Fanny’s consequence increased
on the departure of her cousins. Becoming, as
she then did, the only young woman in the drawing-room,
the only occupier of that interesting division of
a family in which she had hitherto held so humble
a third, it was impossible for her not to be more
looked at, more thought of and attended to, than she
had ever been before; and “Where is Fanny?”
became no uncommon question, even without her being
wanted for any one’s convenience.
Not only at home did her value increase,
but at the Parsonage too. In that house, which
she had hardly entered twice a year since Mr. Norris’s
death, she became a welcome, an invited guest, and
in the gloom and dirt of a November day, most acceptable
to Mary Crawford. Her visits there, beginning
by chance, were continued by solicitation. Mrs.
Grant, really eager to get any change for her sister,
could, by the easiest self-deceit, persuade herself
that she was doing the kindest thing by Fanny, and
giving her the most important opportunities of improvement
in pressing her frequent calls.
Fanny, having been sent into the village
on some errand by her aunt Norris, was overtaken by
a heavy shower close to the Parsonage; and being descried
from one of the windows endeavouring to find shelter
under the branches and lingering leaves of an oak
just beyond their premises, was forced, though not
without some modest reluctance on her part, to come
in. A civil servant she had withstood; but when
Dr. Grant himself went out with an umbrella, there
was nothing to be done but to be very much ashamed,
and to get into the house as fast as possible; and
to poor Miss Crawford, who had just been contemplating
the dismal rain in a very desponding state of mind,
sighing over the ruin of all her plan of exercise
for that morning, and of every chance of seeing a
single creature beyond themselves for the next twenty-four
hours, the sound of a little bustle at the front door,
and the sight of Miss Price dripping with wet in the
vestibule, was delightful. The value of an event
on a wet day in the country was most forcibly brought
before her. She was all alive again directly,
and among the most active in being useful to Fanny,
in detecting her to be wetter than she would at first
allow, and providing her with dry clothes; and Fanny,
after being obliged to submit to all this attention,
and to being assisted and waited on by mistresses
and maids, being also obliged, on returning downstairs,
to be fixed in their drawing-room for an hour while
the rain continued, the blessing of something fresh
to see and think of was thus extended to Miss Crawford,
and might carry on her spirits to the period of dressing
and dinner.
The two sisters were so kind to her,
and so pleasant, that Fanny might have enjoyed her
visit could she have believed herself not in the way,
and could she have foreseen that the weather would
certainly clear at the end of the hour, and save her
from the shame of having Dr. Grant’s carriage
and horses out to take her home, with which she was
threatened. As to anxiety for any alarm that
her absence in such weather might occasion at home,
she had nothing to suffer on that score; for as her
being out was known only to her two aunts, she was
perfectly aware that none would be felt, and that
in whatever cottage aunt Norris might chuse to establish
her during the rain, her being in such cottage would
be indubitable to aunt Bertram.
It was beginning to look brighter,
when Fanny, observing a harp in the room, asked some
questions about it, which soon led to an acknowledgment
of her wishing very much to hear it, and a confession,
which could hardly be believed, of her having never
yet heard it since its being in Mansfield. To
Fanny herself it appeared a very simple and natural
circumstance. She had scarcely ever been at
the Parsonage since the instrument’s arrival,
there had been no reason that she should; but Miss
Crawford, calling to mind an early expressed wish
on the subject, was concerned at her own neglect;
and “Shall I play to you now?” and “What
will you have?” were questions immediately following
with the readiest good-humour.
She played accordingly; happy to have
a new listener, and a listener who seemed so much
obliged, so full of wonder at the performance, and
who shewed herself not wanting in taste. She
played till Fanny’s eyes, straying to the window
on the weather’s being evidently fair, spoke
what she felt must be done.
“Another quarter of an hour,”
said Miss Crawford, “and we shall see how it
will be. Do not run away the first moment of
its holding up. Those clouds look alarming.”
“But they are passed over,”
said Fanny. “I have been watching them.
This weather is all from the south.”
“South or north, I know a black
cloud when I see it; and you must not set forward
while it is so threatening. And besides, I want
to play something more to you—a very pretty
piece—and your cousin Edmund’s prime
favourite. You must stay and hear your cousin’s
favourite.”
Fanny felt that she must; and though
she had not waited for that sentence to be thinking
of Edmund, such a memento made her particularly awake
to his idea, and she fancied him sitting in that room
again and again, perhaps in the very spot where she
sat now, listening with constant delight to the favourite
air, played, as it appeared to her, with superior
tone and expression; and though pleased with it herself,
and glad to like whatever was liked by him, she was
more sincerely impatient to go away at the conclusion
of it than she had been before; and on this being
evident, she was so kindly asked to call again, to
take them in her walk whenever she could, to come
and hear more of the harp, that she felt it necessary
to be done, if no objection arose at home.
Such was the origin of the sort of
intimacy which took place between them within the
first fortnight after the Miss Bertrams’ going
away—an intimacy resulting principally
from Miss Crawford’s desire of something new,
and which had little reality in Fanny’s feelings.
Fanny went to her every two or three days: it
seemed a kind of fascination: she could not
be easy without going, and yet it was without loving
her, without ever thinking like her, without any sense
of obligation for being sought after now when nobody
else was to be had; and deriving no higher pleasure
from her conversation than occasional amusement, and
that often at the expense of her judgment,
when it was raised by pleasantry on people or subjects
which she wished to be respected. She went, however,
and they sauntered about together many an half-hour
in Mrs. Grant’s shrubbery, the weather being
unusually mild for the time of year, and venturing
sometimes even to sit down on one of the benches now
comparatively unsheltered, remaining there perhaps
till, in the midst of some tender ejaculation of Fanny’s
on the sweets of so protracted an autumn, they were
forced, by the sudden swell of a cold gust shaking
down the last few yellow leaves about them, to jump
up and walk for warmth.
“This is pretty, very pretty,”
said Fanny, looking around her as they were thus sitting
together one day; “every time I come into this
shrubbery I am more struck with its growth and beauty.
Three years ago, this was nothing but a rough hedgerow
along the upper side of the field, never thought of
as anything, or capable of becoming anything; and
now it is converted into a walk, and it would be difficult
to say whether most valuable as a convenience or an
ornament; and perhaps, in another three years, we
may be forgetting—almost forgetting what
it was before. How wonderful, how very wonderful
the operations of time, and the changes of the human
mind!” And following the latter train of thought,
she soon afterwards added: “If any one
faculty of our nature may be called more wonderful
than the rest, I do think it is memory. There
seems something more speakingly incomprehensible in
the powers, the failures, the inequalities of memory,
than in any other of our intelligences. The memory
is sometimes so retentive, so serviceable, so obedient;
at others, so bewildered and so weak; and at others
again, so tyrannic, so beyond control! We are,
to be sure, a miracle every way; but our powers of
recollecting and of forgetting do seem peculiarly past
finding out.”
Miss Crawford, untouched and inattentive,
had nothing to say; and Fanny, perceiving it, brought
back her own mind to what she thought must interest.
“It may seem impertinent in
me to praise, but I must admire the taste Mrs.
Grant has shewn in all this. There is such a
quiet simplicity in the plan of the walk! Not
too much attempted!”
“Yes,” replied Miss Crawford
carelessly, “it does very well for a place of
this sort. One does not think of extent here;
and between ourselves, till I came to Mansfield, I
had not imagined a country parson ever aspired to
a shrubbery, or anything of the kind.”
“I am so glad to see the evergreens
thrive!” said Fanny, in reply. “My
uncle’s gardener always says the soil here is
better than his own, and so it appears from the growth
of the laurels and evergreens in general. The
evergreen! How beautiful, how welcome, how wonderful
the evergreen! When one thinks of it, how astonishing
a variety of nature! In some countries we know
the tree that sheds its leaf is the variety, but that
does not make it less amazing that the same soil and
the same sun should nurture plants differing in the
first rule and law of their existence. You will
think me rhapsodising; but when I am out of doors,
especially when I am sitting out of doors, I am very
apt to get into this sort of wondering strain.
One cannot fix one’s eyes on the commonest
natural production without finding food for a rambling
fancy.”
“To say the truth,” replied
Miss Crawford, “I am something like the famous
Doge at the court of Lewis XIV.; and may declare that
I see no wonder in this shrubbery equal to seeing
myself in it. If anybody had told me a year
ago that this place would be my home, that I should
be spending month after month here, as I have done,
I certainly should not have believed them. I
have now been here nearly five months; and, moreover,
the quietest five months I ever passed.”
“Too quiet for you, I believe.”
“I should have thought so theoretically
myself, but,” and her eyes brightened as she
spoke, “take it all and all, I never spent so
happy a summer. But then,” with a more
thoughtful air and lowered voice, “there is
no saying what it may lead to.”
Fanny’s heart beat quick, and
she felt quite unequal to surmising or soliciting
anything more. Miss Crawford, however, with
renewed animation, soon went on—
“I am conscious of being far
better reconciled to a country residence than I had
ever expected to be. I can even suppose it pleasant
to spend half the year in the country, under
certain circumstances, very pleasant. An elegant,
moderate-sized house in the centre of family connexions;
continual engagements among them; commanding the first
society in the neighbourhood; looked up to, perhaps,
as leading it even more than those of larger fortune,
and turning from the cheerful round of such amusements
to nothing worse than a tete-a-tete with the
person one feels most agreeable in the world.
There is nothing frightful in such a picture, is
there, Miss Price? One need not envy the new
Mrs. Rushworth with such a home as that.”
“Envy Mrs. Rushworth!”
was all that Fanny attempted to say. “Come,
come, it would be very un-handsome in us to be severe
on Mrs. Rushworth, for I look forward to our owing
her a great many gay, brilliant, happy hours.
I expect we shall be all very much at Sotherton another
year. Such a match as Miss Bertram has made is
a public blessing; for the first pleasures of Mr.
Rushworth’s wife must be to fill her house,
and give the best balls in the country.”
Fanny was silent, and Miss Crawford
relapsed into thoughtfulness, till suddenly looking
up at the end of a few minutes, she exclaimed, “Ah!
here he is.” It was not Mr. Rushworth,
however, but Edmund, who then appeared walking towards
them with Mrs. Grant. “My sister and Mr.
Bertram. I am so glad your eldest cousin is
gone, that he may be Mr. Bertram again. There
is something in the sound of Mr. Edmund Bertram
so formal, so pitiful, so younger-brother-like, that
I detest it.”
“How differently we feel!”
cried Fanny. “To me, the sound of Mr.
Bertram is so cold and nothing-meaning, so entirely
without warmth or character! It just stands
for a gentleman, and that’s all. But there
is nobleness in the name of Edmund. It is a
name of heroism and renown; of kings, princes, and
knights; and seems to breathe the spirit of chivalry
and warm affections.”
“I grant you the name is good
in itself, and Lord Edmund or Sir Edmund
sound delightfully; but sink it under the chill, the
annihilation of a Mr., and Mr. Edmund is no more than
Mr. John or Mr. Thomas. Well, shall we join and
disappoint them of half their lecture upon sitting
down out of doors at this time of year, by being up
before they can begin?”
Edmund met them with particular pleasure.
It was the first time of his seeing them together
since the beginning of that better acquaintance which
he had been hearing of with great satisfaction.
A friendship between two so very dear to him was
exactly what he could have wished: and to the
credit of the lover’s understanding, be it stated,
that he did not by any means consider Fanny as the
only, or even as the greater gainer by such a friendship.
“Well,” said Miss Crawford,
“and do you not scold us for our imprudence?
What do you think we have been sitting down for but
to be talked to about it, and entreated and supplicated
never to do so again?”
“Perhaps I might have scolded,”
said Edmund, “if either of you had been sitting
down alone; but while you do wrong together, I can
overlook a great deal.”
“They cannot have been sitting
long,” cried Mrs. Grant, “for when I went
up for my shawl I saw them from the staircase window,
and then they were walking.”
“And really,” added Edmund,
“the day is so mild, that your sitting down
for a few minutes can be hardly thought imprudent.
Our weather must not always be judged by the calendar.
We may sometimes take greater liberties in November
than in May.”
“Upon my word,” cried
Miss Crawford, “you are two of the most disappointing
and unfeeling kind friends I ever met with! There
is no giving you a moment’s uneasiness.
You do not know how much we have been suffering,
nor what chills we have felt! But I have long
thought Mr. Bertram one of the worst subjects to work
on, in any little manoeuvre against common sense,
that a woman could be plagued with. I had very
little hope of him from the first; but you,
Mrs. Grant, my sister, my own sister, I think I had
a right to alarm you a little.”
“Do not flatter yourself, my
dearest Mary. You have not the smallest chance
of moving me. I have my alarms, but they are
quite in a different quarter; and if I could have
altered the weather, you would have had a good sharp
east wind blowing on you the whole time—for
here are some of my plants which Robert will
leave out because the nights are so mild, and I know
the end of it will be, that we shall have a sudden
change of weather, a hard frost setting in all at
once, taking everybody (at least Robert) by surprise,
and I shall lose every one; and what is worse, cook
has just been telling me that the turkey, which I
particularly wished not to be dressed till Sunday,
because I know how much more Dr. Grant would enjoy
it on Sunday after the fatigues of the day, will not
keep beyond to-morrow. These are something like
grievances, and make me think the weather most unseasonably
close.”
“The sweets of housekeeping
in a country village!” said Miss Crawford archly.
“Commend me to the nurseryman and the poulterer.”
“My dear child, commend Dr.
Grant to the deanery of Westminster or St. Paul’s,
and I should be as glad of your nurseryman and poulterer
as you could be. But we have no such people
in Mansfield. What would you have me do?”
“Oh! you can do nothing but
what you do already: be plagued very often, and
never lose your temper.”
“Thank you; but there is no
escaping these little vexations, Mary, live where
we may; and when you are settled in town and I come
to see you, I dare say I shall find you with yours,
in spite of the nurseryman and the poulterer, perhaps
on their very account. Their remoteness and
unpunctuality, or their exorbitant charges and frauds,
will be drawing forth bitter lamentations.”
“I mean to be too rich to lament
or to feel anything of the sort. A large income
is the best recipe for happiness I ever heard of.
It certainly may secure all the myrtle and turkey
part of it.”
“You intend to be very rich?”
said Edmund, with a look which, to Fanny’s eye,
had a great deal of serious meaning.
“To be sure. Do not you? Do not
we all?”
“I cannot intend anything which
it must be so completely beyond my power to command.
Miss Crawford may chuse her degree of wealth.
She has only to fix on her number of thousands a
year, and there can be no doubt of their coming.
My intentions are only not to be poor.”
“By moderation and economy,
and bringing down your wants to your income, and all
that. I understand you—and a very
proper plan it is for a person at your time of life,
with such limited means and indifferent connexions.
What can you want but a decent maintenance?
You have not much time before you; and your relations
are in no situation to do anything for you, or to
mortify you by the contrast of their own wealth and
consequence. Be honest and poor, by all means—but
I shall not envy you; I do not much think I shall
even respect you. I have a much greater respect
for those that are honest and rich.”
“Your degree of respect for
honesty, rich or poor, is precisely what I have no
manner of concern with. I do not mean to be poor.
Poverty is exactly what I have determined against.
Honesty, in the something between, in the middle
state of worldly circumstances, is all that I am anxious
for your not looking down on.”
“But I do look down upon it,
if it might have been higher. I must look down
upon anything contented with obscurity when it might
rise to distinction.”
“But how may it rise?
How may my honesty at least rise to any distinction?”
This was not so very easy a question
to answer, and occasioned an “Oh!” of
some length from the fair lady before she could add,
“You ought to be in parliament, or you should
have gone into the army ten years ago.”
“That is not much to
the purpose now; and as to my being in parliament,
I believe I must wait till there is an especial assembly
for the representation of younger sons who have little
to live on. No, Miss Crawford,” he added,
in a more serious tone, “there are distinctions
which I should be miserable if I thought myself without
any chance— absolutely without chance or
possibility of obtaining— but they are
of a different character.”
A look of consciousness as he spoke,
and what seemed a consciousness of manner on Miss
Crawford’s side as she made some laughing answer,
was sorrowfull food for Fanny’s observation;
and finding herself quite unable to attend as she
ought to Mrs. Grant, by whose side she was now following
the others, she had nearly resolved on going home
immediately, and only waited for courage to say so,
when the sound of the great clock at Mansfield Park,
striking three, made her feel that she had really
been much longer absent than usual, and brought the
previous self-inquiry of whether she should take leave
or not just then, and how, to a very speedy issue.
With undoubting decision she directly began her adieus;
and Edmund began at the same time to recollect that
his mother had been inquiring for her, and that he
had walked down to the Parsonage on purpose to bring
her back.
Fanny’s hurry increased; and
without in the least expecting Edmund’s attendance,
she would have hastened away alone; but the general
pace was quickened, and they all accompanied her into
the house, through which it was necessary to pass.
Dr. Grant was in the vestibule, and as they stopt to
speak to him she found, from Edmund’s manner,
that he did mean to go with her. He too
was taking leave. She could not but be thankful.
In the moment of parting, Edmund was invited by Dr.
Grant to eat his mutton with him the next day; and
Fanny had barely time for an unpleasant feeling on
the occasion, when Mrs. Grant, with sudden recollection,
turned to her and asked for the pleasure of her company
too. This was so new an attention, so perfectly
new a circumstance in the events of Fanny’s
life, that she was all surprise and embarrassment;
and while stammering out her great obligation, and
her “but she did not suppose it would be in
her power,” was looking at Edmund for his opinion
and help. But Edmund, delighted with her having
such an happiness offered, and ascertaining with half
a look, and half a sentence, that she had no objection
but on her aunt’s account, could not imagine
that his mother would make any difficulty of sparing
her, and therefore gave his decided open advice that
the invitation should be accepted; and though Fanny
would not venture, even on his encouragement, to such
a flight of audacious independence, it was soon settled,
that if nothing were heard to the contrary, Mrs. Grant
might expect her.
“And you know what your dinner
will be,” said Mrs. Grant, smiling—“the
turkey, and I assure you a very fine one; for, my
dear,” turning to her husband, “cook insists
upon the turkey’s being dressed to-morrow.”
“Very well, very well,”
cried Dr. Grant, “all the better; I am glad
to hear you have anything so good in the house.
But Miss Price and Mr. Edmund Bertram, I dare say,
would take their chance. We none of us want
to hear the bill of fare. A friendly meeting,
and not a fine dinner, is all we have in view.
A turkey, or a goose, or a leg of mutton, or whatever
you and your cook chuse to give us.”
The two cousins walked home together;
and, except in the immediate discussion of this engagement,
which Edmund spoke of with the warmest satisfaction,
as so particularly desirable for her in the intimacy
which he saw with so much pleasure established, it
was a silent walk; for having finished that subject,
he grew thoughtful and indisposed for any other.