Edmund’s first object the next
morning was to see his father alone, and give him
a fair statement of the whole acting scheme, defending
his own share in it as far only as he could then,
in a soberer moment, feel his motives to deserve,
and acknowledging, with perfect ingenuousness, that
his concession had been attended with such partial
good as to make his judgment in it very doubtful.
He was anxious, while vindicating himself, to say nothing
unkind of the others: but there was only one
amongst them whose conduct he could mention without
some necessity of defence or palliation. “We
have all been more or less to blame,” said he,
“every one of us, excepting Fanny. Fanny
is the only one who has judged rightly throughout;
who has been consistent. Her feelings have
been steadily against it from first to last.
She never ceased to think of what was due to you.
You will find Fanny everything you could wish.”
Sir Thomas saw all the impropriety
of such a scheme among such a party, and at such a
time, as strongly as his son had ever supposed he
must; he felt it too much, indeed, for many words;
and having shaken hands with Edmund, meant to try
to lose the disagreeable impression, and forget how
much he had been forgotten himself as soon as he could,
after the house had been cleared of every object enforcing
the remembrance, and restored to its proper state.
He did not enter into any remonstrance with his other
children: he was more willing to believe they
felt their error than to run the risk of investigation.
The reproof of an immediate conclusion of everything,
the sweep of every preparation, would be sufficient.
There was one person, however, in
the house, whom he could not leave to learn his sentiments
merely through his conduct. He could not help
giving Mrs. Norris a hint of his having hoped that
her advice might have been interposed to prevent what
her judgment must certainly have disapproved.
The young people had been very inconsiderate in forming
the plan; they ought to have been capable of a better
decision themselves; but they were young; and, excepting
Edmund, he believed, of unsteady characters; and with
greater surprise, therefore, he must regard her acquiescence
in their wrong measures, her countenance of their
unsafe amusements, than that such measures and such
amusements should have been suggested. Mrs. Norris
was a little confounded and as nearly being silenced
as ever she had been in her life; for she was ashamed
to confess having never seen any of the impropriety
which was so glaring to Sir Thomas, and would not
have admitted that her influence was insufficient—
that she might have talked in vain. Her only
resource was to get out of the subject as fast as
possible, and turn the current of Sir Thomas’s
ideas into a happier channel. She had a great
deal to insinuate in her own praise as to general
attention to the interest and comfort of his family,
much exertion and many sacrifices to glance at in
the form of hurried walks and sudden removals from
her own fireside, and many excellent hints of distrust
and economy to Lady Bertram and Edmund to detail,
whereby a most considerable saving had always arisen,
and more than one bad servant been detected.
But her chief strength lay in Sotherton. Her
greatest support and glory was in having formed the
connexion with the Rushworths. There she was
impregnable. She took to herself all the credit
of bringing Mr. Rushworth’s admiration of Maria
to any effect. “If I had not been active,”
said she, “and made a point of being introduced
to his mother, and then prevailed on my sister to
pay the first visit, I am as certain as I sit here
that nothing would have come of it; for Mr. Rushworth
is the sort of amiable modest young man who wants
a great deal of encouragement, and there were girls
enough on the catch for him if we had been idle.
But I left no stone unturned. I was ready to
move heaven and earth to persuade my sister, and at
last I did persuade her. You know the distance
to Sotherton; it was in the middle of winter, and the
roads almost impassable, but I did persuade her.”
“I know how great, how justly
great, your influence is with Lady Bertram and her
children, and am the more concerned that it should
not have been.”
“My dear Sir Thomas, if you
had seen the state of the roads that day!
I thought we should never have got through them,
though we had the four horses of course; and poor
old coachman would attend us, out of his great love
and kindness, though he was hardly able to sit the
box on account of the rheumatism which I had been
doctoring him for ever since Michaelmas. I cured
him at last; but he was very bad all the winter—and
this was such a day, I could not help going to him
up in his room before we set off to advise him not
to venture: he was putting on his wig; so I
said, ’Coachman, you had much better not go;
your Lady and I shall be very safe; you know how steady
Stephen is, and Charles has been upon the leaders
so often now, that I am sure there is no fear.’
But, however, I soon found it would not do; he was
bent upon going, and as I hate to be worrying and
officious, I said no more; but my heart quite ached
for him at every jolt, and when we got into the rough
lanes about Stoke, where, what with frost and snow
upon beds of stones, it was worse than anything you
can imagine, I was quite in an agony about him.
And then the poor horses too! To see them straining
away! You know how I always feel for the horses.
And when we got to the bottom of Sandcroft Hill,
what do you think I did? You will laugh at me;
but I got out and walked up. I did indeed.
It might not be saving them much, but it was something,
and I could not bear to sit at my ease and be dragged
up at the expense of those noble animals. I caught
a dreadful cold, but that I did not regard.
My object was accomplished in the visit.”
“I hope we shall always think
the acquaintance worth any trouble that might be taken
to establish it. There is nothing very striking
in Mr. Rushworth’s manners, but I was pleased
last night with what appeared to be his opinion on
one subject: his decided preference of a quiet
family party to the bustle and confusion of acting.
He seemed to feel exactly as one could wish.”
“Yes, indeed, and the more you
know of him the better you will like him. He
is not a shining character, but he has a thousand
good qualities; and is so disposed to look up to you,
that I am quite laughed at about it, for everybody
considers it as my doing. ’Upon my word,
Mrs. Norris,’ said Mrs. Grant the other day,
’if Mr. Rushworth were a son of your own, he
could not hold Sir Thomas in greater respect.’”
Sir Thomas gave up the point, foiled
by her evasions, disarmed by her flattery; and was
obliged to rest satisfied with the conviction that
where the present pleasure of those she loved was
at stake, her kindness did sometimes overpower her
judgment.
It was a busy morning with him.
Conversation with any of them occupied but a small
part of it. He had to reinstate himself in all
the wonted concerns of his Mansfield life: to
see his steward and his bailiff; to examine and compute,
and, in the intervals of business, to walk into his
stables and his gardens, and nearest plantations;
but active and methodical, he had not only done all
this before he resumed his seat as master of the house
at dinner, he had also set the carpenter to work in
pulling down what had been so lately put up in the
billiard-room, and given the scene-painter his dismissal
long enough to justify the pleasing belief of his
being then at least as far off as Northampton.
The scene-painter was gone, having spoilt only the
floor of one room, ruined all the coachman’s
sponges, and made five of the under-servants idle
and dissatisfied; and Sir Thomas was in hopes that
another day or two would suffice to wipe away every
outward memento of what had been, even to the destruction
of every unbound copy of Lovers’ Vows in the
house, for he was burning all that met his eye.
Mr. Yates was beginning now to understand
Sir Thomas’s intentions, though as far as ever
from understanding their source. He and his friend
had been out with their guns the chief of the morning,
and Tom had taken the opportunity of explaining, with
proper apologies for his father’s particularity,
what was to be expected. Mr. Yates felt it as
acutely as might be supposed. To be a second
time disappointed in the same way was an instance
of very severe ill-luck; and his indignation was such,
that had it not been for delicacy towards his friend,
and his friend’s youngest sister, he believed
he should certainly attack the baronet on the absurdity
of his proceedings, and argue him into a little more
rationality. He believed this very stoutly while
he was in Mansfield Wood, and all the way home; but
there was a something in Sir Thomas, when they sat
round the same table, which made Mr. Yates think it
wiser to let him pursue his own way, and feel the
folly of it without opposition. He had known
many disagreeable fathers before, and often been struck
with the inconveniences they occasioned, but never,
in the whole course of his life, had he seen one of
that class so unintelligibly moral, so infamously
tyrannical as Sir Thomas. He was not a man to
be endured but for his children’s sake, and he
might be thankful to his fair daughter Julia that
Mr. Yates did yet mean to stay a few days longer under
his roof.
The evening passed with external smoothness,
though almost every mind was ruffled; and the music
which Sir Thomas called for from his daughters helped
to conceal the want of real harmony. Maria was
in a good deal of agitation. It was of the utmost
consequence to her that Crawford should now lose no
time in declaring himself, and she was disturbed that
even a day should be gone by without seeming to advance
that point. She had been expecting to see him
the whole morning, and all the evening, too, was still
expecting him. Mr. Rushworth had set off early
with the great news for Sotherton; and she had fondly
hoped for such an immediate eclaircissement
as might save him the trouble of ever coming back
again. But they had seen no one from the Parsonage,
not a creature, and had heard no tidings beyond a
friendly note of congratulation and inquiry from Mrs.
Grant to Lady Bertram. It was the first day
for many, many weeks, in which the families had been
wholly divided. Four-and-twenty hours had never
passed before, since August began, without bringing
them together in some way or other. It was a
sad, anxious day; and the morrow, though differing
in the sort of evil, did by no means bring less.
A few moments of feverish enjoyment were followed
by hours of acute suffering. Henry Crawford was
again in the house: he walked up with Dr. Grant,
who was anxious to pay his respects to Sir Thomas,
and at rather an early hour they were ushered into
the breakfast-room, where were most of the family.
Sir Thomas soon appeared, and Maria saw with delight
and agitation the introduction of the man she loved
to her father. Her sensations were indefinable,
and so were they a few minutes afterwards upon hearing
Henry Crawford, who had a chair between herself and
Tom, ask the latter in an undervoice whether there
were any plans for resuming the play after the present
happy interruption (with a courteous glance at Sir
Thomas), because, in that case, he should make a point
of returning to Mansfield at any time required by
the party: he was going away immediately, being
to meet his uncle at Bath without delay; but if there
were any prospect of a renewal of Lovers’ Vows,
he should hold himself positively engaged, he should
break through every other claim, he should absolutely
condition with his uncle for attending them whenever
he might be wanted. The play should not be lost
by his absence.
“From Bath, Norfolk, London,
York, wherever I may be,” said he; “I
will attend you from any place in England, at an hour’s
notice.”
It was well at that moment that Tom
had to speak, and not his sister. He could immediately
say with easy fluency, “I am sorry you are going;
but as to our play, that is all over—entirely
at an end” (looking significantly at his father).
“The painter was sent off yesterday, and very
little will remain of the theatre to-morrow. I
knew how that would be from the first.
It is early for Bath. You will find nobody there.”
“It is about my uncle’s usual time.”
“When do you think of going?”
“I may, perhaps, get as far as Banbury to-day.”
“Whose stables do you use at
Bath?” was the next question; and while this
branch of the subject was under discussion, Maria,
who wanted neither pride nor resolution, was preparing
to encounter her share of it with tolerable calmness.
To her he soon turned, repeating much
of what he had already said, with only a softened
air and stronger expressions of regret. But
what availed his expressions or his air? He
was going, and, if not voluntarily going, voluntarily
intending to stay away; for, excepting what might
be due to his uncle, his engagements were all self-imposed.
He might talk of necessity, but she knew his independence.
The hand which had so pressed hers to his heart! the
hand and the heart were alike motionless and passive
now! Her spirit supported her, but the agony
of her mind was severe. She had not long to endure
what arose from listening to language which his actions
contradicted, or to bury the tumult of her feelings
under the restraint of society; for general civilities
soon called his notice from her, and the farewell
visit, as it then became openly acknowledged, was
a very short one. He was gone—he had
touched her hand for the last time, he had made his
parting bow, and she might seek directly all that
solitude could do for her. Henry Crawford was
gone, gone from the house, and within two hours afterwards
from the parish; and so ended all the hopes his selfish
vanity had raised in Maria and Julia Bertram.
Julia could rejoice that he was gone.
His presence was beginning to be odious to her; and
if Maria gained him not, she was now cool enough to
dispense with any other revenge. She did not
want exposure to be added to desertion. Henry
Crawford gone, she could even pity her sister.
With a purer spirit did Fanny rejoice
in the intelligence. She heard it at dinner,
and felt it a blessing. By all the others it
was mentioned with regret; and his merits honoured
with due gradation of feeling— from the
sincerity of Edmund’s too partial regard, to
the unconcern of his mother speaking entirely by rote.
Mrs. Norris began to look about her, and wonder that
his falling in love with Julia had come to nothing;
and could almost fear that she had been remiss herself
in forwarding it; but with so many to care for, how
was it possible for even her activity to keep
pace with her wishes?
Another day or two, and Mr. Yates
was gone likewise. In his departure Sir
Thomas felt the chief interest: wanting to be
alone with his family, the presence of a stranger
superior to Mr. Yates must have been irksome; but
of him, trifling and confident, idle and expensive,
it was every way vexatious. In himself he was
wearisome, but as the friend of Tom and the admirer
of Julia he became offensive. Sir Thomas had
been quite indifferent to Mr. Crawford’s going
or staying: but his good wishes for Mr. Yates’s
having a pleasant journey, as he walked with him to
the hall-door, were given with genuine satisfaction.
Mr. Yates had staid to see the destruction of every
theatrical preparation at Mansfield, the removal of
everything appertaining to the play: he left
the house in all the soberness of its general character;
and Sir Thomas hoped, in seeing him out of it, to
be rid of the worst object connected with the scheme,
and the last that must be inevitably reminding him
of its existence.
Mrs. Norris contrived to remove one
article from his sight that might have distressed
him. The curtain, over which she had presided
with such talent and such success, went off with her
to her cottage, where she happened to be particularly
in want of green baize.