Seven weeks of the two months were
very nearly gone, when the one letter, the letter
from Edmund, so long expected, was put into Fanny’s
hands. As she opened, and saw its length, she
prepared herself for a minute detail of happiness
and a profusion of love and praise towards the fortunate
creature who was now mistress of his fate. These
were the contents—
“My Dear Fanny,—Excuse
me that I have not written before. Crawford told
me that you were wishing to hear from me, but I found
it impossible to write from London, and persuaded
myself that you would understand my silence.
Could I have sent a few happy lines, they should not
have been wanting, but nothing of that nature was ever
in my power. I am returned to Mansfield in a
less assured state than when I left it. My hopes
are much weaker. You are probably aware of this
already. So very fond of you as Miss Crawford
is, it is most natural that she should tell you enough
of her own feelings to furnish a tolerable guess at
mine. I will not be prevented, however, from
making my own communication. Our confidences
in you need not clash. I ask no questions.
There is something soothing in the idea that we have
the same friend, and that whatever unhappy differences
of opinion may exist between us, we are united in
our love of you. It will be a comfort to me
to tell you how things now are, and what are my present
plans, if plans I can be said to have. I have
been returned since Saturday. I was three weeks
in London, and saw her (for London) very often.
I had every attention from the Frasers that could
be reasonably expected. I dare say I was not
reasonable in carrying with me hopes of an intercourse
at all like that of Mansfield. It was her manner,
however, rather than any unfrequency of meeting.
Had she been different when I did see her, I should
have made no complaint, but from the very first she
was altered: my first reception was so unlike
what I had hoped, that I had almost resolved on leaving
London again directly. I need not particularise.
You know the weak side of her character, and may imagine
the sentiments and expressions which were torturing
me. She was in high spirits, and surrounded by
those who were giving all the support of their own
bad sense to her too lively mind. I do not like
Mrs. Fraser. She is a cold-hearted, vain woman,
who has married entirely from convenience, and though
evidently unhappy in her marriage, places her disappointment
not to faults of judgment, or temper, or disproportion
of age, but to her being, after all, less affluent
than many of her acquaintance, especially than her
sister, Lady Stornaway, and is the determined supporter
of everything mercenary and ambitious, provided it
be only mercenary and ambitious enough. I look
upon her intimacy with those two sisters as the greatest
misfortune of her life and mine. They have been
leading her astray for years. Could she be detached
from them!— and sometimes I do not despair
of it, for the affection appears to me principally
on their side. They are very fond of her; but
I am sure she does not love them as she loves you.
When I think of her great attachment to you, indeed,
and the whole of her judicious, upright conduct as
a sister, she appears a very different creature, capable
of everything noble, and I am ready to blame myself
for a too harsh construction of a playful manner.
I cannot give her up, Fanny. She is the only
woman in the world whom I could ever think of as a
wife. If I did not believe that she had some
regard for me, of course I should not say this, but
I do believe it. I am convinced that she is not
without a decided preference. I have no jealousy
of any individual. It is the influence of the
fashionable world altogether that I am jealous of.
It is the habits of wealth that I fear. Her ideas
are not higher than her own fortune may warrant, but
they are beyond what our incomes united could authorise.
There is comfort, however, even here. I could
better bear to lose her because not rich enough, than
because of my profession. That would only prove
her affection not equal to sacrifices, which, in fact,
I am scarcely justified in asking; and, if I am refused,
that, I think, will be the honest motive. Her
prejudices, I trust, are not so strong as they were.
You have my thoughts exactly as they arise, my dear
Fanny; perhaps they are sometimes contradictory, but
it will not be a less faithful picture of my mind.
Having once begun, it is a pleasure to me to tell
you all I feel. I cannot give her up. Connected
as we already are, and, I hope, are to be, to give
up Mary Crawford would be to give up the society of
some of those most dear to me; to banish myself from
the very houses and friends whom, under any other distress,
I should turn to for consolation. The loss of
Mary I must consider as comprehending the loss of
Crawford and of Fanny. Were it a decided thing,
an actual refusal, I hope I should know how to bear
it, and how to endeavour to weaken her hold on my
heart, and in the course of a few years—
but I am writing nonsense. Were I refused, I
must bear it; and till I am, I can never cease to
try for her. This is the truth. The only
question is how? What may be the likeliest
means? I have sometimes thought of going to
London again after Easter, and sometimes resolved on
doing nothing till she returns to Mansfield.
Even now, she speaks with pleasure of being in Mansfield
in June; but June is at a great distance, and I believe
I shall write to her. I have nearly determined
on explaining myself by letter. To be at an
early certainty is a material object. My present
state is miserably irksome. Considering everything,
I think a letter will be decidedly the best method
of explanation. I shall be able to write much
that I could not say, and shall be giving her time
for reflection before she resolves on her answer,
and I am less afraid of the result of reflection than
of an immediate hasty impulse; I think I am.
My greatest danger would lie in her consulting Mrs.
Fraser, and I at a distance unable to help my own
cause. A letter exposes to all the evil of consultation,
and where the mind is anything short of perfect decision,
an adviser may, in an unlucky moment, lead it to do
what it may afterwards regret. I must think
this matter over a little. This long letter,
full of my own concerns alone, will be enough to tire
even the friendship of a Fanny. The last time
I saw Crawford was at Mrs. Fraser’s party.
I am more and more satisfied with all that I see and
hear of him. There is not a shadow of wavering.
He thoroughly knows his own mind, and acts up to
his resolutions: an inestimable quality.
I could not see him and my eldest sister in the same
room without recollecting what you once told me, and
I acknowledge that they did not meet as friends.
There was marked coolness on her side. They
scarcely spoke. I saw him draw back surprised,
and I was sorry that Mrs. Rushworth should resent any
former supposed slight to Miss Bertram. You will
wish to hear my opinion of Maria’s degree of
comfort as a wife. There is no appearance of
unhappiness. I hope they get on pretty well
together. I dined twice in Wimpole Street, and
might have been there oftener, but it is mortifying
to be with Rushworth as a brother. Julia seems
to enjoy London exceedingly. I had little enjoyment
there, but have less here. We are not a lively
party. You are very much wanted. I miss
you more than I can express. My mother desires
her best love, and hopes to hear from you soon.
She talks of you almost every hour, and I am sorry
to find how many weeks more she is likely to be without
you. My father means to fetch you himself, but
it will not be till after Easter, when he has business
in town. You are happy at Portsmouth, I hope,
but this must not be a yearly visit. I want you
at home, that I may have your opinion about Thornton
Lacey. I have little heart for extensive improvements
till I know that it will ever have a mistress.
I think I shall certainly write. It is quite
settled that the Grants go to Bath; they leave Mansfield
on Monday. I am glad of it. I am not comfortable
enough to be fit for anybody; but your aunt seems
to feel out of luck that such an article of Mansfield
news should fall to my pen instead of hers.—Yours
ever, my dearest Fanny.”
“I never will, no, I certainly
never will wish for a letter again,” was Fanny’s
secret declaration as she finished this. “What
do they bring but disappointment and sorrow?
Not till after Easter! How shall I bear it?
And my poor aunt talking of me every hour!”
Fanny checked the tendency of these
thoughts as well as she could, but she was within
half a minute of starting the idea that Sir Thomas
was quite unkind, both to her aunt and to herself.
As for the main subject of the letter, there was
nothing in that to soothe irritation. She was
almost vexed into displeasure and anger against Edmund.
“There is no good in this delay,” said
she. “Why is not it settled? He
is blinded, and nothing will open his eyes; nothing
can, after having had truths before him so long in
vain. He will marry her, and be poor and miserable.
God grant that her influence do not make him cease
to be respectable!” She looked over the letter
again. “‘So very fond of me!’
’tis nonsense all. She loves nobody but
herself and her brother. Her friends leading
her astray for years! She is quite as likely
to have led them astray. They have all,
perhaps, been corrupting one another; but if they
are so much fonder of her than she is of them, she
is the less likely to have been hurt, except by their
flattery. ’The only woman in the world
whom he could ever think of as a wife.’
I firmly believe it. It is an attachment to
govern his whole life. Accepted or refused, his
heart is wedded to her for ever. ’The loss
of Mary I must consider as comprehending the loss
of Crawford and Fanny.’ Edmund, you do
not know me. The families would never be connected
if you did not connect them! Oh! write, write.
Finish it at once. Let there be an end of this
suspense. Fix, commit, condemn yourself.”
Such sensations, however, were too
near akin to resentment to be long guiding Fanny’s
soliloquies. She was soon more softened and sorrowful.
His warm regard, his kind expressions, his confidential
treatment, touched her strongly. He was only
too good to everybody. It was a letter, in short,
which she would not but have had for the world, and
which could never be valued enough. This was
the end of it.
Everybody at all addicted to letter-writing,
without having much to say, which will include a large
proportion of the female world at least, must feel
with Lady Bertram that she was out of luck in having
such a capital piece of Mansfield news as the certainty
of the Grants going to Bath, occur at a time when
she could make no advantage of it, and will admit
that it must have been very mortifying to her to see
it fall to the share of her thankless son, and treated
as concisely as possible at the end of a long letter,
instead of having it to spread over the largest part
of a page of her own. For though Lady Bertram
rather shone in the epistolary line, having early
in her marriage, from the want of other employment,
and the circumstance of Sir Thomas’s being in
Parliament, got into the way of making and keeping
correspondents, and formed for herself a very creditable,
common-place, amplifying style, so that a very little
matter was enough for her: she could not do
entirely without any; she must have something to write
about, even to her niece; and being so soon to lose
all the benefit of Dr. Grant’s gouty symptoms
and Mrs. Grant’s morning calls, it was very hard
upon her to be deprived of one of the last epistolary
uses she could put them to.
There was a rich amends, however,
preparing for her. Lady Bertram’s hour
of good luck came. Within a few days from the
receipt of Edmund’s letter, Fanny had one from
her aunt, beginning thus—
“My Dear Fanny,—I
take up my pen to communicate some very alarming intelligence,
which I make no doubt will give you much concern”.
This was a great deal better than
to have to take up the pen to acquaint her with all
the particulars of the Grants’ intended journey,
for the present intelligence was of a nature to promise
occupation for the pen for many days to come, being
no less than the dangerous illness of her eldest son,
of which they had received notice by express a few
hours before.
Tom had gone from London with a party
of young men to Newmarket, where a neglected fall
and a good deal of drinking had brought on a fever;
and when the party broke up, being unable to move,
had been left by himself at the house of one of these
young men to the comforts of sickness and solitude,
and the attendance only of servants. Instead
of being soon well enough to follow his friends, as
he had then hoped, his disorder increased considerably,
and it was not long before he thought so ill of himself
as to be as ready as his physician to have a letter
despatched to Mansfield.
“This distressing intelligence,
as you may suppose,” observed her ladyship,
after giving the substance of it, “has agitated
us exceedingly, and we cannot prevent ourselves from
being greatly alarmed and apprehensive for the poor
invalid, whose state Sir Thomas fears may be very
critical; and Edmund kindly proposes attending his
brother immediately, but I am happy to add that Sir
Thomas will not leave me on this distressing occasion,
as it would be too trying for me. We shall greatly
miss Edmund in our small circle, but I trust and hope
he will find the poor invalid in a less alarming state
than might be apprehended, and that he will be able
to bring him to Mansfield shortly, which Sir Thomas
proposes should be done, and thinks best on every
account, and I flatter myself the poor sufferer will
soon be able to bear the removal without material
inconvenience or injury. As I have little doubt
of your feeling for us, my dear Fanny, under these
distressing circumstances, I will write again very
soon.”
Fanny’s feelings on the occasion
were indeed considerably more warm and genuine than
her aunt’s style of writing. She felt truly
for them all. Tom dangerously ill, Edmund gone
to attend him, and the sadly small party remaining
at Mansfield, were cares to shut out every other care,
or almost every other. She could just find selfishness
enough to wonder whether Edmund had written
to Miss Crawford before this summons came, but no sentiment
dwelt long with her that was not purely affectionate
and disinterestedly anxious. Her aunt did not
neglect her: she wrote again and again; they
were receiving frequent accounts from Edmund, and
these accounts were as regularly transmitted to Fanny,
in the same diffuse style, and the same medley of
trusts, hopes, and fears, all following and producing
each other at haphazard. It was a sort of playing
at being frightened. The sufferings which Lady
Bertram did not see had little power over her fancy;
and she wrote very comfortably about agitation, and
anxiety, and poor invalids, till Tom was actually
conveyed to Mansfield, and her own eyes had beheld
his altered appearance. Then a letter which she
had been previously preparing for Fanny was finished
in a different style, in the language of real feeling
and alarm; then she wrote as she might have spoken.
“He is just come, my dear Fanny, and is taken
upstairs; and I am so shocked to see him, that I do
not know what to do. I am sure he has been very
ill. Poor Tom! I am quite grieved for him,
and very much frightened, and so is Sir Thomas; and
how glad I should be if you were here to comfort me.
But Sir Thomas hopes he will be better to-morrow,
and says we must consider his journey.”
The real solicitude now awakened in
the maternal bosom was not soon over. Tom’s
extreme impatience to be removed to Mansfield, and
experience those comforts of home and family which
had been little thought of in uninterrupted health,
had probably induced his being conveyed thither too
early, as a return of fever came on, and for a week
he was in a more alarming state than ever. They
were all very seriously frightened. Lady Bertram
wrote her daily terrors to her niece, who might now
be said to live upon letters, and pass all her time
between suffering from that of to-day and looking
forward to to-morrow’s. Without any particular
affection for her eldest cousin, her tenderness of
heart made her feel that she could not spare him,
and the purity of her principles added yet a keener
solicitude, when she considered how little useful,
how little self-denying his life had (apparently) been.
Susan was her only companion and listener
on this, as on more common occasions. Susan
was always ready to hear and to sympathise.
Nobody else could be interested in so remote an evil
as illness in a family above an hundred miles off;
not even Mrs. Price, beyond a brief question or two,
if she saw her daughter with a letter in her hand,
and now and then the quiet observation of, “My
poor sister Bertram must be in a great deal of trouble.”
So long divided and so differently
situated, the ties of blood were little more than
nothing. An attachment, originally as tranquil
as their tempers, was now become a mere name.
Mrs. Price did quite as much for Lady Bertram as
Lady Bertram would have done for Mrs. Price.
Three or four Prices might have been swept away, any
or all except Fanny and William, and Lady Bertram
would have thought little about it; or perhaps might
have caught from Mrs. Norris’s lips the cant
of its being a very happy thing and a great blessing
to their poor dear sister Price to have them so well
provided for.