The Miss Dashwoods had now been rather
more than two months in town, and Marianne’s
impatience to be gone increased every day. She
sighed for the air, the liberty, the quiet of the
country; and fancied that if any place could give
her ease, Barton must do it. Elinor was hardly
less anxious than herself for their removal, and only
so much less bent on its being effected immediately,
as that she was conscious of the difficulties of so
long a journey, which Marianne could not be brought
to acknowledge. She began, however, seriously
to turn her thoughts towards its accomplishment, and
had already mentioned their wishes to their kind hostess,
who resisted them with all the eloquence of her good-will,
when a plan was suggested, which, though detaining
them from home yet a few weeks longer, appeared to
Elinor altogether much more eligible than any other.
The Palmers were to remove to Cleveland about the
end of March, for the Easter holidays; and Mrs. Jennings,
with both her friends, received a very warm invitation
from Charlotte to go with them. This would not,
in itself, have been sufficient for the delicacy of
Miss Dashwood;—but it was inforced with
so much real politeness by Mr. Palmer himself, as,
joined to the very great amendment of his manners
towards them since her sister had been known to be
unhappy, induced her to accept it with pleasure.
When she told Marianne what she had
done, however, her first reply was not very auspicious.
“Cleveland!”—she
cried, with great agitation. “No, I cannot
go to Cleveland.”—
“You forget,” said Elinor
gently, “that its situation is not…that it
is not in the neighbourhood of…”
“But it is in Somersetshire.—I
cannot go into Somersetshire.—There, where
I looked forward to going…No, Elinor, you cannot
expect me to go there.”
Elinor would not argue upon the propriety
of overcoming such feelings;—she only endeavoured
to counteract them by working on others;—represented
it, therefore, as a measure which would fix the time
of her returning to that dear mother, whom she so
much wished to see, in a more eligible, more comfortable
manner, than any other plan could do, and perhaps
without any greater delay. From Cleveland, which
was within a few miles of Bristol, the distance to
Barton was not beyond one day, though a long day’s
journey; and their mother’s servant might easily
come there to attend them down; and as there could
be no occasion of their staying above a week at Cleveland,
they might now be at home in little more than three
weeks’ time. As Marianne’s affection
for her mother was sincere, it must triumph with little
difficulty, over the imaginary evils she had started.
Mrs. Jennings was so far from being
weary of her guest, that she pressed them very earnestly
to return with her again from Cleveland. Elinor
was grateful for the attention, but it could not alter
her design; and their mother’s concurrence being
readily gained, every thing relative to their return
was arranged as far as it could be;— and
Marianne found some relief in drawing up a statement
of the hours that were yet to divide her from Barton.
“Ah! Colonel, I do not
know what you and I shall do without the Miss Dashwoods;”—was
Mrs. Jennings’s address to him when he first
called on her, after their leaving her was settled—“for
they are quite resolved upon going home from the Palmers;—and
how forlorn we shall be, when I come back
we shall sit and gape at one another as dull as two
cats.”
Perhaps Mrs. Jennings was in hopes,
by this vigorous sketch of their future ennui, to
provoke him to make that offer, which might give himself
an escape from it;— and if so, she had
soon afterwards good reason to think her object gained;
for, on Elinor’s moving to the window to take
more expeditiously the dimensions of a print, which
she was going to copy for her friend, he followed
her to it with a look of particular meaning, and conversed
with her there for several minutes. The effect
of his discourse on the lady too, could not escape
her observation, for though she was too honorable
to listen, and had even changed her seat, on purpose
that she might not hear, to one close by the
piano forte on which Marianne was playing, she could
not keep herself from seeing that Elinor changed colour,
attended with agitation, and was too intent on what
he said to pursue her employment.— Still
farther in confirmation of her hopes, in the interval
of Marianne’s turning from one lesson to another,
some words of the Colonel’s inevitably reached
her ear, in which he seemed to be apologising for
the badness of his house. This set the matter
beyond a doubt. She wondered, indeed, at his
thinking it necessary to do so; but supposed it to
be the proper etiquette. What Elinor said in
reply she could not distinguish, but judged from the
motion of her lips, that she did not think that
any material objection;—and Mrs. Jennings
commended her in her heart for being so honest.
They then talked on for a few minutes longer without
her catching a syllable, when another lucky stop in
Marianne’s performance brought her these words
in the Colonel’s calm voice,—
“I am afraid it cannot take place very soon.”
Astonished and shocked at so unlover-like
a speech, she was almost ready to cry out, “Lord!
what should hinder it?”—but checking
her desire, confined herself to this silent ejaculation.
“This is very strange!—sure
he need not wait to be older.”
This delay on the Colonel’s
side, however, did not seem to offend or mortify his
fair companion in the least, for on their breaking
up the conference soon afterwards, and moving different
ways, Mrs. Jennings very plainly heard Elinor say,
and with a voice which shewed her to feel what she
said,
“I shall always think myself
very much obliged to you.”
Mrs. Jennings was delighted with her
gratitude, and only wondered that after hearing such
a sentence, the Colonel should be able to take leave
of them, as he immediately did, with the utmost sang-froid,
and go away without making her any reply!—She
had not thought her old friend could have made so
indifferent a suitor.
What had really passed between them
was to this effect.
“I have heard,” said he,
with great compassion, “of the injustice your
friend Mr. Ferrars has suffered from his family; for
if I understand the matter right, he has been entirely
cast off by them for persevering in his engagement
with a very deserving young woman.— Have
I been rightly informed?—Is it so?—”
Elinor told him that it was.
“The cruelty, the impolitic
cruelty,”—he replied, with great
feeling,—“of dividing, or attempting
to divide, two young people long attached to each
other, is terrible.— Mrs. Ferrars does
not know what she may be doing—what she
may drive her son to. I have seen Mr. Ferrars
two or three times in Harley Street, and am much pleased
with him. He is not a young man with whom one
can be intimately acquainted in a short time, but
I have seen enough of him to wish him well for his
own sake, and as a friend of yours, I wish it still
more. I understand that he intends to take orders.
Will you be so good as to tell him that the living
of Delaford, now just vacant, as I am informed by
this day’s post, is his, if he think it worth
his acceptance—but that, perhaps,
so unfortunately circumstanced as he is now, it may
be nonsense to appear to doubt; I only wish it were
more valuable.— It is a rectory, but a
small one; the late incumbent, I believe, did not
make more than 200 L per annum, and though it is certainly
capable of improvement, I fear, not to such an amount
as to afford him a very comfortable income.
Such as it is, however, my pleasure in presenting
him to it, will be very great. Pray assure him
of it.”
Elinor’s astonishment at this
commission could hardly have been greater, had the
Colonel been really making her an offer of his hand.
The preferment, which only two days before she had
considered as hopeless for Edward, was already provided
to enable him to marry;— and she,
of all people in the world, was fixed on to bestow
it!—Her emotion was such as Mrs. Jennings
had attributed to a very different cause;—but
whatever minor feelings less pure, less pleasing,
might have a share in that emotion, her esteem for
the general benevolence, and her gratitude for the
particular friendship, which together prompted Colonel
Brandon to this act, were strongly felt, and warmly
expressed. She thanked him for it with all her
heart, spoke of Edward’s principles and disposition
with that praise which she knew them to deserve; and
promised to undertake the commission with pleasure,
if it were really his wish to put off so agreeable
an office to another. But at the same time,
she could not help thinking that no one could so well
perform it as himself. It was an office in short,
from which, unwilling to give Edward the pain of receiving
an obligation from her, she would have been very
glad to be spared herself;— but Colonel
Brandon, on motives of equal delicacy, declining it
likewise, still seemed so desirous of its being given
through her means, that she would not on any account
make farther opposition. Edward, she believed,
was still in town, and fortunately she had heard
his address from Miss Steele. She could undertake
therefore to inform him of it, in the course of the
day. After this had been settled, Colonel Brandon
began to talk of his own advantage in securing so
respectable and agreeable a neighbour, and then
it was that he mentioned with regret, that the house
was small and indifferent;—an evil which
Elinor, as Mrs. Jennings had supposed her to do, made
very light of, at least as far as regarded its size.
“The smallness of the house,”
said she, “I cannot imagine any inconvenience
to them, for it will be in proportion to their family
and income.”
By which the Colonel was surprised
to find that she was considering Mr. Ferrars’s
marriage as the certain consequence of the presentation;
for he did not suppose it possible that Delaford living
could supply such an income, as anybody in his style
of life would venture to settle on— and
he said so.
“This little rectory can
do no more than make Mr. Ferrars comfortable as a
bachelor; it cannot enable him to marry. I am
sorry to say that my patronage ends with this; and
my interest is hardly more extensive. If, however,
by an unforeseen chance it should be in my power to
serve him farther, I must think very differently of
him from what I now do, if I am not as ready to be
useful to him then as I sincerely wish I could be
at present. What I am now doing indeed, seems
nothing at all, since it can advance him so little
towards what must be his principal, his only object
of happiness. His marriage must still be a distant
good;—at least, I am afraid it cannot take
place very soon.—”
Such was the sentence which, when
misunderstood, so justly offended the delicate feelings
of Mrs. Jennings; but after this narration of what
really passed between Colonel Brandon and Elinor,
while they stood at the window, the gratitude expressed
by the latter on their parting, may perhaps appear
in general, not less reasonably excited, nor less
properly worded than if it had arisen from an offer
of marriage.