The novelty of travelling, and the
happiness of being with William, soon produced their
natural effect on Fanny’s spirits, when Mansfield
Park was fairly left behind; and by the time their
first stage was ended, and they were to quit Sir Thomas’s
carriage, she was able to take leave of the old coachman,
and send back proper messages, with cheerful looks.
Of pleasant talk between the brother
and sister there was no end. Everything supplied
an amusement to the high glee of William’s mind,
and he was full of frolic and joke in the intervals
of their higher-toned subjects, all of which ended,
if they did not begin, in praise of the Thrush, conjectures
how she would be employed, schemes for an action with
some superior force, which (supposing the first lieutenant
out of the way, and William was not very merciful
to the first lieutenant) was to give himself the next
step as soon as possible, or speculations upon prize-money,
which was to be generously distributed at home, with
only the reservation of enough to make the little
cottage comfortable, in which he and Fanny were to
pass all their middle and later life together.
Fanny’s immediate concerns,
as far as they involved Mr. Crawford, made no part
of their conversation. William knew what had
passed, and from his heart lamented that his sister’s
feelings should be so cold towards a man whom he must
consider as the first of human characters; but he
was of an age to be all for love, and therefore unable
to blame; and knowing her wish on the subject, he
would not distress her by the slightest allusion.
She had reason to suppose herself
not yet forgotten by Mr. Crawford. She had heard
repeatedly from his sister within the three weeks
which had passed since their leaving Mansfield, and
in each letter there had been a few lines from himself,
warm and determined like his speeches. It was
a correspondence which Fanny found quite as unpleasant
as she had feared. Miss Crawford’s style
of writing, lively and affectionate, was itself an
evil, independent of what she was thus forced into
reading from the brother’s pen, for Edmund would
never rest till she had read the chief of the letter
to him; and then she had to listen to his admiration
of her language, and the warmth of her attachments.
There had, in fact, been so much of message, of allusion,
of recollection, so much of Mansfield in every letter,
that Fanny could not but suppose it meant for him to
hear; and to find herself forced into a purpose of
that kind, compelled into a correspondence which was
bringing her the addresses of the man she did not
love, and obliging her to administer to the adverse
passion of the man she did, was cruelly mortifying.
Here, too, her present removal promised advantage.
When no longer under the same roof with Edmund, she
trusted that Miss Crawford would have no motive for
writing strong enough to overcome the trouble, and
that at Portsmouth their correspondence would dwindle
into nothing.
With such thoughts as these, among
ten hundred others, Fanny proceeded in her journey
safely and cheerfully, and as expeditiously as could
rationally be hoped in the dirty month of February.
They entered Oxford, but she could take only a hasty
glimpse of Edmund’s college as they passed along,
and made no stop anywhere till they reached Newbury,
where a comfortable meal, uniting dinner and supper,
wound up the enjoyments and fatigues of the day.
The next morning saw them off again
at an early hour; and with no events, and no delays,
they regularly advanced, and were in the environs
of Portsmouth while there was yet daylight for Fanny
to look around her, and wonder at the new buildings.
They passed the drawbridge, and entered the town;
and the light was only beginning to fail as, guided
by William’s powerful voice, they were rattled
into a narrow street, leading from the High Street,
and drawn up before the door of a small house now inhabited
by Mr. Price.
Fanny was all agitation and flutter;
all hope and apprehension. The moment they stopped,
a trollopy-looking maidservant, seemingly in waiting
for them at the door, stepped forward, and more intent
on telling the news than giving them any help, immediately
began with, “The Thrush is gone out of harbour,
please sir, and one of the officers has been here to—”
She was interrupted by a fine tall boy of eleven years
old, who, rushing out of the house, pushed the maid
aside, and while William was opening the chaise-door
himself, called out, “You are just in time.
We have been looking for you this half-hour.
The Thrush went out of harbour this morning.
I saw her. It was a beautiful sight. And
they think she will have her orders in a day or two.
And Mr. Campbell was here at four o’clock to
ask for you: he has got one of the Thrush’s
boats, and is going off to her at six, and hoped you
would be here in time to go with him.”
A stare or two at Fanny, as William
helped her out of the carriage, was all the voluntary
notice which this brother bestowed; but he made no
objection to her kissing him, though still entirely
engaged in detailing farther particulars of the Thrush’s
going out of harbour, in which he had a strong right
of interest, being to commence his career of seamanship
in her at this very time.
Another moment and Fanny was in the
narrow entrance-passage of the house, and in her mother’s
arms, who met her there with looks of true kindness,
and with features which Fanny loved the more, because
they brought her aunt Bertram’s before her,
and there were her two sisters: Susan, a well-grown
fine girl of fourteen, and Betsey, the youngest of
the family, about five—both glad to see
her in their way, though with no advantage of manner
in receiving her. But manner Fanny did not want.
Would they but love her, she should be satisfied.
She was then taken into a parlour,
so small that her first conviction was of its being
only a passage-room to something better, and she stood
for a moment expecting to be invited on; but when
she saw there was no other door, and that there were
signs of habitation before her, she called back her
thoughts, reproved herself, and grieved lest they
should have been suspected. Her mother, however,
could not stay long enough to suspect anything.
She was gone again to the street-door, to welcome William.
“Oh! my dear William, how glad I am to see you.
But have you heard about the Thrush? She is gone
out of harbour already; three days before we had any
thought of it; and I do not know what I am to do about
Sam’s things, they will never be ready in time;
for she may have her orders to-morrow, perhaps.
It takes me quite unawares. And now you must
be off for Spithead too. Campbell has been here,
quite in a worry about you; and now what shall we do?
I thought to have had such a comfortable evening with
you, and here everything comes upon me at once.”
Her son answered cheerfully, telling
her that everything was always for the best; and making
light of his own inconvenience in being obliged to
hurry away so soon.
“To be sure, I had much rather
she had stayed in harbour, that I might have sat a
few hours with you in comfort; but as there is a boat
ashore, I had better go off at once, and there is
no help for it. Whereabouts does the Thrush
lay at Spithead? Near the Canopus? But
no matter; here’s Fanny in the parlour, and
why should we stay in the passage? Come, mother,
you have hardly looked at your own dear Fanny yet.”
In they both came, and Mrs. Price
having kindly kissed her daughter again, and commented
a little on her growth, began with very natural solicitude
to feel for their fatigues and wants as travellers.
“Poor dears! how tired you must
both be! and now, what will you have? I began
to think you would never come. Betsey and I have
been watching for you this half-hour. And when
did you get anything to eat? And what would you
like to have now? I could not tell whether you
would be for some meat, or only a dish of tea, after
your journey, or else I would have got something ready.
And now I am afraid Campbell will be here before
there is time to dress a steak, and we have no butcher
at hand. It is very inconvenient to have no butcher
in the street. We were better off in our last
house. Perhaps you would like some tea as soon
as it can be got.”
They both declared they should prefer
it to anything. “Then, Betsey, my dear,
run into the kitchen and see if Rebecca has put the
water on; and tell her to bring in the tea-things
as soon as she can. I wish we could get the bell
mended; but Betsey is a very handy little messenger.”
Betsey went with alacrity, proud to
shew her abilities before her fine new sister.
“Dear me!” continued the
anxious mother, “what a sad fire we have got,
and I dare say you are both starved with cold.
Draw your chair nearer, my dear. I cannot think
what Rebecca has been about. I am sure I told
her to bring some coals half an hour ago. Susan,
you should have taken care of the fire.”
“I was upstairs, mama, moving
my things,” said Susan, in a fearless, self-defending
tone, which startled Fanny. “You know you
had but just settled that my sister Fanny and I should
have the other room; and I could not get Rebecca to
give me any help.”
Farther discussion was prevented by
various bustles: first, the driver came to be
paid; then there was a squabble between Sam and Rebecca
about the manner of carrying up his sister’s
trunk, which he would manage all his own way; and
lastly, in walked Mr. Price himself, his own loud
voice preceding him, as with something of the oath
kind he kicked away his son’s port-manteau and
his daughter’s bandbox in the passage, and called
out for a candle; no candle was brought, however,
and he walked into the room.
Fanny with doubting feelings had risen
to meet him, but sank down again on finding herself
undistinguished in the dusk, and unthought of.
With a friendly shake of his son’s hand, and
an eager voice, he instantly began— “Ha!
welcome back, my boy. Glad to see you.
Have you heard the news? The Thrush went out
of harbour this morning. Sharp is the word, you
see! By G—, you are just in time!
The doctor has been here inquiring for you: he
has got one of the boats, and is to be off for Spithead
by six, so you had better go with him. I have
been to Turner’s about your mess; it is all
in a way to be done. I should not wonder if you
had your orders to-morrow: but you cannot sail
with this wind, if you are to cruise to the westward;
and Captain Walsh thinks you will certainly have a
cruise to the westward, with the Elephant. By
G—, I wish you may! But old Scholey
was saying, just now, that he thought you would be
sent first to the Texel. Well, well, we are
ready, whatever happens. But by G—,
you lost a fine sight by not being here in the morning
to see the Thrush go out of harbour! I would
not have been out of the way for a thousand pounds.
Old Scholey ran in at breakfast-time, to say she had
slipped her moorings and was coming out, I jumped up,
and made but two steps to the platform. If ever
there was a perfect beauty afloat, she is one; and
there she lays at Spithead, and anybody in England
would take her for an eight-and-twenty. I was
upon the platform two hours this afternoon looking
at her. She lays close to the Endymion, between
her and the Cleopatra, just to the eastward of the
sheer hulk.”
“Ha!” cried William, “that’s
just where I should have put her myself. It’s
the best berth at Spithead. But here is my sister,
sir; here is Fanny,” turning and leading her
forward; “it is so dark you do not see her.”
With an acknowledgment that he had
quite forgot her, Mr. Price now received his daughter;
and having given her a cordial hug, and observed that
she was grown into a woman, and he supposed would
be wanting a husband soon, seemed very much inclined
to forget her again. Fanny shrunk back to her
seat, with feelings sadly pained by his language and
his smell of spirits; and he talked on only to his
son, and only of the Thrush, though William, warmly
interested as he was in that subject, more than once
tried to make his father think of Fanny, and her long
absence and long journey.
After sitting some time longer, a
candle was obtained; but as there was still no appearance
of tea, nor, from Betsey’s reports from the
kitchen, much hope of any under a considerable period,
William determined to go and change his dress, and
make the necessary preparations for his removal on
board directly, that he might have his tea in comfort
afterwards.
As he left the room, two rosy-faced
boys, ragged and dirty, about eight and nine years
old, rushed into it just released from school, and
coming eagerly to see their sister, and tell that
the Thrush was gone out of harbour; Tom and Charles.
Charles had been born since Fanny’s going away,
but Tom she had often helped to nurse, and now felt
a particular pleasure in seeing again. Both were
kissed very tenderly, but Tom she wanted to keep by
her, to try to trace the features of the baby she
had loved, and talked to, of his infant preference
of herself. Tom, however, had no mind for such
treatment: he came home not to stand and be talked
to, but to run about and make a noise; and both boys
had soon burst from her, and slammed the parlour-door
till her temples ached.
She had now seen all that were at
home; there remained only two brothers between herself
and Susan, one of whom was a clerk in a public office
in London, and the other midshipman on board an Indiaman.
But though she had seen all the members of the
family, she had not yet heard all the noise
they could make. Another quarter of an hour brought
her a great deal more. William was soon calling
out from the landing-place of the second story for
his mother and for Rebecca. He was in distress
for something that he had left there, and did not
find again. A key was mislaid, Betsey accused
of having got at his new hat, and some slight, but
essential alteration of his uniform waistcoat, which
he had been promised to have done for him, entirely
neglected.
Mrs. Price, Rebecca, and Betsey all
went up to defend themselves, all talking together,
but Rebecca loudest, and the job was to be done as
well as it could in a great hurry; William trying
in vain to send Betsey down again, or keep her from
being troublesome where she was; the whole of which,
as almost every door in the house was open, could be
plainly distinguished in the parlour, except when
drowned at intervals by the superior noise of Sam,
Tom, and Charles chasing each other up and down stairs,
and tumbling about and hallooing.
Fanny was almost stunned. The
smallness of the house and thinness of the walls brought
everything so close to her, that, added to the fatigue
of her journey, and all her recent agitation, she
hardly knew how to bear it. Within the room
all was tranquil enough, for Susan having disappeared
with the others, there were soon only her father and
herself remaining; and he, taking out a newspaper,
the accustomary loan of a neighbour, applied himself
to studying it, without seeming to recollect her existence.
The solitary candle was held between himself and the
paper, without any reference to her possible convenience;
but she had nothing to do, and was glad to have the
light screened from her aching head, as she sat in
bewildered, broken, sorrowful contemplation.
She was at home. But, alas!
it was not such a home, she had not such a welcome,
as—she checked herself; she was unreasonable.
What right had she to be of importance to her family?
She could have none, so long lost sight of!
William’s concerns must be dearest, they always
had been, and he had every right. Yet to have
so little said or asked about herself, to have scarcely
an inquiry made after Mansfield! It did pain
her to have Mansfield forgotten; the friends who had
done so much—the dear, dear friends!
But here, one subject swallowed up all the rest.
Perhaps it must be so. The destination of the
Thrush must be now preeminently interesting.
A day or two might shew the difference. She
only was to blame. Yet she thought it would not
have been so at Mansfield. No, in her uncle’s
house there would have been a consideration of times
and seasons, a regulation of subject, a propriety,
an attention towards everybody which there was not
here.
The only interruption which thoughts
like these received for nearly half an hour was from
a sudden burst of her father’s, not at all calculated
to compose them. At a more than ordinary pitch
of thumping and hallooing in the passage, he exclaimed,
“Devil take those young dogs! How they
are singing out! Ay, Sam’s voice louder
than all the rest! That boy is fit for a boatswain.
Holla, you there! Sam, stop your confounded
pipe, or I shall be after you.”
This threat was so palpably disregarded,
that though within five minutes afterwards the three
boys all burst into the room together and sat down,
Fanny could not consider it as a proof of anything
more than their being for the time thoroughly fagged,
which their hot faces and panting breaths seemed to
prove, especially as they were still kicking each
other’s shins, and hallooing out at sudden starts
immediately under their father’s eye.
The next opening of the door brought
something more welcome: it was for the tea-things,
which she had begun almost to despair of seeing that
evening. Susan and an attendant girl, whose
inferior appearance informed Fanny, to her great surprise,
that she had previously seen the upper servant, brought
in everything necessary for the meal; Susan looking,
as she put the kettle on the fire and glanced at her
sister, as if divided between the agreeable triumph
of shewing her activity and usefulness, and the dread
of being thought to demean herself by such an office.
“She had been into the kitchen,” she said,
“to hurry Sally and help make the toast, and
spread the bread and butter, or she did not know when
they should have got tea, and she was sure her sister
must want something after her journey.”
Fanny was very thankful. She
could not but own that she should be very glad of
a little tea, and Susan immediately set about making
it, as if pleased to have the employment all to herself;
and with only a little unnecessary bustle, and some
few injudicious attempts at keeping her brothers in
better order than she could, acquitted herself very
well. Fanny’s spirit was as much refreshed
as her body; her head and heart were soon the better
for such well-timed kindness. Susan had an open,
sensible countenance; she was like William, and Fanny
hoped to find her like him in disposition and goodwill
towards herself.
In this more placid state of things
William reentered, followed not far behind by his
mother and Betsey. He, complete in his lieutenant’s
uniform, looking and moving all the taller, firmer,
and more graceful for it, and with the happiest smile
over his face, walked up directly to Fanny, who, rising
from her seat, looked at him for a moment in speechless
admiration, and then threw her arms round his neck
to sob out her various emotions of pain and pleasure.
Anxious not to appear unhappy, she
soon recovered herself; and wiping away her tears,
was able to notice and admire all the striking parts
of his dress; listening with reviving spirits to his
cheerful hopes of being on shore some part of every
day before they sailed, and even of getting her to
Spithead to see the sloop.
The next bustle brought in Mr. Campbell,
the surgeon of the Thrush, a very well-behaved young
man, who came to call for his friend, and for whom
there was with some contrivance found a chair, and
with some hasty washing of the young tea-maker’s,
a cup and saucer; and after another quarter of an
hour of earnest talk between the gentlemen, noise
rising upon noise, and bustle upon bustle, men and
boys at last all in motion together, the moment came
for setting off; everything was ready, William took
leave, and all of them were gone; for the three boys,
in spite of their mother’s entreaty, determined
to see their brother and Mr. Campbell to the sally-port;
and Mr. Price walked off at the same time to carry
back his neighbour’s newspaper.
Something like tranquillity might
now be hoped for; and accordingly, when Rebecca had
been prevailed on to carry away the tea-things, and
Mrs. Price had walked about the room some time looking
for a shirt-sleeve, which Betsey at last hunted out
from a drawer in the kitchen, the small party of females
were pretty well composed, and the mother having lamented
again over the impossibility of getting Sam ready
in time, was at leisure to think of her eldest daughter
and the friends she had come from.
A few inquiries began: but one
of the earliest—“How did sister Bertram
manage about her servants?” “Was she
as much plagued as herself to get tolerable servants?”—
soon led her mind away from Northamptonshire, and fixed
it on her own domestic grievances, and the shocking
character of all the Portsmouth servants, of whom
she believed her own two were the very worst, engrossed
her completely. The Bertrams were all forgotten
in detailing the faults of Rebecca, against whom Susan
had also much to depose, and little Betsey a great
deal more, and who did seem so thoroughly without
a single recommendation, that Fanny could not help
modestly presuming that her mother meant to part with
her when her year was up.
“Her year!” cried Mrs.
Price; “I am sure I hope I shall be rid of her
before she has staid a year, for that will not be
up till November. Servants are come to such
a pass, my dear, in Portsmouth, that it is quite a
miracle if one keeps them more than half a year.
I have no hope of ever being settled; and if I was
to part with Rebecca, I should only get something
worse. And yet I do not think I am a very difficult
mistress to please; and I am sure the place is easy
enough, for there is always a girl under her, and
I often do half the work myself.”
Fanny was silent; but not from being
convinced that there might not be a remedy found for
some of these evils. As she now sat looking at
Betsey, she could not but think particularly of another
sister, a very pretty little girl, whom she had left
there not much younger when she went into Northamptonshire,
who had died a few years afterwards. There had
been something remarkably amiable about her.
Fanny in those early days had preferred her to Susan;
and when the news of her death had at last reached
Mansfield, had for a short time been quite afflicted.
The sight of Betsey brought the image of little Mary
back again, but she would not have pained her mother
by alluding to her for the world. While considering
her with these ideas, Betsey, at a small distance,
was holding out something to catch her eyes, meaning
to screen it at the same time from Susan’s.
“What have you got there, my
love?” said Fanny; “come and shew it to
me.”
It was a silver knife. Up jumped
Susan, claiming it as her own, and trying to get it
away; but the child ran to her mother’s protection,
and Susan could only reproach, which she did very
warmly, and evidently hoping to interest Fanny on
her side. “It was very hard that she was
not to have her own knife; it was her own knife;
little sister Mary had left it to her upon her deathbed,
and she ought to have had it to keep herself long ago.
But mama kept it from her, and was always letting Betsey
get hold of it; and the end of it would be that Betsey
would spoil it, and get it for her own, though mama
had promised her that Betsey should not have
it in her own hands.”
Fanny was quite shocked. Every
feeling of duty, honour, and tenderness was wounded
by her sister’s speech and her mother’s
reply.
“Now, Susan,” cried Mrs.
Price, in a complaining voice, “now, how can
you be so cross? You are always quarrelling
about that knife. I wish you would not be so
quarrelsome. Poor little Betsey; how cross Susan
is to you! But you should not have taken it
out, my dear, when I sent you to the drawer.
You know I told you not to touch it, because Susan
is so cross about it. I must hide it another
time, Betsey. Poor Mary little thought it would
be such a bone of contention when she gave it me to
keep, only two hours before she died. Poor little
soul! she could but just speak to be heard, and she
said so prettily, ’Let sister Susan have my
knife, mama, when I am dead and buried.’
Poor little dear! she was so fond of it, Fanny, that
she would have it lay by her in bed, all through her
illness. It was the gift of her good godmother,
old Mrs. Admiral Maxwell, only six weeks before she
was taken for death. Poor little sweet creature!
Well, she was taken away from evil to come.
My own Betsey” (fondling her), “you
have not the luck of such a good godmother. Aunt
Norris lives too far off to think of such little people
as you.”
Fanny had indeed nothing to convey
from aunt Norris, but a message to say she hoped that
her god-daughter was a good girl, and learnt her book.
There had been at one moment a slight murmur in the
drawing-room at Mansfield Park about sending her a
prayer-book; but no second sound had been heard of
such a purpose. Mrs. Norris, however, had gone
home and taken down two old prayer-books of her husband
with that idea; but, upon examination, the ardour
of generosity went off. One was found to have
too small a print for a child’s eyes, and the
other to be too cumbersome for her to carry about.
Fanny, fatigued and fatigued again,
was thankful to accept the first invitation of going
to bed; and before Betsey had finished her cry at
being allowed to sit up only one hour extraordinary
in honour of sister, she was off, leaving all below
in confusion and noise again; the boys begging for
toasted cheese, her father calling out for his rum
and water, and Rebecca never where she ought to be.
There was nothing to raise her spirits
in the confined and scantily furnished chamber that
she was to share with Susan. The smallness of
the rooms above and below, indeed, and the narrowness
of the passage and staircase, struck her beyond her
imagination. She soon learned to think with
respect of her own little attic at Mansfield Park,
in that house reckoned too small for anybody’s
comfort.