AFFORDING AN EXPLANATION OF MORE MYSTERIES
THAN ONE, AND COMPREHENDING A PROPOSAL OF MARRIAGE
WITH NO WORD OF SETTLEMENT OR PIN-MONEY
The events narrated in the last chapter
were yet but two days old, when Oliver found himself,
at three o’clock in the afternoon, in a travelling-carriage
rolling fast towards his native town. Mrs. Maylie,
and Rose, and Mrs. Bedwin, and the good doctor were
with him: and Mr. Brownlow followed in a post-chaise,
accompanied by one other person whose name had not
been mentioned.
They had not talked much upon the
way; for Oliver was in a flutter of agitation and
uncertainty which deprived him of the power of collecting
his thoughts, and almost of speech, and appeared to
have scarcely less effect on his companions, who shared
it, in at least an equal degree. He and the two
ladies had been very carefully made acquainted by
Mr. Brownlow with the nature of the admissions which
had been forced from Monks; and although they knew
that the object of their present journey was to complete
the work which had been so well begun, still the whole
matter was enveloped in enough of doubt and mystery
to leave them in endurance of the most intense suspense.
The same kind friend had, with Mr.
Losberne’s assistance, cautiously stopped all
channels of communication through which they could
receive intelligence of the dreadful occurrences that
so recently taken place. ‘It was quite
true,’ he said, ’that they must know them
before long, but it might be at a better time than
the present, and it could not be at a worse.’
So, they travelled on in silence: each busied
with reflections on the object which had brought them
together: and no one disposed to give utterance
to the thoughts which crowded upon all.
But if Oliver, under these influences,
had remained silent while they journeyed towards his
birth-place by a road he had never seen, how the whole
current of his recollections ran back to old times,
and what a crowd of emotions were wakened up in his
breast, when they turned into that which he had traversed
on foot: a poor houseless, wandering boy, without
a friend to help him, or a roof to shelter his head.
‘See there, there!’ cried
Oliver, eagerly clasping the hand of Rose, and pointing
out at the carriage window; ’that’s the
stile I came over; there are the hedges I crept behind,
for fear any one should overtake me and force me back!
Yonder is the path across the fields, leading to
the old house where I was a little child! Oh
Dick, Dick, my dear old friend, if I could only see
you now!’
‘You will see him soon,’
replied Rose, gently taking his folded hands between
her own. ’You shall tell him how happy
you are, and how rich you have grown, and that in
all your happiness you have none so great as the coming
back to make him happy too.’
‘Yes, yes,’ said Oliver,
’and we’ll—we’ll take
him away from here, and have him clothed and taught,
and send him to some quiet country place where he
may grow strong and well,—shall we?’
Rose nodded ‘yes,’ for
the boy was smiling through such happy tears that
she could not speak.
‘You will be kind and good to
him, for you are to every one,’ said Oliver.
’It will make you cry, I know, to hear what
he can tell; but never mind, never mind, it will be
all over, and you will smile again—I know
that too—to think how changed he is; you
did the same with me. He said “God bless
you” to me when I ran away,’ cried the
boy with a burst of affectionate emotion; ’and
I will say “God bless you” now, and show
him how I love him for it!’
As they approached the town, and at
length drove through its narrow streets, it became
matter of no small difficulty to restrain the boy
within reasonable bounds. There was Sowerberry’s
the undertaker’s just as it used to be, only
smaller and less imposing in appearance than he remembered
it—there were all the well-known shops
and houses, with almost every one of which he had
some slight incident connected—there was
Gamfield’s cart, the very cart he used to have,
standing at the old public-house door—there
was the workhouse, the dreary prison of his youthful
days, with its dismal windows frowning on the street—there
was the same lean porter standing at the gate, at
sight of whom Oliver involuntarily shrunk back, and
then laughed at himself for being so foolish, then
cried, then laughed again—there were scores
of faces at the doors and windows that he knew quite
well—there was nearly everything as if he
had left it but yesterday, and all his recent life
had been but a happy dream.
But it was pure, earnest, joyful reality.
They drove straight to the door of the chief hotel
(which Oliver used to stare up at, with awe, and think
a mighty palace, but which had somehow fallen off
in grandeur and size); and here was Mr. Grimwig all
ready to receive them, kissing the young lady, and
the old one too, when they got out of the coach, as
if he were the grandfather of the whole party, all
smiles and kindness, and not offering to eat his head—no,
not once; not even when he contradicted a very old
postboy about the nearest road to London, and maintained
he knew it best, though he had only come that way
once, and that time fast asleep. There was dinner
prepared, and there were bedrooms ready, and everything
was arranged as if by magic.
Notwithstanding all this, when the
hurry of the first half-hour was over, the same silence
and constraint prevailed that had marked their journey
down. Mr. Brownlow did not join them at dinner,
but remained in a separate room. The two other
gentlemen hurried in and out with anxious faces, and,
during the short intervals when they were present,
conversed apart. Once, Mrs. Maylie was called
away, and after being absent for nearly an hour, returned
with eyes swollen with weeping. All these things
made Rose and Oliver, who were not in any new secrets,
nervous and uncomfortable. They sat wondering,
in silence; or, if they exchanged a few words, spoke
in whispers, as if they were afraid to hear the sound
of their own voices.
At length, when nine o’clock
had come, and they began to think they were to hear
no more that night, Mr. Losberne and Mr. Grimwig entered
the room, followed by Mr. Brownlow and a man whom
Oliver almost shrieked with surprise to see; for they
told him it was his brother, and it was the same man
he had met at the market-town, and seen looking in
with Fagin at the window of his little room.
Monks cast a look of hate, which, even then, he could
not dissemble, at the astonished boy, and sat down
near the door. Mr. Brownlow, who had papers
in his hand, walked to a table near which Rose and
Oliver were seated.
‘This is a painful task,’
said he, ’but these declarations, which have
been signed in London before many gentlemen, must be
in substance repeated here. I would have spared
you the degradation, but we must hear them from your
own lips before we part, and you know why.’
‘Go on,’ said the person
addressed, turning away his face. ’Quick.
I have almost done enough, I think. Don’t
keep me here.’
‘This child,’ said Mr.
Brownlow, drawing Oliver to him, and laying his hand
upon his head, ’is your half-brother; the illegitimate
son of your father, my dear friend Edwin Leeford, by
poor young Agnes Fleming, who died in giving him birth.’
‘Yes,’ said Monks, scowling
at the trembling boy: the beating of whose heart
he might have heard. ‘That is the bastard
child.’
‘The term you use,’ said
Mr. Brownlow, sternly, ’is a reproach to those
long since passed beyond the feeble censure of the
world. It reflects disgrace on no one living,
except you who use it. Let that pass. He
was born in this town.’
‘In the workhouse of this town,’
was the sullen reply. ’You have the story
there.’ He pointed impatiently to the papers
as he spoke.
‘I must have it here, too,’
said Mr. Brownlow, looking round upon the listeners.
‘Listen then! You!’
returned Monks. ’His father being taken
ill at Rome, was joined by his wife, my mother, from
whom he had been long separated, who went from Paris
and took me with her—to look after his
property, for what I know, for she had no great affection
for him, nor he for her. He knew nothing of us,
for his senses were gone, and he slumbered on till
next day, when he died. Among the papers in
his desk, were two, dated on the night his illness
first came on, directed to yourself’; he addressed
himself to Mr. Brownlow; ’and enclosed in a few
short lines to you, with an intimation on the cover
of the package that it was not to be forwarded till
after he was dead. One of these papers was a
letter to this girl Agnes; the other a will.’
‘What of the letter?’ asked Mr. Brownlow.
’The letter?—A sheet
of paper crossed and crossed again, with a penitent
confession, and prayers to God to help her. He
had palmed a tale on the girl that some secret mystery—to
be explained one day—prevented his marrying
her just then; and so she had gone on, trusting patiently
to him, until she trusted too far, and lost what none
could ever give her back. She was, at that time,
within a few months of her confinement. He told
her all he had meant to do, to hide her shame, if
he had lived, and prayed her, if he died, not to curse
his memory, or think the consequences of their sin
would be visited on her or their young child; for
all the guilt was his. He reminded her of the
day he had given her the little locket and the ring
with her christian name engraved upon it, and a blank
left for that which he hoped one day to have bestowed
upon her—prayed her yet to keep it, and
wear it next her heart, as she had done before—and
then ran on, wildly, in the same words, over and over
again, as if he had gone distracted. I believe
he had.’
‘The will,’ said Mr. Brownlow,
as Oliver’s tears fell fast.
Monks was silent.
‘The will,’ said Mr. Brownlow,
speaking for him, ’was in the same spirit as
the letter. He talked of miseries which his wife
had brought upon him; of the rebellious disposition,
vice, malice, and premature bad passions of you his
only son, who had been trained to hate him; and left
you, and your mother, each an annuity of eight hundred
pounds. The bulk of his property he divided
into two equal portions—one for Agnes Fleming,
and the other for their child, if it should be born
alive, and ever come of age. If it were a girl,
it was to inherit the money unconditionally; but if
a boy, only on the stipulation that in his minority
he should never have stained his name with any public
act of dishonour, meanness, cowardice, or wrong.
He did this, he said, to mark his confidence in the
other, and his conviction—only strengthened
by approaching death—that the child would
share her gentle heart, and noble nature. If
he were disappointed in this expectation, then the
money was to come to you: for then, and not
till then, when both children were equal, would he
recognise your prior claim upon his purse, who had
none upon his heart, but had, from an infant, repulsed
him with coldness and aversion.’
‘My mother,’ said Monks,
in a louder tone, ’did what a woman should have
done. She burnt this will. The letter never
reached its destination; but that, and other proofs,
she kept, in case they ever tried to lie away the
blot. The girl’s father had the truth
from her with every aggravation that her violent hate—I
love her for it now—could add. Goaded
by shame and dishonour he fled with his children into
a remote corner of Wales, changing his very name that
his friends might never know of his retreat; and here,
no great while afterwards, he was found dead in his
bed. The girl had left her home, in secret, some
weeks before; he had searched for her, on foot, in
every town and village near; it was on the night when
he returned home, assured that she had destroyed herself,
to hide her shame and his, that his old heart broke.’
There was a short silence here, until
Mr. Brownlow took up the thread of the narrative.
‘Years after this,’ he
said, ’this man’s—Edward Leeford’s—mother
came to me. He had left her, when only eighteen;
robbed her of jewels and money; gambled, squandered,
forged, and fled to London: where for two years
he had associated with the lowest outcasts.
She was sinking under a painful and incurable disease,
and wished to recover him before she died. Inquiries
were set on foot, and strict searches made. They
were unavailing for a long time, but ultimately successful;
and he went back with her to France.’
‘There she died,’ said
Monks, ’after a lingering illness; and, on her
death-bed, she bequeathed these secrets to me, together
with her unquenchable and deadly hatred of all whom
they involved—though she need not have
left me that, for I had inherited it long before.
She would not believe that the girl had destroyed
herself, and the child too, but was filled with the
impression that a male child had been born, and was
alive. I swore to her, if ever it crossed my
path, to hunt it down; never to let it rest; to pursue
it with the bitterest and most unrelenting animosity;
to vent upon it the hatred that I deeply felt, and
to spit upon the empty vaunt of that insulting will
by draggin it, if I could, to the very gallows-foot.
She was right. He came in my way at last.
I began well; and, but for babbling drabs, I would
have finished as I began!’
As the villain folded his arms tight
together, and muttered curses on himself in the impotence
of baffled malice, Mr. Brownlow turned to the terrified
group beside him, and explained that the Jew, who
had been his old accomplice and confidant, had a large
reward for keeping Oliver ensnared: of which
some part was to be given up, in the event of his
being rescued: and that a dispute on this head
had led to their visit to the country house for the
purpose of identifying him.
‘The locket and ring?’
said Mr. Brownlow, turning to Monks.
’I bought them from the man
and woman I told you of, who stole them from the nurse,
who stole them from the corpse,’ answered Monks
without raising his eyes. ‘You know what
became of them.’
Mr. Brownlow merely nodded to Mr.
Grimwig, who disappearing with great alacrity, shortly
returned, pushing in Mrs. Bumble, and dragging her
unwilling consort after him.
‘Do my hi’s deceive me!’
cried Mr. Bumble, with ill-feigned enthusiasm, ’or
is that little Oliver? Oh O-li-ver, if you know’d
how I’ve been a-grieving for you—’
‘Hold your tongue, fool,’ murmured Mrs.
Bumble.
‘Isn’t natur, natur, Mrs.
Bumble?’ remonstrated the workhouse master.
’Can’t I be supposed to feel—I
as brought him up porochially—when I see
him a-setting here among ladies and gentlemen of the
very affablest description! I always loved that
boy as if he’d been my—my—my
own grandfather,’ said Mr. Bumble, halting for
an appropriate comparison. ’Master Oliver,
my dear, you remember the blessed gentleman in the
white waistcoat? Ah! he went to heaven last
week, in a oak coffin with plated handles, Oliver.’
‘Come, sir,’ said Mr.
Grimwig, tartly; ‘suppress your feelings.’
‘I will do my endeavours, sir,’
replied Mr. Bumble. ’How do you do, sir?
I hope you are very well.’
This salutation was addressed to Mr.
Brownlow, who had stepped up to within a short distance
of the respectable couple. He inquired, as he
pointed to Monks,
‘Do you know that person?’
‘No,’ replied Mrs. Bumble flatly.
‘Perhaps you don’t?’ said
Mr. Brownlow, addressing her spouse.
‘I never saw him in all my life,’ said
Mr. Bumble.
‘Nor sold him anything, perhaps?’
‘No,’ replied Mrs. Bumble.
‘You never had, perhaps, a certain
gold locket and ring?’ said Mr. Brownlow.
‘Certainly not,’ replied
the matron. ’Why are we brought here to
answer to such nonsense as this?’
Again Mr. Brownlow nodded to Mr. Grimwig;
and again that gentleman limped away with extraordinary
readiness. But not again did he return with
a stout man and wife; for this time, he led in two
palsied women, who shook and tottered as they walked.
‘You shut the door the night
old Sally died,’ said the foremost one, raising
her shrivelled hand, ’but you couldn’t
shut out the sound, nor stop the chinks.’
‘No, no,’ said the other,
looking round her and wagging her toothless jaws.
‘No, no, no.’
’We heard her try to tell you
what she’d done, and saw you take a paper from
her hand, and watched you too, next day, to the pawnbroker’s
shop,’ said the first.
‘Yes,’ added the second,
’and it was a “locket and gold ring.”
We found out that, and saw it given you. We were
by. Oh! we were by.’
‘And we know more than that,’
resumed the first, ’for she told us often, long
ago, that the young mother had told her that, feeling
she should never get over it, she was on her way, at
the time that she was taken ill, to die near the grave
of the father of the child.’
‘Would you like to see the pawnbroker
himself?’ asked Mr. Grimwig with a motion towards
the door.
‘No,’ replied the woman;
’if he—she pointed to Monks—’has
been coward enough to confess, as I see he has, and
you have sounded all these hags till you have found
the right ones, I have nothing more to say.
I did sell them, and they’re where you’ll
never get them. What then?’
‘Nothing,’ replied Mr.
Brownlow, ’except that it remains for us to
take care that neither of you is employed in a situation
of trust again. You may leave the room.’
‘I hope,’ said Mr. Bumble,
looking about him with great ruefulness, as Mr. Grimwig
disappeared with the two old women: ’I
hope that this unfortunate little circumstance will
not deprive me of my porochial office?’
‘Indeed it will,’ replied
Mr. Brownlow. ’You may make up your mind
to that, and think yourself well off besides.’
‘It was all Mrs. Bumble.
She would do it,’ urged Mr. Bumble;
first looking round to ascertain that his partner had
left the room.
‘That is no excuse,’ replied
Mr. Brownlow. ’You were present on the
occasion of the destruction of these trinkets, and
indeed are the more guilty of the two, in the eye
of the law; for the law supposes that your wife acts
under your direction.’
‘If the law supposes that,’
said Mr. Bumble, squeezing his hat emphatically in
both hands, ’the law is a ass—a idiot.
If that’s the eye of the law, the law is a
bachelor; and the worst I wish the law is, that his
eye may be opened by experience—by experience.’
Laying great stress on the repetition
of these two words, Mr. Bumble fixed his hat on very
tight, and putting his hands in his pockets, followed
his helpmate downstairs.
‘Young lady,’ said Mr.
Brownlow, turning to Rose, ’give me your hand.
Do not tremble. You need not fear to hear the
few remaining words we have to say.’
’If they have—I do
not know how they can, but if they have—any
reference to me,’ said Rose, ’pray let
me hear them at some other time. I have not
strength or spirits now.’
‘Nay,’ returned the old
gentlman, drawing her arm through his; ’you
have more fortitude than this, I am sure. Do
you know this young lady, sir?’
‘Yes,’ replied Monks.
‘I never saw you before,’ said Rose faintly.
‘I have seen you often,’ returned Monks.
‘The father of the unhappy Agnes
had two daughters,’ said Mr. Brownlow.
‘What was the fate of the other—the
child?’
‘The child,’ replied Monks,
’when her father died in a strange place, in
a strange name, without a letter, book, or scrap of
paper that yielded the faintest clue by which his friends
or relatives could be traced—the child
was taken by some wretched cottagers, who reared it
as their own.’
‘Go on,’ said Mr. Brownlow,
signing to Mrs. Maylie to approach. ‘Go
on!’
‘You couldn’t find the
spot to which these people had repaired,’ said
Monks, ’but where friendship fails, hatred will
often force a way. My mother found it, after
a year of cunning search—ay, and found
the child.’
‘She took it, did she?’
’No. The people were poor
and began to sicken—at least the man did—of
their fine humanity; so she left it with them, giving
them a small present of money which would not last
long, and promised more, which she never meant to
send. She didn’t quite rely, however,
on their discontent and poverty for the child’s
unhappiness, but told the history of the sister’s
shame, with such alterations as suited her; bade them
take good heed of the child, for she came of bad blood;
and told them she was illegitimate, and sure to go
wrong at one time or other. The circumstances
countenanced all this; the people believed it; and
there the child dragged on an existence, miserable
enough even to satisfy us, until a widow lady, residing,
then, at Chester, saw the girl by chance, pitied her,
and took her home. There was some cursed spell,
I think, against us; for in spite of all our efforts
she remained there and was happy. I lost sight
of her, two or three years ago, and saw her no more
until a few months back.’
‘Do you see her now?’
‘Yes. Leaning on your arm.’
‘But not the less my niece,’
cried Mrs. Maylie, folding the fainting girl in her
arms; ’not the less my dearest child. I
would not lose her now, for all the treasures of the
world. My sweet companion, my own dear girl!’
‘The only friend I ever had,’
cried Rose, clinging to her. ’The kindest,
best of friends. My heart will burst. I
cannot bear all this.’
’You have borne more, and have
been, through all, the best and gentlest creature
that ever shed happiness on every one she knew,’
said Mrs. Maylie, embracing her tenderly. ’Come,
come, my love, remember who this is who waits to clasp
you in his arms, poor child! See here—look,
look, my dear!’
‘Not aunt,’ cried Oliver,
throwing his arms about her neck; ’I’ll
never call her aunt—sister, my own dear
sister, that something taught my heart to love so
dearly from the first! Rose, dear, darling Rose!’
Let the tears which fell, and the
broken words which were exchanged in the long close
embrace between the orphans, be sacred. A father,
sister, and mother, were gained, and lost, in that
one moment. Joy and grief were mingled in the
cup; but there were no bitter tears: for even
grief itself arose so softened, and clothed in such
sweet and tender recollections, that it became a solemn
pleasure, and lost all character of pain.
They were a long, long time alone.
A soft tap at the door, at length announced that
some one was without. Oliver opened it, glided
away, and gave place to Harry Maylie.
‘I know it all,’ he said,
taking a seat beside the lovely girl. ‘Dear
Rose, I know it all.’
‘I am not here by accident,’
he added after a lengthened silence; ’nor have
I heard all this to-night, for I knew it yesterday—only
yesterday. Do you guess that I have come to
remind you of a promise?’
‘Stay,’ said Rose. ‘You do
know all.’
’All. You gave me leave,
at any time within a year, to renew the subject of
our last discourse.’
‘I did.’
‘Not to press you to alter your
determination,’ pursued the young man, ’but
to hear you repeat it, if you would. I was to
lay whatever of station or fortune I might possess
at your feet, and if you still adhered to your former
determination, I pledged myself, by no word or act,
to seek to change it.’
’The same reasons which influenced
me then, will influence me now,’ said Rose firmly.
’If I ever owed a strict and rigid duty to
her, whose goodness saved me from a life of indigence
and suffering, when should I ever feel it, as I should
to-night? It is a struggle,’ said Rose,
’but one I am proud to make; it is a pang, but
one my heart shall bear.’
’The disclosure of to-night,’—Harry
began.
‘The disclosure of to-night,’
replied Rose softly, ’leaves me in the same
position, with reference to you, as that in which I
stood before.’
‘You harden your heart against
me, Rose,’ urged her lover.
‘Oh Harry, Harry,’ said
the young lady, bursting into tears; ’I wish
I could, and spare myself this pain.’
‘Then why inflict it on yourself?’
said Harry, taking her hand. ‘Think, dear
Rose, think what you have heard to-night.’
‘And what have I heard!
What have I heard!’ cried Rose. ’That
a sense of his deep disgrace so worked upon my own
father that he shunned all—there, we have
said enough, Harry, we have said enough.’
‘Not yet, not yet,’ said
the young man, detaining her as she rose. ’My
hopes, my wishes, prospects, feeling: every thought
in life except my love for you: have undergone
a change. I offer you, now, no distinction among
a bustling crowd; no mingling with a world of malice
and detraction, where the blood is called into honest
cheeks by aught but real disgrace and shame; but a
home—a heart and home—yes, dearest
Rose, and those, and those alone, are all I have to
offer.’
‘What do you mean!’ she faltered.
’I mean but this—that
when I left you last, I left you with a firm determination
to level all fancied barriers between yourself and
me; resolved that if my world could not be yours, I
would make yours mine; that no pride of birth should
curl the lip at you, for I would turn from it.
This I have done. Those who have shrunk from
me because of this, have shrunk from you, and proved
you so far right. Such power and patronage:
such relatives of influence and rank: as smiled
upon me then, look coldly now; but there are smiling
fields and waving trees in England’s richest
county; and by one village church—mine,
Rose, my own!—there stands a rustic dwelling
which you can make me prouder of, than all the hopes
I have renounced, measured a thousandfold. This
is my rank and station now, and here I lay it down!’
* * * * *
* *
‘It’s a trying thing waiting
supper for lovers,’ said Mr. Grimwig, waking
up, and pulling his pocket-handkerchief from over
his head.
Truth to tell, the supper had been
waiting a most unreasonable time. Neither Mrs.
Maylie, nor Harry, nor Rose (who all came in together),
could offer a word in extenuation.
‘I had serious thoughts of eating
my head to-night,’ said Mr. Grimwig, ’for
I began to think I should get nothing else. I’ll
take the liberty, if you’ll allow me, of saluting
the bride that is to be.’
Mr. Grimwig lost no time in carrying
this notice into effect upon the blushing girl; and
the example, being contagious, was followed both by
the doctor and Mr. Brownlow: some people affirm
that Harry Maylie had been observed to set it, orginally,
in a dark room adjoining; but the best authorities
consider this downright scandal: he being young
and a clergyman.
‘Oliver, my child,’ said
Mrs. Maylie, ’where have you been, and why do
you look so sad? There are tears stealing down
your face at this moment. What is the matter?’
It is a world of disappointment:
often to the hopes we most cherish, and hopes that
do our nature the greatest honour.
Poor Dick was dead!