From a night of more sleep than she
had expected, Marianne awoke the next morning to the
same consciousness of misery in which she had closed
her eyes.
Elinor encouraged her as much as possible
to talk of what she felt; and before breakfast was
ready, they had gone through the subject again and
again; and with the same steady conviction and affectionate
counsel on Elinor’s side, the same impetuous
feelings and varying opinions on Marianne’s,
as before. Sometimes she could believe Willoughby
to be as unfortunate and as innocent as herself, and
at others, lost every consolation in the impossibility
of acquitting him. At one moment she was absolutely
indifferent to the observation of all the world, at
another she would seclude herself from it for ever,
and at a third could resist it with energy.
In one thing, however, she was uniform, when it came
to the point, in avoiding, where it was possible,
the presence of Mrs. Jennings, and in a determined
silence when obliged to endure it. Her heart
was hardened against the belief of Mrs. Jennings’s
entering into her sorrows with any compassion.
“No, no, no, it cannot be,”
she cried; “she cannot feel. Her kindness
is not sympathy; her good-nature is not tenderness.
All that she wants is gossip, and she only likes
me now because I supply it.”
Elinor had not needed this to be assured
of the injustice to which her sister was often led
in her opinion of others, by the irritable refinement
of her own mind, and the too great importance placed
by her on the delicacies of a strong sensibility,
and the graces of a polished manner. Like half
the rest of the world, if more than half there be
that are clever and good, Marianne, with excellent
abilities and an excellent disposition, was neither
reasonable nor candid. She expected from other
people the same opinions and feelings as her own,
and she judged of their motives by the immediate effect
of their actions on herself. Thus a circumstance
occurred, while the sisters were together in their
own room after breakfast, which sunk the heart of
Mrs. Jennings still lower in her estimation; because,
through her own weakness, it chanced to prove a source
of fresh pain to herself, though Mrs. Jennings was
governed in it by an impulse of the utmost goodwill.
With a letter in her outstretched
hand, and countenance gaily smiling, from the persuasion
of bringing comfort, she entered their room, saying,
“Now, my dear, I bring you something
that I am sure will do you good.”
Marianne heard enough. In one
moment her imagination placed before her a letter
from Willoughby, full of tenderness and contrition,
explanatory of all that had passed, satisfactory,
convincing; and instantly followed by Willoughby himself,
rushing eagerly into the room to inforce, at her feet,
by the eloquence of his eyes, the assurances of his
letter. The work of one moment was destroyed
by the next. The hand writing of her mother,
never till then unwelcome, was before her; and, in
the acuteness of the disappointment which followed
such an ecstasy of more than hope, she felt as if,
till that instant, she had never suffered.
The cruelty of Mrs. Jennings no language,
within her reach in her moments of happiest eloquence,
could have expressed; and now she could reproach her
only by the tears which streamed from her eyes with
passionate violence—a reproach, however,
so entirely lost on its object, that after many expressions
of pity, she withdrew, still referring her to the
letter of comfort. But the letter, when she was
calm enough to read it, brought little comfort.
Willoughby filled every page. Her mother, still
confident of their engagement, and relying as warmly
as ever on his constancy, had only been roused by
Elinor’s application, to intreat from Marianne
greater openness towards them both; and this, with
such tenderness towards her, such affection for Willoughby,
and such a conviction of their future happiness in
each other, that she wept with agony through the whole
of it.
All her impatience to be at home again
now returned; her mother was dearer to her than ever;
dearer through the very excess of her mistaken confidence
in Willoughby, and she was wildly urgent to be gone.
Elinor, unable herself to determine whether it were
better for Marianne to be in London or at Barton,
offered no counsel of her own except of patience till
their mother’s wishes could be known; and at
length she obtained her sister’s consent to wait
for that knowledge.
Mrs. Jennings left them earlier than
usual; for she could not be easy till the Middletons
and Palmers were able to grieve as much as herself;
and positively refusing Elinor’s offered attendance,
went out alone for the rest of the morning.
Elinor, with a very heavy heart, aware of the pain
she was going to communicate, and perceiving, by Marianne’s
letter, how ill she had succeeded in laying any foundation
for it, then sat down to write her mother an account
of what had passed, and entreat her directions for
the future; while Marianne, who came into the drawing-room
on Mrs. Jennings’s going away, remained fixed
at the table where Elinor wrote, watching the advancement
of her pen, grieving over her for the hardship of
such a task, and grieving still more fondly over its
effect on her mother.
In this manner they had continued
about a quarter of an hour, when Marianne, whose nerves
could not then bear any sudden noise, was startled
by a rap at the door.
“Who can this be?” cried
Elinor. “So early too! I thought
we had been safe.”
Marianne moved to the window—
“It is Colonel Brandon!” said she, with
vexation.
“We are never safe from him.”
“He will not come in, as Mrs. Jennings is from
home.”
“I will not trust to that,”
retreating to her own room. “A man who
has nothing to do with his own time has no conscience
in his intrusion on that of others.”
The event proved her conjecture right,
though it was founded on injustice and error; for
Colonel Brandon did come in; and Elinor, who
was convinced that solicitude for Marianne brought
him thither, and who saw that solicitude in his
disturbed and melancholy look, and in his anxious
though brief inquiry after her, could not forgive
her sister for esteeming him so lightly.
“I met Mrs. Jennings in Bond
Street,” said he, after the first salutation,
“and she encouraged me to come on; and I was
the more easily encouraged, because I thought it probable
that I might find you alone, which I was very desirous
of doing. My object—my wish—my
sole wish in desiring it—I hope, I believe
it is—is to be a means of giving comfort;—no,
I must not say comfort—not present comfort—but
conviction, lasting conviction to your sister’s
mind. My regard for her, for yourself, for your
mother—will you allow me to prove it, by
relating some circumstances which nothing but a very
sincere regard—nothing but an earnest desire
of being useful—I think I am justified—though
where so many hours have been spent in convincing
myself that I am right, is there not some reason to
fear I may be wrong?” He stopped.
“I understand you,” said
Elinor. “You have something to tell me
of Mr. Willoughby, that will open his character farther.
Your telling it will be the greatest act of friendship
that can be shewn Marianne. My gratitude
will be insured immediately by any information tending
to that end, and hers must be gained by it in
time. Pray, pray let me hear it.”
“You shall; and, to be brief,
when I quitted Barton last October,—but
this will give you no idea—I must go farther
back. You will find me a very awkward narrator,
Miss Dashwood; I hardly know where to begin.
A short account of myself, I believe, will be necessary,
and it shall be a short one. On such a
subject,” sighing heavily, “can I have
little temptation to be diffuse.”
He stopt a moment for recollection,
and then, with another sigh, went on.
“You have probably entirely
forgotten a conversation— (it is not to
be supposed that it could make any impression on you)—a
conversation between us one evening at Barton Park—it
was the evening of a dance—in which I alluded
to a lady I had once known, as resembling, in some
measure, your sister Marianne.”
“Indeed,” answered Elinor,
“I have not forgotten it.” He
looked pleased by this remembrance, and added,
“If I am not deceived by the
uncertainty, the partiality of tender recollection,
there is a very strong resemblance between them, as
well in mind as person. The same warmth of heart,
the same eagerness of fancy and spirits. This
lady was one of my nearest relations, an orphan from
her infancy, and under the guardianship of my father.
Our ages were nearly the same, and from our earliest
years we were playfellows and friends. I cannot
remember the time when I did not love Eliza; and my
affection for her, as we grew up, was such, as perhaps,
judging from my present forlorn and cheerless gravity,
you might think me incapable of having ever felt.
Her’s, for me, was, I believe, fervent as the
attachment of your sister to Mr. Willoughby and it
was, though from a different cause, no less unfortunate.
At seventeen she was lost to me for ever. She
was married—married against her inclination
to my brother. Her fortune was large, and our
family estate much encumbered. And this, I fear,
is all that can be said for the conduct of one, who
was at once her uncle and guardian. My brother
did not deserve her; he did not even love her.
I had hoped that her regard for me would support her
under any difficulty, and for some time it did; but
at last the misery of her situation, for she experienced
great unkindness, overcame all her resolution, and
though she had promised me that nothing—but
how blindly I relate! I have never told you
how this was brought on. We were within a few
hours of eloping together for Scotland. The treachery,
or the folly, of my cousin’s maid betrayed us.
I was banished to the house of a relation far distant,
and she was allowed no liberty, no society, no amusement,
till my father’s point was gained. I had
depended on her fortitude too far, and the blow was
a severe one— but had her marriage been
happy, so young as I then was, a few months must have
reconciled me to it, or at least I should not have
now to lament it. This however was not the case.
My brother had no regard for her; his pleasures were
not what they ought to have been, and from the first
he treated her unkindly. The consequence of
this, upon a mind so young, so lively, so inexperienced
as Mrs. Brandon’s, was but too natural.
She resigned herself at first to all the misery of
her situation; and happy had it been if she had not
lived to overcome those regrets which the remembrance
of me occasioned. But can we wonder that, with
such a husband to provoke inconstancy, and without
a friend to advise or restrain her (for my father
lived only a few months after their marriage, and
I was with my regiment in the East Indies) she should
fall? Had I remained in England, perhaps—but
I meant to promote the happiness of both by removing
from her for years, and for that purpose had procured
my exchange. The shock which her marriage had
given me,” he continued, in a voice of great
agitation, “was of trifling weight—was
nothing to what I felt when I heard, about two years
afterwards, of her divorce. It was that
which threw this gloom,—even now the recollection
of what I suffered—”
He could say no more, and rising hastily
walked for a few minutes about the room. Elinor,
affected by his relation, and still more by his distress,
could not speak. He saw her concern, and coming
to her, took her hand, pressed it, and kissed it with
grateful respect. A few minutes more of silent
exertion enabled him to proceed with composure.
“It was nearly three years after
this unhappy period before I returned to England.
My first care, when I did arrive, was of course
to seek for her; but the search was as fruitless as
it was melancholy. I could not trace her beyond
her first seducer, and there was every reason to fear
that she had removed from him only to sink deeper
in a life of sin. Her legal allowance was not
adequate to her fortune, nor sufficient for her comfortable
maintenance, and I learnt from my brother that the
power of receiving it had been made over some months
before to another person. He imagined, and calmly
could he imagine it, that her extravagance, and consequent
distress, had obliged her to dispose of it for some
immediate relief. At last, however, and after
I had been six months in England, I did find
her. Regard for a former servant of my own,
who had since fallen into misfortune, carried me to
visit him in a spunging-house, where he was confined
for debt; and there, the same house, under a similar
confinement, was my unfortunate sister. So altered—so
faded—worn down by acute suffering of every
kind! hardly could I believe the melancholy and sickly
figure before me, to be the remains of the lovely,
blooming, healthful girl, on whom I had once doted.
What I endured in so beholding her—but
I have no right to wound your feelings by attempting
to describe it—I have pained you too much
already. That she was, to all appearance, in
the last stage of a consumption, was—yes,
in such a situation it was my greatest comfort.
Life could do nothing for her, beyond giving time
for a better preparation for death; and that was given.
I saw her placed in comfortable lodgings, and under
proper attendants; I visited her every day during
the rest of her short life: I was with her in
her last moments.”
Again he stopped to recover himself;
and Elinor spoke her feelings in an exclamation of
tender concern, at the fate of his unfortunate friend.
“Your sister, I hope, cannot
be offended,” said he, “by the resemblance
I have fancied between her and my poor disgraced relation.
Their fates, their fortunes, cannot be the same;
and had the natural sweet disposition of the one been
guarded by a firmer mind, or a happier marriage, she
might have been all that you will live to see the
other be. But to what does all this lead?
I seem to have been distressing you for nothing.
Ah! Miss Dashwood—a subject such as
this—untouched for fourteen years—it
is dangerous to handle it at all! I will
be more collected—more concise. She
left to my care her only child, a little girl, the
offspring of her first guilty connection, who was
then about three years old. She loved the child,
and had always kept it with her. It was a valued,
a precious trust to me; and gladly would I have discharged
it in the strictest sense, by watching over her education
myself, had the nature of our situations allowed it;
but I had no family, no home; and my little Eliza
was therefore placed at school. I saw her there
whenever I could, and after the death of my brother,
(which happened about five years ago, and which left
to me the possession of the family property,) she
visited me at Delaford. I called her a distant
relation; but I am well aware that I have in general
been suspected of a much nearer connection with her.
It is now three years ago (she had just reached her
fourteenth year,) that I removed her from school,
to place her under the care of a very respectable
woman, residing in Dorsetshire, who had the charge
of four or five other girls of about the same time
of life; and for two years I had every reason to be
pleased with her situation. But last February,
almost a twelvemonth back, she suddenly disappeared.
I had allowed her, (imprudently, as it has since turned
out,) at her earnest desire, to go to Bath with one
of her young friends, who was attending her father
there for his health. I knew him to be a very
good sort of man, and I thought well of his daughter—better
than she deserved, for, with a most obstinate and
ill-judged secrecy, she would tell nothing, would
give no clue, though she certainly knew all.
He, her father, a well-meaning, but not a quick-sighted
man, could really, I believe, give no information;
for he had been generally confined to the house, while
the girls were ranging over the town and making what
acquaintance they chose; and he tried to convince
me, as thoroughly as he was convinced himself, of
his daughter’s being entirely unconcerned in
the business. In short, I could learn nothing
but that she was gone; all the rest, for eight long
months, was left to conjecture. What I thought,
what I feared, may be imagined; and what I suffered
too.”
“Good heavens!” cried
Elinor, “could it be—could Willoughby!”—
“The first news that reached
me of her,” he continued, “came in a letter
from herself, last October. It was forwarded
to me from Delaford, and I received it on the very
morning of our intended party to Whitwell; and this
was the reason of my leaving Barton so suddenly, which
I am sure must at the time have appeared strange to
every body, and which I believe gave offence to some.
Little did Mr. Willoughby imagine, I suppose, when
his looks censured me for incivility in breaking up
the party, that I was called away to the relief of
one whom he had made poor and miserable; but had
he known it, what would it have availed? Would
he have been less gay or less happy in the smiles
of your sister? No, he had already done that,
which no man who can feel for another would do.
He had left the girl whose youth and innocence he
had seduced, in a situation of the utmost distress,
with no creditable home, no help, no friends, ignorant
of his address! He had left her, promising to
return; he neither returned, nor wrote, nor relieved
her.”
“This is beyond every thing!” exclaimed
Elinor.
“His character is now before
you; expensive, dissipated, and worse than both.
Knowing all this, as I have now known it many weeks,
guess what I must have felt on seeing your sister
as fond of him as ever, and on being assured that
she was to marry him: guess what I must have felt
for all your sakes. When I came to you last week
and found you alone, I came determined to know the
truth; though irresolute what to do when it was
known. My behaviour must have seemed strange
to you then; but now you will comprehend it.
To suffer you all to be so deceived; to see your
sister—but what could I do? I had
no hope of interfering with success; and sometimes
I thought your sister’s influence might yet reclaim
him. But now, after such dishonorable usage,
who can tell what were his designs on her. Whatever
they may have been, however, she may now, and hereafter
doubtless will turn with gratitude towards her
own condition, when she compares it with that of my
poor Eliza, when she considers the wretched and hopeless
situation of this poor girl, and pictures her to herself,
with an affection for him so strong, still as strong
as her own, and with a mind tormented by self-reproach,
which must attend her through life. Surely this
comparison must have its use with her. She will
feel her own sufferings to be nothing. They
proceed from no misconduct, and can bring no disgrace.
On the contrary, every friend must be made still more
her friend by them. Concern for her unhappiness,
and respect for her fortitude under it, must strengthen
every attachment. Use your own discretion, however,
in communicating to her what I have told you.
You must know best what will be its effect; but had
I not seriously, and from my heart believed it might
be of service, might lessen her regrets, I would not
have suffered myself to trouble you with this account
of my family afflictions, with a recital which may
seem to have been intended to raise myself at the
expense of others.”
Elinor’s thanks followed this
speech with grateful earnestness; attended too with
the assurance of her expecting material advantage
to Marianne, from the communication of what had passed.
“I have been more pained,”
said she, “by her endeavors to acquit him than
by all the rest; for it irritates her mind more than
the most perfect conviction of his unworthiness can
do. Now, though at first she will suffer much,
I am sure she will soon become easier. Have you,”
she continued, after a short silence, “ever
seen Mr. Willoughby since you left him at Barton?”
“Yes,” he replied gravely,
“once I have. One meeting was unavoidable.”
Elinor, startled by his manner, looked
at him anxiously, saying,
“What? have you met him to—”
“I could meet him no other way.
Eliza had confessed to me, though most reluctantly,
the name of her lover; and when he returned to town,
which was within a fortnight after myself, we met
by appointment, he to defend, I to punish his conduct.
We returned unwounded, and the meeting, therefore,
never got abroad.”
Elinor sighed over the fancied necessity
of this; but to a man and a soldier she presumed not
to censure it.
“Such,” said Colonel Brandon,
after a pause, “has been the unhappy resemblance
between the fate of mother and daughter! and so imperfectly
have I discharged my trust!”
“Is she still in town?”
“No; as soon as she recovered
from her lying-in, for I found her near her delivery,
I removed her and her child into the country, and
there she remains.”
Recollecting, soon afterwards, that
he was probably dividing Elinor from her sister, he
put an end to his visit, receiving from her again
the same grateful acknowledgments, and leaving her
full of compassion and esteem for him.