Mrs. Palmer was so well at the end
of a fortnight, that her mother felt it no longer
necessary to give up the whole of her time to her;
and, contenting herself with visiting her once or
twice a day, returned from that period to her own
home, and her own habits, in which she found the Miss
Dashwoods very ready to resume their former share.
About the third or fourth morning
after their being thus resettled in Berkeley Street,
Mrs. Jennings, on returning from her ordinary visit
to Mrs. Palmer, entered the drawing-room, where Elinor
was sitting by herself, with an air of such hurrying
importance as prepared her to hear something wonderful;
and giving her time only to form that idea, began
directly to justify it, by saying,
“Lord! my dear Miss Dashwood!
have you heard the news?”
“No, ma’am. What is it?”
“Something so strange!
But you shall hear it all.— When I got
to Mr. Palmer’s, I found Charlotte quite in
a fuss about the child. She was sure it was very
ill—it cried, and fretted, and was all over
pimples. So I looked at it directly, and, ‘Lord!
my dear,’ says I, ‘it is nothing in the
world, but the red gum—’ and nurse
said just the same. But Charlotte, she would
not be satisfied, so Mr. Donavan was sent for; and
luckily he happened to just come in from Harley Street,
so he stepped over directly, and as soon as ever he
saw the child, be said just as we did, that it was
nothing in the world but the red gum, and then Charlotte
was easy. And so, just as he was going away
again, it came into my head, I am sure I do not know
how I happened to think of it, but it came into my
head to ask him if there was any news. So upon
that, he smirked, and simpered, and looked grave,
and seemed to know something or other, and at last
he said in a whisper, ’For fear any unpleasant
report should reach the young ladies under your care
as to their sister’s indisposition, I think
it advisable to say, that I believe there is no great
reason for alarm; I hope Mrs. Dashwood will do very
well.’”
“What! is Fanny ill?”
“That is exactly what I said,
my dear. ‘Lord!’ says I, ‘is
Mrs. Dashwood ill?’ So then it all came out;
and the long and the short of the matter, by all I
can learn, seems to be this. Mr. Edward Ferrars,
the very young man I used to joke with you about (but
however, as it turns out, I am monstrous glad there
was never any thing in it), Mr. Edward Ferrars, it
seems, has been engaged above this twelvemonth to
my cousin Lucy!—There’s for you,
my dear!—And not a creature knowing a syllable
of the matter, except Nancy!—Could you
have believed such a thing possible?— There
is no great wonder in their liking one another; but
that matters should be brought so forward between them,
and nobody suspect it!—That is strange!—I
never happened to see them together, or I am sure
I should have found it out directly. Well, and
so this was kept a great secret, for fear of Mrs.
Ferrars, and neither she nor your brother or sister
suspected a word of the matter;— till this
very morning, poor Nancy, who, you know, is a well-meaning
creature, but no conjurer, popt it all out. ‘Lord!’
thinks she to herself, ’they are all so fond
of Lucy, to be sure they will make no difficulty about
it;’ and so, away she went to your sister, who
was sitting all alone at her carpet-work, little suspecting
what was to come—for she had just been
saying to your brother, only five minutes before,
that she thought to make a match between Edward and
some Lord’s daughter or other, I forget who.
So you may think what a blow it was to all her vanity
and pride. She fell into violent hysterics immediately,
with such screams as reached your brother’s ears,
as he was sitting in his own dressing-room down stairs,
thinking about writing a letter to his steward in the
country. So up he flew directly, and a terrible
scene took place, for Lucy was come to them by that
time, little dreaming what was going on. Poor
soul! I pity her. And I must say,
I think she was used very hardly; for your sister scolded
like any fury, and soon drove her into a fainting fit.
Nancy, she fell upon her knees, and cried bitterly;
and your brother, he walked about the room, and said
he did not know what to do. Mrs. Dashwood declared
they should not stay a minute longer in the house,
and your brother was forced to go down upon his
knees too, to persuade her to let them stay till they
had packed up their clothes. Then she fell
into hysterics again, and he was so frightened that
he would send for Mr. Donavan, and Mr. Donavan found
the house in all this uproar. The carriage was
at the door ready to take my poor cousins away, and
they were just stepping in as he came off; poor Lucy
in such a condition, he says, she could hardly walk;
and Nancy, she was almost as bad. I declare,
I have no patience with your sister; and I hope, with
all my heart, it will be a match in spite of her.
Lord! what a taking poor Mr. Edward will be in when
he hears of it! To have his love used so scornfully!
for they say he is monstrous fond of her, as well
he may. I should not wonder, if he was to be
in the greatest passion!—and Mr. Donavan
thinks just the same. He and I had a great deal
of talk about it; and the best of all is, that he
is gone back again to Harley Street, that he may be
within call when Mrs. Ferrars is told of it, for she
was sent for as soon as ever my cousins left the house,
for your sister was sure she would be in hysterics
too; and so she may, for what I care. I have
no pity for either of them. I have no notion
of people’s making such a to-do about money
and greatness. There is no reason on earth why
Mr. Edward and Lucy should not marry; for I am sure
Mrs. Ferrars may afford to do very well by her son,
and though Lucy has next to nothing herself, she knows
better than any body how to make the most of every
thing; I dare say, if Mrs. Ferrars would only allow
him five hundred a-year, she would make as good an
appearance with it as any body else would with eight.
Lord! how snug they might live in such another cottage
as yours—or a little bigger—with
two maids, and two men; and I believe I could help
them to a housemaid, for my Betty has a sister out
of place, that would fit them exactly.”
Here Mrs. Jennings ceased, and as
Elinor had had time enough to collect her thoughts,
she was able to give such an answer, and make such
observations, as the subject might naturally be supposed
to produce. Happy to find that she was not suspected
of any extraordinary interest in it; that Mrs. Jennings
(as she had of late often hoped might be the case)
had ceased to imagine her at all attached to Edward;
and happy above all the rest, in the absence of Marianne,
she felt very well able to speak of the affair without
embarrassment, and to give her judgment, as she believed,
with impartiality on the conduct of every one concerned
in it.
She could hardly determine what her
own expectation of its event really was; though she
earnestly tried to drive away the notion of its being
possible to end otherwise at last, than in the marriage
of Edward and Lucy. What Mrs. Ferrars would say
and do, though there could not be a doubt of its nature,
she was anxious to hear; and still more anxious to
know how Edward would conduct himself. For him
she felt much compassion;— for Lucy very
little—and it cost her some pains to procure
that little;—for the rest of the party none
at all.
As Mrs. Jennings could talk on no
other subject, Elinor soon saw the necessity of preparing
Marianne for its discussion. No time was to
be lost in undeceiving her, in making her acquainted
with the real truth, and in endeavouring to bring
her to hear it talked of by others, without betraying
that she felt any uneasiness for her sister, or any
resentment against Edward.
Elinor’s office was a painful
one.—She was going to remove what she really
believed to be her sister’s chief consolation,—to
give such particulars of Edward as she feared would
ruin him for ever in her good opinion,-and to make
Marianne, by a resemblance in their situations, which
to her fancy would seem strong, feel all her own
disappointment over again. But unwelcome as such
a task must be, it was necessary to be done, and Elinor
therefore hastened to perform it.
She was very far from wishing to dwell
on her own feelings, or to represent herself as suffering
much, any otherwise than as the self-command she had
practised since her first knowledge of Edward’s
engagement, might suggest a hint of what was practicable
to Marianne. Her narration was clear and simple;
and though it could not be given without emotion,
it was not accompanied by violent agitation, nor impetuous
grief.—That belonged rather to the
hearer, for Marianne listened with horror, and cried
excessively. Elinor was to be the comforter
of others in her own distresses, no less than in theirs;
and all the comfort that could be given by assurances
of her own composure of mind, and a very earnest vindication
of Edward from every charge but of imprudence, was
readily offered.
But Marianne for some time would give
credit to neither. Edward seemed a second Willoughby;
and acknowledging as Elinor did, that she had
loved him most sincerely, could she feel less than
herself! As for Lucy Steele, she considered
her so totally unamiable, so absolutely incapable
of attaching a sensible man, that she could not be
persuaded at first to believe, and afterwards to pardon,
any former affection of Edward for her. She would
not even admit it to have been natural; and Elinor
left her to be convinced that it was so, by that which
only could convince her, a better knowledge of mankind.
Her first communication had reached
no farther than to state the fact of the engagement,
and the length of time it had existed.—Marianne’s
feelings had then broken in, and put an end to all
regularity of detail; and for some time all that could
be done was to soothe her distress, lessen her alarms,
and combat her resentment. The first question
on her side, which led to farther particulars, was,
“How long has this been known
to you, Elinor? has he written to you?”
“I have known it these four
months. When Lucy first came to Barton Park
last November, she told me in confidence of her engagement.”
At these words, Marianne’s eyes
expressed the astonishment which her lips could not
utter. After a pause of wonder, she exclaimed—
“Four months!—Have
you known of this four months?”
Elinor confirmed it.
“What!—while attending
me in all my misery, has this been on your heart?—And
I have reproached you for being happy!”—
“It was not fit that you should
then know how much I was the reverse!”
“Four months!”—cried
Marianne again.—“So calm!—
so cheerful!—how have you been supported?”—
“By feeling that I was doing
my duty.—My promise to Lucy, obliged me
to be secret. I owed it to her, therefore, to
avoid giving any hint of the truth; and I owed it to
my family and friends, not to create in them a solicitude
about me, which it could not be in my power to satisfy.”
Marianne seemed much struck.
“I have very often wished to
undeceive yourself and my mother,” added Elinor;
“and once or twice I have attempted it;—
but without betraying my trust, I never could have
convinced you.”
“Four months!—and yet you loved him!”—
“Yes. But I did not love
only him;—and while the comfort of others
was dear to me, I was glad to spare them from knowing
how much I felt. Now, I can think and speak of
it with little emotion. I would not have you
suffer on my account; for I assure you I no longer
suffer materially myself. I have many things
to support me. I am not conscious of having
provoked the disappointment by any imprudence of my
own, I have borne it as much as possible without spreading
it farther. I acquit Edward of essential misconduct.
I wish him very happy; and I am so sure of his always
doing his duty, that though now he may harbour some
regret, in the end he must become so. Lucy does
not want sense, and that is the foundation on which
every thing good may be built.—And after
all, Marianne, after all that is bewitching in the
idea of a single and constant attachment, and all
that can be said of one’s happiness depending
entirely on any particular person, it is not meant—it
is not fit—it is not possible that it should
be so.— Edward will marry Lucy; he will
marry a woman superior in person and understanding
to half her sex; and time and habit will teach him
to forget that he ever thought another superior to
her.”—
“If such is your way of thinking,”
said Marianne, “if the loss of what is most
valued is so easily to be made up by something else,
your resolution, your self-command, are, perhaps,
a little less to be wondered at.—They are
brought more within my comprehension.”
“I understand you.—You
do not suppose that I have ever felt much.—For
four months, Marianne, I have had all this hanging
on my mind, without being at liberty to speak of it
to a single creature; knowing that it would make you
and my mother most unhappy whenever it were explained
to you, yet unable to prepare you for it in the least.—
It was told me,—it was in a manner forced
on me by the very person herself, whose prior engagement
ruined all my prospects; and told me, as I thought,
with triumph.— This person’s suspicions,
therefore, I have had to oppose, by endeavouring to
appear indifferent where I have been most deeply interested;—and
it has not been only once;—I have had her
hopes and exultation to listen to again and again.—
I have known myself to be divided from Edward for ever,
without hearing one circumstance that could make me
less desire the connection.—Nothing has
proved him unworthy; nor has anything declared him
indifferent to me.— I have had to contend
against the unkindness of his sister, and the insolence
of his mother; and have suffered the punishment of
an attachment, without enjoying its advantages.—
And all this has been going on at a time, when, as
you know too well, it has not been my only unhappiness.—
If you can think me capable of ever feeling—surely
you may suppose that I have suffered now.
The composure of mind with which I have brought myself
at present to consider the matter, the consolation
that I have been willing to admit, have been the effect
of constant and painful exertion;—they
did not spring up of themselves;— they
did not occur to relieve my spirits at first.—
No, Marianne.—Then, if I had not been
bound to silence, perhaps nothing could have kept
me entirely—not even what I owed to my
dearest friends—from openly shewing that
I was very unhappy.”—
Marianne was quite subdued.—
“Oh! Elinor,” she
cried, “you have made me hate myself for ever.—How
barbarous have I been to you!— you, who
have been my only comfort, who have borne with me
in all my misery, who have seemed to be only suffering
for me!—Is this my gratitude?—Is
this the only return I can make you?—Because
your merit cries out upon myself, I have been trying
to do it away.”
The tenderest caresses followed this
confession. In such a frame of mind as she was
now in, Elinor had no difficulty in obtaining from
her whatever promise she required; and at her request,
Marianne engaged never to speak of the affair to any
one with the least appearance of bitterness;—to
meet Lucy without betraying the smallest increase
of dislike to her;—and even to see Edward
himself, if chance should bring them together, without
any diminution of her usual cordiality.—
These were great concessions;—but where
Marianne felt that she had injured, no reparation
could be too much for her to make.
She performed her promise of being
discreet, to admiration.—She attended to
all that Mrs. Jennings had to say upon the subject,
with an unchanging complexion, dissented from her
in nothing, and was heard three times to say, “Yes,
ma’am.”—She listened to her
praise of Lucy with only moving from one chair to
another, and when Mrs. Jennings talked of Edward’s
affection, it cost her only a spasm in her throat.—Such
advances towards heroism in her sister, made Elinor
feel equal to any thing herself.
The next morning brought a farther
trial of it, in a visit from their brother, who came
with a most serious aspect to talk over the dreadful
affair, and bring them news of his wife.
“You have heard, I suppose,”
said he with great solemnity, as soon as he was seated,
“of the very shocking discovery that took place
under our roof yesterday.”
They all looked their assent; it seemed
too awful a moment for speech.
“Your sister,” he continued,
“has suffered dreadfully. Mrs. Ferrars
too—in short it has been a scene of such
complicated distress—but I will hope that
the storm may be weathered without our being any of
us quite overcome. Poor Fanny! she was in hysterics
all yesterday. But I would not alarm you too
much. Donavan says there is nothing materially
to be apprehended; her constitution is a good one,
and her resolution equal to any thing. She has
borne it all, with the fortitude of an angel!
She says she never shall think well of anybody again;
and one cannot wonder at it, after being so deceived!—
meeting with such ingratitude, where so much kindness
had been shewn, so much confidence had been placed!
It was quite out of the benevolence of her heart,
that she had asked these young women to her house;
merely because she thought they deserved some attention,
were harmless, well-behaved girls, and would be pleasant
companions; for otherwise we both wished very much
to have invited you and Marianne to be with us, while
your kind friend there, was attending her daughter.
And now to be so rewarded! ‘I wish, with
all my heart,’ says poor Fanny in her affectionate
way, ’that we had asked your sisters instead
of them.’”
Here he stopped to be thanked; which
being done, he went on.
“What poor Mrs. Ferrars suffered,
when first Fanny broke it to her, is not to be described.
While she with the truest affection had been planning
a most eligible connection for him, was it to be supposed
that he could be all the time secretly engaged to
another person!—such a suspicion could
never have entered her head! If she suspected
any prepossession elsewhere, it could not be
in that quarter. ‘There, to be
sure,’ said she, ’I might have thought
myself safe.’ She was quite in an agony.
We consulted together, however, as to what should be
done, and at last she determined to send for Edward.
He came. But I am sorry to relate what ensued.
All that Mrs. Ferrars could say to make him put an
end to the engagement, assisted too as you may well
suppose by my arguments, and Fanny’s entreaties,
was of no avail. Duty, affection, every thing
was disregarded. I never thought Edward so stubborn,
so unfeeling before. His mother explained to
him her liberal designs, in case of his marrying Miss
Morton; told him she would settle on him the Norfolk
estate, which, clear of land-tax, brings in a good
thousand a-year; offered even, when matters grew desperate,
to make it twelve hundred; and in opposition to this,
if he still persisted in this low connection, represented
to him the certain penury that must attend the match.
His own two thousand pounds she protested should
be his all; she would never see him again; and so far
would she be from affording him the smallest assistance,
that if he were to enter into any profession with a
view of better support, she would do all in her power
to prevent him advancing in it.”
Here Marianne, in an ecstasy of indignation,
clapped her hands together, and cried, “Gracious
God! can this be possible!”
“Well may you wonder, Marianne,”
replied her brother, “at the obstinacy which
could resist such arguments as these. Your exclamation
is very natural.”
Marianne was going to retort, but
she remembered her promises, and forbore.
“All this, however,” he
continued, “was urged in vain. Edward said
very little; but what he did say, was in the most
determined manner. Nothing should prevail on
him to give up his engagement. He would stand
to it, cost him what it might.”
“Then,” cried Mrs. Jennings
with blunt sincerity, no longer able to be silent,
“he has acted like an honest man! I beg
your pardon, Mr. Dashwood, but if he had done otherwise,
I should have thought him a rascal. I have some
little concern in the business, as well as yourself,
for Lucy Steele is my cousin, and I believe there
is not a better kind of girl in the world, nor one
who more deserves a good husband.”
John Dashwood was greatly astonished;
but his nature was calm, not open to provocation,
and he never wished to offend anybody, especially
anybody of good fortune. He therefore replied,
without any resentment,
“I would by no means speak disrespectfully
of any relation of yours, madam. Miss Lucy Steele
is, I dare say, a very deserving young woman, but
in the present case you know, the connection must
be impossible. And to have entered into a secret
engagement with a young man under her uncle’s
care, the son of a woman especially of such very large
fortune as Mrs. Ferrars, is perhaps, altogether a
little extraordinary. In short, I do not mean
to reflect upon the behaviour of any person whom you
have a regard for, Mrs. Jennings. We all wish
her extremely happy; and Mrs. Ferrars’s conduct
throughout the whole, has been such as every conscientious,
good mother, in like circumstances, would adopt.
It has been dignified and liberal. Edward has
drawn his own lot, and I fear it will be a bad one.”
Marianne sighed out her similar apprehension;
and Elinor’s heart wrung for the feelings of
Edward, while braving his mother’s threats,
for a woman who could not reward him.
“Well, sir,” said Mrs.
Jennings, “and how did it end?”
“I am sorry to say, ma’am,
in a most unhappy rupture:— Edward is dismissed
for ever from his mother’s notice. He left
her house yesterday, but where he is gone, or whether
he is still in town, I do not know; for we of
course can make no inquiry.”
“Poor young man!—and what is to become
of him?”
“What, indeed, ma’am!
It is a melancholy consideration. Born to the
prospect of such affluence! I cannot conceive
a situation more deplorable. The interest of
two thousand pounds—how can a man live
on it?—and when to that is added the recollection,
that he might, but for his own folly, within three
months have been in the receipt of two thousand, five
hundred a-year (for Miss Morton has thirty thousand
pounds,) I cannot picture to myself a more wretched
condition. We must all feel for him; and the
more so, because it is totally out of our power to
assist him.”
“Poor young man!” cried
Mrs. Jennings, “I am sure he should be very
welcome to bed and board at my house; and so I would
tell him if I could see him. It is not fit that
he should be living about at his own charge now, at
lodgings and taverns.”
Elinor’s heart thanked her for
such kindness towards Edward, though she could not
forbear smiling at the form of it.
“If he would only have done
as well by himself,” said John Dashwood, “as
all his friends were disposed to do by him, he might
now have been in his proper situation, and would have
wanted for nothing. But as it is, it must be
out of anybody’s power to assist him. And
there is one thing more preparing against him, which
must be worse than all—his mother has determined,
with a very natural kind of spirit, to settle that
estate upon Robert immediately, which might have been
Edward’s, on proper conditions. I left
her this morning with her lawyer, talking over the
business.”
“Well!” said Mrs. Jennings,
“that is her revenge. Everybody has
a way of their own. But I don’t think mine
would be, to make one son independent, because another
had plagued me.”
Marianne got up and walked about the room.
“Can anything be more galling
to the spirit of a man,” continued John, “than
to see his younger brother in possession of an estate
which might have been his own? Poor Edward!
I feel for him sincerely.”
A few minutes more spent in the same
kind of effusion, concluded his visit; and with repeated
assurances to his sisters that he really believed
there was no material danger in Fanny’s indisposition,
and that they need not therefore be very uneasy about
it, he went away; leaving the three ladies unanimous
in their sentiments on the present occasion, as far
at least as it regarded Mrs. Ferrars’s conduct,
the Dashwoods’, and Edward’s.
Marianne’s indignation burst
forth as soon as he quitted the room; and as her vehemence
made reserve impossible in Elinor, and unnecessary
in Mrs. Jennings, they all joined in a very spirited
critique upon the party.