Before the house-maid had lit their
fire the next day, or the sun gained any power over
a cold, gloomy morning in January, Marianne, only
half dressed, was kneeling against one of the window-seats
for the sake of all the little light she could command
from it, and writing as fast as a continual flow of
tears would permit her. In this situation, Elinor,
roused from sleep by her agitation and sobs, first
perceived her; and after observing her for a few moments
with silent anxiety, said, in a tone of the most considerate
gentleness,
“Marianne, may I ask-?”
“No, Elinor,” she replied,
“ask nothing; you will soon know all.”
The sort of desperate calmness with
which this was said, lasted no longer than while she
spoke, and was immediately followed by a return of
the same excessive affliction. It was some minutes
before she could go on with her letter, and the frequent
bursts of grief which still obliged her, at intervals,
to withhold her pen, were proofs enough of her feeling
how more than probable it was that she was writing
for the last time to Willoughby.
Elinor paid her every quiet and unobtrusive
attention in her power; and she would have tried to
sooth and tranquilize her still more, had not Marianne
entreated her, with all the eagerness of the most
nervous irritability, not to speak to her for the
world. In such circumstances, it was better
for both that they should not be long together; and
the restless state of Marianne’s mind not only
prevented her from remaining in the room a moment
after she was dressed, but requiring at once solitude
and continual change of place, made her wander about
the house till breakfast time, avoiding the sight
of every body.
At breakfast she neither ate, nor
attempted to eat any thing; and Elinor’s attention
was then all employed, not in urging her, not in pitying
her, nor in appearing to regard her, but in endeavouring
to engage Mrs. Jenning’s notice entirely to
herself.
As this was a favourite meal with
Mrs. Jennings, it lasted a considerable time, and
they were just setting themselves, after it, round
the common working table, when a letter was delivered
to Marianne, which she eagerly caught from the servant,
and, turning of a death-like paleness, instantly ran
out of the room. Elinor, who saw as plainly
by this, as if she had seen the direction, that it
must come from Willoughby, felt immediately such a
sickness at heart as made her hardly able to hold
up her head, and sat in such a general tremour as
made her fear it impossible to escape Mrs. Jenning’s
notice. That good lady, however, saw only that
Marianne had received a letter from Willoughby, which
appeared to her a very good joke, and which she treated
accordingly, by hoping, with a laugh, that she would
find it to her liking. Of Elinor’s distress,
she was too busily employed in measuring lengths of
worsted for her rug, to see any thing at all; and
calmly continuing her talk, as soon as Marianne disappeared,
she said,
“Upon my word, I never saw a
young woman so desperately in love in my life!
My girls were nothing to her, and yet they used
to be foolish enough; but as for Miss Marianne, she
is quite an altered creature. I hope, from the
bottom of my heart, he won’t keep her waiting
much longer, for it is quite grievous to see her look
so ill and forlorn. Pray, when are they to be
married?”
Elinor, though never less disposed
to speak than at that moment, obliged herself to answer
such an attack as this, and, therefore, trying to
smile, replied, “And have you really, Ma’am,
talked yourself into a persuasion of my sister’s
being engaged to Mr. Willoughby? I thought it
had been only a joke, but so serious a question seems
to imply more; and I must beg, therefore, that you
will not deceive yourself any longer. I do assure
you that nothing would surprise me more than to hear
of their being going to be married.”
“For shame, for shame, Miss
Dashwood! how can you talk so? Don’t we
all know that it must be a match, that they were over
head and ears in love with each other from the first
moment they met? Did not I see them together
in Devonshire every day, and all day long; and did
not I know that your sister came to town with me on
purpose to buy wedding clothes? Come, come,
this won’t do. Because you are so sly about
it yourself, you think nobody else has any senses;
but it is no such thing, I can tell you, for it has
been known all over town this ever so long. I
tell every body of it and so does Charlotte.”
“Indeed, Ma’am,”
said Elinor, very seriously, “you are mistaken.
Indeed, you are doing a very unkind thing in spreading
the report, and you will find that you have though
you will not believe me now.”
Mrs. Jennings laughed again, but Elinor
had not spirits to say more, and eager at all events
to know what Willoughby had written, hurried away
to their room, where, on opening the door, she saw
Marianne stretched on the bed, almost choked by grief,
one letter in her hand, and two or three others laying
by her. Elinor drew near, but without saying
a word; and seating herself on the bed, took her hand,
kissed her affectionately several times, and then
gave way to a burst of tears, which at first was scarcely
less violent than Marianne’s. The latter,
though unable to speak, seemed to feel all the tenderness
of this behaviour, and after some time thus spent in
joint affliction, she put all the letters into Elinor’s
hands; and then covering her face with her handkerchief,
almost screamed with agony. Elinor, who knew
that such grief, shocking as it was to witness it,
must have its course, watched by her till this excess
of suffering had somewhat spent itself, and then turning
eagerly to Willoughby’s letter, read as follows:
“Bond
Street, January.
“My dear
madam,
“I have just had the honour of
receiving your letter, for which I beg to return
my sincere acknowledgments. I am much concerned
to find there was anything in my behaviour last
night that did not meet your approbation; and
though I am quite at a loss to discover in what
point I could be so unfortunate as to offend
you, I entreat your forgiveness of what I can
assure you to have been perfectly unintentional.
I shall never reflect on my former acquaintance
with your family in Devonshire without the most
grateful pleasure, and flatter myself it will
not be broken by any mistake or misapprehension
of my actions. My esteem for your whole
family is very sincere; but if I have been so unfortunate
as to give rise to a belief of more than I felt,
or meant to express, I shall reproach myself for
not having been more guarded in my professions of
that esteem. That I should ever have meant more
you will allow to be impossible, when you understand
that my affections have been long engaged elsewhere,
and it will not be many weeks, I believe, before
this engagement is fulfilled. It is with
great regret that I obey your commands in returning
the letters with which I have been honoured from
you, and the lock of hair, which you so obligingly
bestowed on me.
“I am, dear Madam,
“Your
most obedient
“humble
servant,
“John
Willoughby.”
With what indignation such a letter
as this must be read by Miss Dashwood, may be imagined.
Though aware, before she began it, that it must bring
a confession of his inconstancy, and confirm their
separation for ever, she was not aware that such language
could be suffered to announce it; nor could she have
supposed Willoughby capable of departing so far from
the appearance of every honourable and delicate feeling—so
far from the common decorum of a gentleman, as to
send a letter so impudently cruel: a letter which,
instead of bringing with his desire of a release any
professions of regret, acknowledged no breach of faith,
denied all peculiar affection whatever—
a letter of which every line was an insult, and which
proclaimed its writer to be deep in hardened villainy.
She paused over it for some time with
indignant astonishment; then read it again and again;
but every perusal only served to increase her abhorrence
of the man, and so bitter were her feelings against
him, that she dared not trust herself to speak, lest
she might wound Marianne still deeper by treating
their disengagement, not as a loss to her of any possible
good but as an escape from the worst and most irremediable
of all evils, a connection, for life, with an unprincipled
man, as a deliverance the most real, a blessing the
most important.
In her earnest meditations on the
contents of the letter, on the depravity of that mind
which could dictate it, and probably, on the very
different mind of a very different person, who had
no other connection whatever with the affair than
what her heart gave him with every thing that passed,
Elinor forgot the immediate distress of her sister,
forgot that she had three letters on her lap yet unread,
and so entirely forgot how long she had been in the
room, that when on hearing a carriage drive up to
the door, she went to the window to see who could
be coming so unreasonably early, she was all astonishment
to perceive Mrs. Jennings’s chariot, which she
knew had not been ordered till one. Determined
not to quit Marianne, though hopeless of contributing,
at present, to her ease, she hurried away to excuse
herself from attending Mrs. Jennings, on account of
her sister being indisposed. Mrs. Jennings, with
a thoroughly good-humoured concern for its cause,
admitted the excuse most readily, and Elinor, after
seeing her safe off, returned to Marianne, whom she
found attempting to rise from the bed, and whom she
reached just in time to prevent her from falling on
the floor, faint and giddy from a long want of proper
rest and food; for it was many days since she had
any appetite, and many nights since she had really
slept; and now, when her mind was no longer supported
by the fever of suspense, the consequence of all this
was felt in an aching head, a weakened stomach, and
a general nervous faintness. A glass of wine,
which Elinor procured for her directly, made her more
comfortable, and she was at last able to express some
sense of her kindness, by saying,
“Poor Elinor! how unhappy I make you!”
“I only wish,” replied
her sister, “there were any thing I could
do, which might be of comfort to you.”
This, as every thing else would have
been, was too much for Marianne, who could only exclaim,
in the anguish of her heart, “Oh! Elinor,
I am miserable, indeed,” before her voice was
entirely lost in sobs.
Elinor could no longer witness this
torrent of unresisted grief in silence.
“Exert yourself, dear Marianne,”
she cried, “if you would not kill yourself and
all who love you. Think of your mother; think
of her misery while you suffer: for her
sake you must exert yourself.”
“I cannot, I cannot,”
cried Marianne; “leave me, leave me, if I distress
you; leave me, hate me, forget me! but do not torture
me so. Oh! how easy for those, who have no sorrow
of their own to talk of exertion! Happy, happy
Elinor, you cannot have an idea of what I suffer.”
“Do you call me happy,
Marianne? Ah! if you knew!—And can
you believe me to be so, while I see you so wretched!”
“Forgive me, forgive me,”
throwing her arms round her sister’s neck; “I
know you feel for me; I know what a heart you have;
but yet you are—you must be happy; Edward
loves you—what, oh what, can do away such
happiness as that?”
“Many, many circumstances,”
said Elinor, solemnly.
“No, no, no,” cried Marianne
wildly, “he loves you, and only you. You
can have no grief.”
“I can have no pleasure while
I see you in this state.”
“And you will never see me otherwise.
Mine is a misery which nothing can do away.”
“You must not talk so, Marianne.
Have you no comforts? no friends? Is your loss
such as leaves no opening for consolation? Much
as you suffer now, think of what you would have suffered
if the discovery of his character had been delayed
to a later period— if your engagement had
been carried on for months and months, as it might
have been, before he chose to put an end to it.
Every additional day of unhappy confidence, on your
side, would have made the blow more dreadful.”
“Engagement!” cried Marianne,
“there has been no engagement.”
“No engagement!”
“No, he is not so unworthy as you believe him.
He has broken no faith with me.”
“But he told you that he loved you.”
“Yes—no—never
absolutely. It was every day implied, but never
professedly declared. Sometimes I thought it
had been—but it never was.”
“Yet you wrote to him?”—
“Yes—could that be
wrong after all that had passed?— But I
cannot talk.”
Elinor said no more, and turning again
to the three letters which now raised a much stronger
curiosity than before, directly ran over the contents
of all. The first, which was what her sister
had sent him on their arrival in town, was to this
effect.
Berkeley Street,
January.
“How surprised you will be, Willoughby,
on receiving this; and I think you will feel
something more than surprise, when you know that
I am in town. An opportunity of coming hither,
though with Mrs. Jennings, was a temptation we
could not resist. I wish you may receive
this in time to come here to-night, but I will
not depend on it. At any rate I shall expect
you to-morrow. For the present, adieu.
“M.D.”
Her second note, which had been written
on the morning after the dance at the Middletons’,
was in these words:—
“I cannot express my disappointment
in having missed you the day before yesterday,
nor my astonishment at not having received any
answer to a note which I sent you above a week
ago. I have been expecting to hear from
you, and still more to see you, every hour of
the day. Pray call again as soon as possible,
and explain the reason of my having expected this
in vain. You had better come earlier another
time, because we are generally out by one.
We were last night at Lady Middleton’s,
where there was a dance. I have been told
that you were asked to be of the party.
But could it be so? You must be very much altered
indeed since we parted, if that could be the
case, and you not there. But I will not suppose
this possible, and I hope very soon to receive
your personal assurance of its being otherwise.
“M.D.”
The contents of her last note to him
were these:—
“What am I to imagine, Willoughby,
by your behaviour last night? Again I demand
an explanation of it. I was prepared to
meet you with the pleasure which our separation
naturally produced, with the familiarity which
our intimacy at Barton appeared to me to justify.
I was repulsed indeed! I have passed a
wretched night in endeavouring to excuse a conduct
which can scarcely be called less than insulting;
but though I have not yet been able to form any
reasonable apology for your behaviour, I am perfectly
ready to hear your justification of it.
You have perhaps been misinformed, or purposely deceived,
in something concerning me, which may have lowered
me in your opinion. Tell me what it is, explain
the grounds on which you acted, and I shall be
satisfied, in being able to satisfy you. It
would grieve me indeed to be obliged to think
ill of you; but if I am to do it, if I am to
learn that you are not what we have hitherto
believed you, that your regard for us all was
insincere, that your behaviour to me was intended
only to deceive, let it be told as soon as possible.
My feelings are at present in a state of dreadful
indecision; I wish to acquit you, but certainty
on either side will be ease to what I now suffer.
If your sentiments are no longer what they were,
you will return my notes, and the lock of my
hair which is in your possession.
“M.D.”
That such letters, so full of affection
and confidence, could have been so answered, Elinor,
for Willoughby’s sake, would have been unwilling
to believe. But her condemnation of him did
not blind her to the impropriety of their having been
written at all; and she was silently grieving over
the imprudence which had hazarded such unsolicited
proofs of tenderness, not warranted by anything preceding,
and most severely condemned by the event, when Marianne,
perceiving that she had finished the letters, observed
to her that they contained nothing but what any one
would have written in the same situation.
“I felt myself,” she added,
“to be as solemnly engaged to him, as if the
strictest legal covenant had bound us to each other.”
“I can believe it,” said
Elinor; “but unfortunately he did not feel the
same.”
“He did feel the same,
Elinor—for weeks and weeks he felt it.
I know he did. Whatever may have changed him
now, (and nothing but the blackest art employed against
me can have done it), I was once as dear to him as
my own soul could wish. This lock of hair, which
now he can so readily give up, was begged of me with
the most earnest supplication. Had you seen his
look, his manner, had you heard his voice at that
moment! Have you forgot the last evening of our
being together at Barton? The morning that we
parted too! When he told me that it might be
many weeks before we met again—his distress—can
I ever forget his distress?”
For a moment or two she could say
no more; but when this emotion had passed away, she
added, in a firmer tone,
“Elinor, I have been cruelly
used; but not by Willoughby.”
“Dearest Marianne, who but himself?
By whom can he have been instigated?”
“By all the world, rather than
by his own heart. I could rather believe every
creature of my acquaintance leagued together to ruin
me in his opinion, than believe his nature capable
of such cruelty. This woman of whom he writes—whoever
she be—or any one, in short, but your own
dear self, mama, and Edward, may have been so barbarous
to bely me. Beyond you three, is there a creature
in the world whom I would not rather suspect of evil
than Willoughby, whose heart I know so well?”
Elinor would not contend, and only
replied, “Whoever may have been so detestably
your enemy, let them be cheated of their malignant
triumph, my dear sister, by seeing how nobly the consciousness
of your own innocence and good intentions supports
your spirits. It is a reasonable and laudable
pride which resists such malevolence.”
“No, no,” cried Marianne,
“misery such as mine has no pride. I care
not who knows that I am wretched. The triumph
of seeing me so may be open to all the world.
Elinor, Elinor, they who suffer little may be proud
and independent as they like—may resist
insult, or return mortification—but I cannot.
I must feel—I must be wretched—and
they are welcome to enjoy the consciousness of it
that can.”
“But for my mother’s sake and mine—”
“I would do more than for my
own. But to appear happy when I am so miserable—Oh!
who can require it?”
Again they were both silent.
Elinor was employed in walking thoughtfully from
the fire to the window, from the window to the fire,
without knowing that she received warmth from one,
or discerning objects through the other; and Marianne,
seated at the foot of the bed, with her head leaning
against one of its posts, again took up Willoughby’s
letter, and, after shuddering over every sentence,
exclaimed—
“It is too much! Oh, Willoughby,
Willoughby, could this be yours! Cruel, cruel—nothing
can acquit you. Elinor, nothing can. Whatever
he might have heard against me— ought he
not to have suspended his belief? ought he not to
have told me of it, to have given me the power of clearing
myself? ’The lock of hair, (repeating it
from the letter,) which you so obligingly bestowed
on me’—That is unpardonable.
Willoughby, where was your heart when you wrote those
words? Oh, barbarously insolent!—Elinor,
can he be justified?”
“No, Marianne, in no possible way.”
“And yet this woman—who
knows what her art may have been?—how long
it may have been premeditated, and how deeply contrived
by her!—Who is she?—Who can
she be?—Whom did I ever hear him talk of
as young and attractive among his female acquaintance?—Oh!
no one, no one—he talked to me only of
myself.”
Another pause ensued; Marianne was
greatly agitated, and it ended thus.
“Elinor, I must go home.
I must go and comfort mama. Can not we be gone
to-morrow?”
“To-morrow, Marianne!”
“Yes, why should I stay here? I came only
for
Willoughby’s sake—and now who cares
for me? Who regards me?”
“It would be impossible to go
to-morrow. We owe Mrs. Jennings much more than
civility; and civility of the commonest kind must
prevent such a hasty removal as that.”
“Well then, another day or two,
perhaps; but I cannot stay here long, I cannot stay
to endure the questions and remarks of all these people.
The Middletons and Palmers—how am I to
bear their pity? The pity of such a woman as
Lady Middleton! Oh, what would he say to
that!”
Elinor advised her to lie down again,
and for a moment she did so; but no attitude could
give her ease; and in restless pain of mind and body
she moved from one posture to another, till growing
more and more hysterical, her sister could with difficulty
keep her on the bed at all, and for some time was
fearful of being constrained to call for assistance.
Some lavender drops, however, which she was at length
persuaded to take, were of use; and from that time
till Mrs. Jennings returned, she continued on the
bed quiet and motionless.