Catherine’s disposition was
not naturally sedentary, nor had her habits been ever
very industrious; but whatever might hitherto have
been her defects of that sort, her mother could not
but perceive them now to be greatly increased.
She could neither sit still nor employ herself for
ten minutes together, walking round the garden and
orchard again and again, as if nothing but motion was
voluntary; and it seemed as if she could even walk
about the house rather than remain fixed for any time
in the parlour. Her loss of spirits was a yet
greater alteration. In her rambling and her idleness
she might only be a caricature of herself; but in her
silence and sadness she was the very reverse of all
that she had been before.
For two days Mrs. Morland allowed
it to pass even without a hint; but when a third night’s
rest had neither restored her cheerfulness, improved
her in useful activity, nor given her a greater inclination
for needlework, she could no longer refrain from the
gentle reproof of, “My dear Catherine, I am
afraid you are growing quite a fine lady. I
do not know when poor Richard’s cravats would
be done, if he had no friend but you. Your head
runs too much upon Bath; but there is a time for everything
— a time for balls and plays, and a time
for work. You have had a long run of amusement,
and now you must try to be useful.”
Catherine took up her work directly,
saying, in a dejected voice, that “her head
did not run upon Bath — much.”
“Then you are fretting about
General Tilney, and that is very simple of you; for
ten to one whether you ever see him again. You
should never fret about trifles.” After
a short silence — “I hope, my Catherine,
you are not getting out of humour with home because
it is not so grand as Northanger. That would
be turning your visit into an evil indeed. Wherever
you are you should always be contented, but especially
at home, because there you must spend the most of
your time. I did not quite like, at breakfast,
to hear you talk so much about the French bread at
Northanger.”
“I am sure I do not care about
the bread. it is all the same to me what I eat.”
“There is a very clever essay
in one of the books upstairs upon much such a subject,
about young girls that have been spoilt for home by
great acquaintance — The Mirror, I think.
I will look it out for you some day or other, because
I am sure it will do you good.”
Catherine said no more, and, with
an endeavour to do right, applied to her work; but,
after a few minutes, sunk again, without knowing it
herself, into languor and listlessness, moving herself
in her chair, from the irritation of weariness, much
oftener than she moved her needle. Mrs. Morland
watched the progress of this relapse; and seeing,
in her daughter’s absent and dissatisfied look,
the full proof of that repining spirit to which she
had now begun to attribute her want of cheerfulness,
hastily left the room to fetch the book in question,
anxious to lose no time in attacking so dreadful a
malady. It was some time before she could find
what she looked for; and other family matters occurring
to detain her, a quarter of an hour had elapsed ere
she returned downstairs with the volume from which
so much was hoped. Her avocations above having
shut out all noise but what she created herself, she
knew not that a visitor had arrived within the last
few minutes, till, on entering the room, the first
object she beheld was a young man whom she had never
seen before. With a look of much respect, he
immediately rose, and being introduced to her by her
conscious daughter as “Mr. Henry Tilney,”
with the embarrassment of real sensibility began to
apologize for his appearance there, acknowledging that
after what had passed he had little right to expect
a welcome at Fullerton, and stating his impatience
to be assured of Miss Morland’s having reached
her home in safety, as the cause of his intrusion.
He did not address himself to an uncandid judge or
a resentful heart. Far from comprehending him
or his sister in their father’s misconduct,
Mrs. Morland had been always kindly disposed towards
each, and instantly, pleased by his appearance, received
him with the simple professions of unaffected benevolence;
thanking him for such an attention to her daughter,
assuring him that the friends of her children were
always welcome there, and entreating him to say not
another word of the past.
He was not ill-inclined to obey this
request, for, though his heart was greatly relieved
by such unlooked-for mildness, it was not just at
that moment in his power to say anything to the purpose.
Returning in silence to his seat, therefore, he remained
for some minutes most civilly answering all Mrs. Morland’s
common remarks about the weather and roads.
Catherine meanwhile — the anxious, agitated,
happy, feverish Catherine — said not a word;
but her glowing cheek and brightened eye made her
mother trust that this good-natured visit would at
least set her heart at ease for a time, and gladly
therefore did she lay aside the first volume of The
Mirror for a future hour.
Desirous of Mr. Morland’s assistance,
as well in giving encouragement, as in finding conversation
for her guest, whose embarrassment on his father’s
account she earnestly pitied, Mrs. Morland had very
early dispatched one of the children to summon him;
but Mr. Morland was from home — and being
thus without any support, at the end of a quarter
of an hour she had nothing to say. After a couple
of minutes’ unbroken silence, Henry, turning
to Catherine for the first time since her mother’s
entrance, asked her, with sudden alacrity, if Mr.
and Mrs. Allen were now at Fullerton? And on
developing, from amidst all her perplexity of words
in reply, the meaning, which one short syllable would
have given, immediately expressed his intention of
paying his respects to them, and, with a rising colour,
asked her if she would have the goodness to show him
the way. “You may see the house from this
window, sir,” was information on Sarah’s
side, which produced only a bow of acknowledgment
from the gentleman, and a silencing nod from her mother;
for Mrs. Morland, thinking it probable, as a secondary
consideration in his wish of waiting on their worthy
neighbours, that he might have some explanation to
give of his father’s behaviour, which it must
be more pleasant for him to communicate only to Catherine,
would not on any account prevent her accompanying
him. They began their walk, and Mrs. Morland
was not entirely mistaken in his object in wishing
it. Some explanation on his father’s account
he had to give; but his first purpose was to explain
himself, and before they reached Mr. Allen’s
grounds he had done it so well that Catherine did
not think it could ever be repeated too often.
She was assured of his affection; and that heart
in return was solicited, which, perhaps, they pretty
equally knew was already entirely his own; for, though
Henry was now sincerely attached to her, though he
felt and delighted in all the excellencies of her
character and truly loved her society, I must confess
that his affection originated in nothing better than
gratitude, or, in other words, that a persuasion of
her partiality for him had been the only cause of giving
her a serious thought. It is a new circumstance
in romance, I acknowledge, and dreadfully derogatory
of an heroine’s dignity; but if it be as new
in common life, the credit of a wild imagination will
at least be all my own.
A very short visit to Mrs. Allen,
in which Henry talked at random, without sense or
connection, and Catherine, rapt in the contemplation
of her own unutterable happiness, scarcely opened her
lips, dismissed them to the ecstasies of another tete-a-tete;
and before it was suffered to close, she was enabled
to judge how far he was sanctioned by parental authority
in his present application. On his return from
Woodston, two days before, he had been met near the
abbey by his impatient father, hastily informed in
angry terms of Miss Morland’s departure, and
ordered to think of her no more.
Such was the permission upon which
he had now offered her his hand. The affrighted
Catherine, amidst all the terrors of expectation, as
she listened to this account, could not but rejoice
in the kind caution with which Henry had saved her
from the necessity of a conscientious rejection, by
engaging her faith before he mentioned the subject;
and as he proceeded to give the particulars, and explain
the motives of his father’s conduct, her feelings
soon hardened into even a triumphant delight.
The general had had nothing to accuse her of, nothing
to lay to her charge, but her being the involuntary,
unconscious object of a deception which his pride could
not pardon, and which a better pride would have been
ashamed to own. She was guilty only of being
less rich than he had supposed her to be. Under
a mistaken persuasion of her possessions and claims,
he had courted her acquaintance in Bath, solicited
her company at Northanger, and designed her for his
daughter-in-law. On discovering his error, to
turn her from the house seemed the best, though to
his feelings an inadequate proof of his resentment
towards herself, and his contempt of her family.
John Thorpe had first misled him.
The general, perceiving his son one night at the
theatre to be paying considerable attention to Miss
Morland, had accidentally inquired of Thorpe if he
knew more of her than her name. Thorpe, most
happy to be on speaking terms with a man of General
Tilney’s importance, had been joyfully and proudly
communicative; and being at that time not only in daily
expectation of Morland’s engaging Isabella, but
likewise pretty well resolved upon marrying Catherine
himself, his vanity induced him to represent the family
as yet more wealthy than his vanity and avarice had
made him believe them. With whomsoever he was,
or was likely to be connected, his own consequence
always required that theirs should be great, and as
his intimacy with any acquaintance grew, so regularly
grew their fortune. The expectations of his
friend Morland, therefore, from the first overrated,
had ever since his introduction to Isabella been gradually
increasing; and by merely adding twice as much for
the grandeur of the moment, by doubling what he chose
to think the amount of Mr. Morland’s preferment,
trebling his private fortune, bestowing a rich aunt,
and sinking half the children, he was able to represent
the whole family to the general in a most respectable
light. For Catherine, however, the peculiar
object of the general’s curiosity, and his own
speculations, he had yet something more in reserve,
and the ten or fifteen thousand pounds which her father
could give her would be a pretty addition to Mr. Allen’s
estate. Her intimacy there had made him seriously
determine on her being handsomely legacied hereafter;
and to speak of her therefore as the almost acknowledged
future heiress of Fullerton naturally followed.
Upon such intelligence the general had proceeded;
for never had it occurred to him to doubt its authority.
Thorpe’s interest in the family, by his sister’s
approaching connection with one of its members, and
his own views on another (circumstances of which he
boasted with almost equal openness), seemed sufficient
vouchers for his truth; and to these were added the
absolute facts of the Allens being wealthy and childless,
of Miss Morland’s being under their care, and
— as soon as his acquaintance allowed him
to judge — of their treating her with parental
kindness. His resolution was soon formed.
Already had he discerned a liking towards Miss Morland
in the countenance of his son; and thankful for Mr.
Thorpe’s communication, he almost instantly
determined to spare no pains in weakening his boasted
interest and ruining his dearest hopes. Catherine
herself could not be more ignorant at the time of all
this, than his own children. Henry and Eleanor,
perceiving nothing in her situation likely to engage
their father’s particular respect, had seen
with astonishment the suddenness, continuance, and
extent of his attention; and though latterly, from
some hints which had accompanied an almost positive
command to his son of doing everything in his power
to attach her, Henry was convinced of his father’s
believing it to be an advantageous connection, it was
not till the late explanation at Northanger that they
had the smallest idea of the false calculations which
had hurried him on. That they were false, the
general had learnt from the very person who had suggested
them, from Thorpe himself, whom he had chanced to meet
again in town, and who, under the influence of exactly
opposite feelings, irritated by Catherine’s
refusal, and yet more by the failure of a very recent
endeavour to accomplish a reconciliation between Morland
and Isabella, convinced that they were separated forever,
and spurning a friendship which could be no longer
serviceable, hastened to contradict all that he had
said before to the advantage of the Morlands —
confessed himself to have been totally mistaken in
his opinion of their circumstances and character, misled
by the rhodomontade of his friend to believe his father
a man of substance and credit, whereas the transactions
of the two or three last weeks proved him to be neither;
for after coming eagerly forward on the first overture
of a marriage between the families, with the most
liberal proposals, he had, on being brought to the
point by the shrewdness of the relator, been constrained
to acknowledge himself incapable of giving the young
people even a decent support. They were, in
fact, a necessitous family; numerous, too, almost beyond
example; by no means respected in their own neighbourhood,
as he had lately had particular opportunities of discovering;
aiming at a style of life which their fortune could
not warrant; seeking to better themselves by wealthy
connections; a forward, bragging, scheming race.
The terrified general pronounced the
name of Allen with an inquiring look; and here too
Thorpe had learnt his error. The Allens, he
believed, had lived near them too long, and he knew
the young man on whom the Fullerton estate must devolve.
The general needed no more. Enraged with almost
everybody in the world but himself, he set out the
next day for the abbey, where his performances have
been seen.
I leave it to my reader’s sagacity
to determine how much of all this it was possible
for Henry to communicate at this time to Catherine,
how much of it he could have learnt from his father,
in what points his own conjectures might assist him,
and what portion must yet remain to be told in a letter
from James. I have united for their case what
they must divide for mine. Catherine, at any
rate, heard enough to feel that in suspecting General
Tilney of either murdering or shutting up his wife,
she had scarcely sinned against his character, or
magnified his cruelty.
Henry, in having such things to relate
of his father, was almost as pitiable as in their
first avowal to himself. He blushed for the
narrow-minded counsel which he was obliged to expose.
The conversation between them at Northanger had been
of the most unfriendly kind. Henry’s indignation
on hearing how Catherine had been treated, on comprehending
his father’s views, and being ordered to acquiesce
in them, had been open and bold. The general,
accustomed on every ordinary occasion to give the law
in his family, prepared for no reluctance but of feeling,
no opposing desire that should dare to clothe itself
in words, could ill brook the opposition of his son,
steady as the sanction of reason and the dictate of
conscience could make it. But, in such a cause,
his anger, though it must shock, could not intimidate
Henry, who was sustained in his purpose by a conviction
of its justice. He felt himself bound as much
in honour as in affection to Miss Morland, and believing
that heart to be his own which he had been directed
to gain, no unworthy retraction of a tacit consent,
no reversing decree of unjustifiable anger, could
shake his fidelity, or influence the resolutions it
prompted.
He steadily refused to accompany his
father into Herefordshire, an engagement formed almost
at the moment to promote the dismissal of Catherine,
and as steadily declared his intention of offering
her his hand. The general was furious in his
anger, and they parted in dreadful disagreement.
Henry, in an agitation of mind which many solitary
hours were required to compose, had returned almost
instantly to Woodston, and, on the afternoon of the
following day, had begun his journey to Fullerton.