On reaching home Fanny went immediately
upstairs to deposit this unexpected acquisition, this
doubtful good of a necklace, in some favourite box
in the East room, which held all her smaller treasures;
but on opening the door, what was her surprise to
find her cousin Edmund there writing at the table!
Such a sight having never occurred before, was almost
as wonderful as it was welcome.
“Fanny,” said he directly,
leaving his seat and his pen, and meeting her with
something in his hand, “I beg your pardon for
being here. I came to look for you, and after
waiting a little while in hope of your coming in,
was making use of your inkstand to explain my errand.
You will find the beginning of a note to yourself;
but I can now speak my business, which is merely to
beg your acceptance of this little trifle—a
chain for William’s cross. You ought to
have had it a week ago, but there has been a delay
from my brother’s not being in town by several
days so soon as I expected; and I have only just now
received it at Northampton. I hope you will like
the chain itself, Fanny. I endeavoured to consult
the simplicity of your taste; but, at any rate, I
know you will be kind to my intentions, and consider
it, as it really is, a token of the love of one of
your oldest friends.”
And so saying, he was hurrying away,
before Fanny, overpowered by a thousand feelings of
pain and pleasure, could attempt to speak; but quickened
by one sovereign wish, she then called out, “Oh!
cousin, stop a moment, pray stop!”
He turned back.
“I cannot attempt to thank you,”
she continued, in a very agitated manner; “thanks
are out of the question. I feel much more than
I can possibly express. Your goodness in thinking
of me in such a way is beyond—”
“If that is all you have to
say, Fanny” smiling and turning away again.
“No, no, it is not. I want to consult
you.”
Almost unconsciously she had now undone
the parcel he had just put into her hand, and seeing
before her, in all the niceness of jewellers’
packing, a plain gold chain, perfectly simple and
neat, she could not help bursting forth again, “Oh,
this is beautiful indeed! This is the very thing,
precisely what I wished for! This is the only
ornament I have ever had a desire to possess.
It will exactly suit my cross. They must and
shall be worn together. It comes, too, in such
an acceptable moment. Oh, cousin, you do not
know how acceptable it is.”
“My dear Fanny, you feel these
things a great deal too much. I am most happy
that you like the chain, and that it should be here
in time for to-morrow; but your thanks are far beyond
the occasion. Believe me, I have no pleasure
in the world superior to that of contributing to yours.
No, I can safely say, I have no pleasure so complete,
so unalloyed. It is without a drawback.”
Upon such expressions of affection
Fanny could have lived an hour without saying another
word; but Edmund, after waiting a moment, obliged
her to bring down her mind from its heavenly flight
by saying, “But what is it that you want to
consult me about?”
It was about the necklace, which she
was now most earnestly longing to return, and hoped
to obtain his approbation of her doing. She
gave the history of her recent visit, and now her
raptures might well be over; for Edmund was so struck
with the circumstance, so delighted with what Miss
Crawford had done, so gratified by such a coincidence
of conduct between them, that Fanny could not but admit
the superior power of one pleasure over his own mind,
though it might have its drawback. It was some
time before she could get his attention to her plan,
or any answer to her demand of his opinion:
he was in a reverie of fond reflection, uttering only
now and then a few half-sentences of praise; but when
he did awake and understand, he was very decided in
opposing what she wished.
“Return the necklace!
No, my dear Fanny, upon no account. It would
be mortifying her severely. There can hardly
be a more unpleasant sensation than the having anything
returned on our hands which we have given with a reasonable
hope of its contributing to the comfort of a friend.
Why should she lose a pleasure which she has shewn
herself so deserving of?”
“If it had been given to me
in the first instance,” said Fanny, “I
should not have thought of returning it; but being
her brother’s present, is not it fair to suppose
that she would rather not part with it, when it is
not wanted?”
“She must not suppose it not
wanted, not acceptable, at least: and its having
been originally her brother’s gift makes no
difference; for as she was not prevented from offering,
nor you from taking it on that account, it ought not
to prevent you from keeping it. No doubt it
is handsomer than mine, and fitter for a ballroom.”
“No, it is not handsomer, not
at all handsomer in its way, and, for my purpose,
not half so fit. The chain will agree with William’s
cross beyond all comparison better than the necklace.”
“For one night, Fanny, for only
one night, if it be a sacrifice; I am sure
you will, upon consideration, make that sacrifice
rather than give pain to one who has been so studious
of your comfort. Miss Crawford’s attentions
to you have been—not more than you were
justly entitled to— I am the last person
to think that could be, but they have
been invariable; and to be returning them with what
must have something the air of ingratitude,
though I know it could never have the meaning,
is not in your nature, I am sure. Wear the necklace,
as you are engaged to do, to-morrow evening, and let
the chain, which was not ordered with any reference
to the ball, be kept for commoner occasions.
This is my advice. I would not have the shadow
of a coolness between the two whose intimacy I have
been observing with the greatest pleasure, and in
whose characters there is so much general resemblance
in true generosity and natural delicacy as to make
the few slight differences, resulting principally
from situation, no reasonable hindrance to a perfect
friendship. I would not have the shadow of a
coolness arise,” he repeated, his voice sinking
a little, “between the two dearest objects I
have on earth.”
He was gone as he spoke; and Fanny
remained to tranquillise herself as she could.
She was one of his two dearest— that must
support her. But the other: the first!
She had never heard him speak so openly before, and
though it told her no more than what she had long
perceived, it was a stab, for it told of his own convictions
and views. They were decided. He would
marry Miss Crawford. It was a stab, in spite
of every long-standing expectation; and she was obliged
to repeat again and again, that she was one of his
two dearest, before the words gave her any sensation.
Could she believe Miss Crawford to deserve him, it
would be—oh, how different would it be—
how far more tolerable! But he was deceived in
her: he gave her merits which she had not; her
faults were what they had ever been, but he saw them
no longer. Till she had shed many tears over
this deception, Fanny could not subdue her agitation;
and the dejection which followed could only be relieved
by the influence of fervent prayers for his happiness.
It was her intention, as she felt
it to be her duty, to try to overcome all that was
excessive, all that bordered on selfishness, in her
affection for Edmund. To call or to fancy it
a loss, a disappointment, would be a presumption for
which she had not words strong enough to satisfy her
own humility. To think of him as Miss Crawford
might be justified in thinking, would in her be insanity.
To her he could be nothing under any circumstances;
nothing dearer than a friend. Why did such an
idea occur to her even enough to be reprobated and
forbidden? It ought not to have touched on the
confines of her imagination. She would endeavour
to be rational, and to deserve the right of judging
of Miss Crawford’s character, and the privilege
of true solicitude for him by a sound intellect and
an honest heart.
She had all the heroism of principle,
and was determined to do her duty; but having also
many of the feelings of youth and nature, let her
not be much wondered at, if, after making all these
good resolutions on the side of self-government, she
seized the scrap of paper on which Edmund had begun
writing to her, as a treasure beyond all her hopes,
and reading with the tenderest emotion these words,
“My very dear Fanny, you must do me the favour
to accept” locked it up with the chain, as the
dearest part of the gift. It was the only thing
approaching to a letter which she had ever received
from him; she might never receive another; it was
impossible that she ever should receive another so
perfectly gratifying in the occasion and the style.
Two lines more prized had never fallen from the pen
of the most distinguished author—never more
completely blessed the researches of the fondest biographer.
The enthusiasm of a woman’s love is even beyond
the biographer’s. To her, the handwriting
itself, independent of anything it may convey, is
a blessedness. Never were such characters cut
by any other human being as Edmund’s commonest
handwriting gave! This specimen, written in
haste as it was, had not a fault; and there was a
felicity in the flow of the first four words, in the
arrangement of “My very dear Fanny,” which
she could have looked at for ever.
Having regulated her thoughts and
comforted her feelings by this happy mixture of reason
and weakness, she was able in due time to go down
and resume her usual employments near her aunt Bertram,
and pay her the usual observances without any apparent
want of spirits.
Thursday, predestined to hope and
enjoyment, came; and opened with more kindness to
Fanny than such self-willed, unmanageable days often
volunteer, for soon after breakfast a very friendly
note was brought from Mr. Crawford to William, stating
that as he found himself obliged to go to London on
the morrow for a few days, he could not help trying
to procure a companion; and therefore hoped that if
William could make up his mind to leave Mansfield
half a day earlier than had been proposed, he would
accept a place in his carriage. Mr. Crawford
meant to be in town by his uncle’s accustomary
late dinner-hour, and William was invited to dine
with him at the Admiral’s. The proposal
was a very pleasant one to William himself, who enjoyed
the idea of travelling post with four horses, and
such a good-humoured, agreeable friend; and, in likening
it to going up with despatches, was saying at once
everything in favour of its happiness and dignity
which his imagination could suggest; and Fanny, from
a different motive, was exceedingly pleased; for the
original plan was that William should go up by the
mail from Northampton the following night, which would
not have allowed him an hour’s rest before he
must have got into a Portsmouth coach; and though
this offer of Mr. Crawford’s would rob her of
many hours of his company, she was too happy in having
William spared from the fatigue of such a journey,
to think of anything else. Sir Thomas approved
of it for another reason. His nephew’s
introduction to Admiral Crawford might be of service.
The Admiral, he believed, had interest. Upon
the whole, it was a very joyous note. Fanny’s
spirits lived on it half the morning, deriving some
accession of pleasure from its writer being himself
to go away.
As for the ball, so near at hand,
she had too many agitations and fears to have half
the enjoyment in anticipation which she ought to have
had, or must have been supposed to have by the many
young ladies looking forward to the same event in
situations more at ease, but under circumstances of
less novelty, less interest, less peculiar gratification,
than would be attributed to her. Miss Price,
known only by name to half the people invited, was
now to make her first appearance, and must be regarded
as the queen of the evening. Who could be happier
than Miss Price? But Miss Price had not been
brought up to the trade of coming out;
and had she known in what light this ball was, in general,
considered respecting her, it would very much have
lessened her comfort by increasing the fears she already
had of doing wrong and being looked at. To dance
without much observation or any extraordinary fatigue,
to have strength and partners for about half the evening,
to dance a little with Edmund, and not a great deal
with Mr. Crawford, to see William enjoy himself, and
be able to keep away from her aunt Norris, was the
height of her ambition, and seemed to comprehend her
greatest possibility of happiness. As these were
the best of her hopes, they could not always prevail;
and in the course of a long morning, spent principally
with her two aunts, she was often under the influence
of much less sanguine views. William, determined
to make this last day a day of thorough enjoyment,
was out snipe-shooting; Edmund, she had too much reason
to suppose, was at the Parsonage; and left alone to
bear the worrying of Mrs. Norris, who was cross because
the housekeeper would have her own way with the supper,
and whom she could not avoid though the housekeeper
might, Fanny was worn down at last to think everything
an evil belonging to the ball, and when sent off with
a parting worry to dress, moved as languidly towards
her own room, and felt as incapable of happiness as
if she had been allowed no share in it.
As she walked slowly upstairs she
thought of yesterday; it had been about the same hour
that she had returned from the Parsonage, and found
Edmund in the East room. “Suppose I were
to find him there again to-day!” said she to
herself, in a fond indulgence of fancy.
“Fanny,” said a voice
at that moment near her. Starting and looking
up, she saw, across the lobby she had just reached,
Edmund himself, standing at the head of a different
staircase. He came towards her. “You
look tired and fagged, Fanny. You have been
walking too far.”
“No, I have not been out at all.”
“Then you have had fatigues
within doors, which are worse. You had better
have gone out.”
Fanny, not liking to complain, found
it easiest to make no answer; and though he looked
at her with his usual kindness, she believed he had
soon ceased to think of her countenance. He did
not appear in spirits: something unconnected
with her was probably amiss. They proceeded
upstairs together, their rooms being on the same floor
above.
“I come from Dr. Grant’s,”
said Edmund presently. “You may guess my
errand there, Fanny.” And he looked so
conscious, that Fanny could think but of one errand,
which turned her too sick for speech. “I
wished to engage Miss Crawford for the two first dances,”
was the explanation that followed, and brought Fanny
to life again, enabling her, as she found she was
expected to speak, to utter something like an inquiry
as to the result.
“Yes,” he answered, “she
is engaged to me; but” (with a smile that did
not sit easy) “she says it is to be the last
time that she ever will dance with me. She is
not serious. I think, I hope, I am sure she is
not serious; but I would rather not hear it.
She never has danced with a clergyman, she says,
and she never will. For my own sake, I
could wish there had been no ball just at—I
mean not this very week, this very day; to-morrow
I leave home.”
Fanny struggled for speech, and said,
“I am very sorry that anything has occurred
to distress you. This ought to be a day of pleasure.
My uncle meant it so.”
“Oh yes, yes! and it will be
a day of pleasure. It will all end right.
I am only vexed for a moment. In fact, it is
not that I consider the ball as ill-timed; what does
it signify? But, Fanny,” stopping her,
by taking her hand, and speaking low and seriously,
“you know what all this means. You see
how it is; and could tell me, perhaps better than
I could tell you, how and why I am vexed. Let
me talk to you a little. You are a kind, kind
listener. I have been pained by her manner this
morning, and cannot get the better of it. I
know her disposition to be as sweet and faultless
as your own, but the influence of her former companions
makes her seem—gives to her conversation,
to her professed opinions, sometimes a tinge of wrong.
She does not think evil, but she speaks it,
speaks it in playfulness; and though I know it to
be playfulness, it grieves me to the soul.”
“The effect of education,” said Fanny
gently.
Edmund could not but agree to it.
“Yes, that uncle and aunt! They have injured
the finest mind; for sometimes, Fanny, I own to you,
it does appear more than manner: it appears as
if the mind itself was tainted.”
Fanny imagined this to be an appeal
to her judgment, and therefore, after a moment’s
consideration, said, “If you only want me as
a listener, cousin, I will be as useful as I can;
but I am not qualified for an adviser. Do not
ask advice of me. I am not competent.”
“You are right, Fanny, to protest
against such an office, but you need not be afraid.
It is a subject on which I should never ask advice;
it is the sort of subject on which it had better never
be asked; and few, I imagine, do ask it, but when
they want to be influenced against their conscience.
I only want to talk to you.”
“One thing more. Excuse
the liberty; but take care how you talk to
me. Do not tell me anything now, which hereafter
you may be sorry for. The time may come—”
The colour rushed into her cheeks as she spoke.
“Dearest Fanny!” cried
Edmund, pressing her hand to his lips with almost
as much warmth as if it had been Miss Crawford’s,
“you are all considerate thought! But it
is unnecessary here. The time will never come.
No such time as you allude to will ever come.
I begin to think it most improbable: the chances
grow less and less; and even if it should, there will
be nothing to be remembered by either you or me that
we need be afraid of, for I can never be ashamed of
my own scruples; and if they are removed, it must
be by changes that will only raise her character the
more by the recollection of the faults she once had.
You are the only being upon earth to whom I should
say what I have said; but you have always known my
opinion of her; you can bear me witness, Fanny, that
I have never been blinded. How many a time have
we talked over her little errors! You need not
fear me; I have almost given up every serious idea
of her; but I must be a blockhead indeed, if, whatever
befell me, I could think of your kindness and sympathy
without the sincerest gratitude.”
He had said enough to shake the experience
of eighteen. He had said enough to give Fanny
some happier feelings than she had lately known, and
with a brighter look, she answered, “Yes, cousin,
I am convinced that you would be incapable
of anything else, though perhaps some might not.
I cannot be afraid of hearing anything you wish to
say. Do not check yourself. Tell me whatever
you like.”
They were now on the second floor,
and the appearance of a housemaid prevented any farther
conversation. For Fanny’s present comfort
it was concluded, perhaps, at the happiest moment:
had he been able to talk another five minutes, there
is no saying that he might not have talked away all
Miss Crawford’s faults and his own despondence.
But as it was, they parted with looks on his side of
grateful affection, and with some very precious sensations
on hers. She had felt nothing like it for hours.
Since the first joy from Mr. Crawford’s note
to William had worn away, she had been in a state
absolutely the reverse; there had been no comfort
around, no hope within her. Now everything was
smiling. William’s good fortune returned
again upon her mind, and seemed of greater value than
at first. The ball, too—such an evening
of pleasure before her! It was now a real animation;
and she began to dress for it with much of the happy
flutter which belongs to a ball. All went well:
she did not dislike her own looks; and when she came
to the necklaces again, her good fortune seemed complete,
for upon trial the one given her by Miss Crawford would
by no means go through the ring of the cross.
She had, to oblige Edmund, resolved to wear it; but
it was too large for the purpose. His, therefore,
must be worn; and having, with delightful feelings,
joined the chain and the cross—those memorials
of the two most beloved of her heart, those dearest
tokens so formed for each other by everything real
and imaginary—and put them round her neck,
and seen and felt how full of William and Edmund they
were, she was able, without an effort, to resolve
on wearing Miss Crawford’s necklace too.
She acknowledged it to be right. Miss Crawford
had a claim; and when it was no longer to encroach
on, to interfere with the stronger claims, the truer
kindness of another, she could do her justice even
with pleasure to herself. The necklace really
looked very well; and Fanny left her room at last,
comfortably satisfied with herself and all about her.
Her aunt Bertram had recollected her
on this occasion with an unusual degree of wakefulness.
It had really occurred to her, unprompted, that Fanny,
preparing for a ball, might be glad of better help
than the upper housemaid’s, and when dressed
herself, she actually sent her own maid to assist
her; too late, of course, to be of any use. Mrs.
Chapman had just reached the attic floor, when Miss
Price came out of her room completely dressed, and
only civilities were necessary; but Fanny felt her
aunt’s attention almost as much as Lady Bertram
or Mrs. Chapman could do themselves.