In little more than twenty minutes
the journey was accomplished. I paused at the
gate to wipe my streaming forehead, and recover my
breath and some degree of composure. Already
the rapid walking had somewhat mitigated my excitement;
and with a firm and steady tread I paced the garden-walk.
In passing the inhabited wing of the building, I
caught a sight of Mrs. Graham, through the open window,
slowly pacing up and down her lonely room.
She seemed agitated and even dismayed
at my arrival, as if she thought I too was coming
to accuse her. I had entered her presence intending
to condole with her upon the wickedness of the world,
and help her to abuse the vicar and his vile informants,
but now I felt positively ashamed to mention the subject,
and determined not to refer to it, unless she led
the way.
‘I am come at an unseasonable
hour,’ said I, assuming a cheerfulness I did
not feel, in order to reassure her; ’but I won’t
stay many minutes.’
She smiled upon me, faintly it is
true, but most kindly — I had almost said thankfully,
as her apprehensions were removed.
‘How dismal you are, Helen!
Why have you no fire?’ I said, looking round
on the gloomy apartment.
‘It is summer yet,’ she replied.
’But we always have a fire in
the evenings, if we can bear it; and you especially
require one in this cold house and dreary room.’
’You should have come a little
sooner, and I would have had one lighted for you:
but it is not worth while now — you won’t
stay many minutes, you say, and Arthur is gone to
bed.’
’But I have a fancy for a fire,
nevertheless. Will you order one, if I ring?’
‘Why, Gilbert, you don’t
look cold!’ said she, smilingly regarding my
face, which no doubt seemed warm enough.
‘No,’ replied I, ‘but
I want to see you comfortable before I go.’
‘Me comfortable!’ repeated
she, with a bitter laugh, as if there were something
amusingly absurd in the idea. ’It suits
me better as it is,’ she added, in a tone of
mournful resignation.
But determined to have my own way, I pulled the bell.
‘There now, Helen!’ I
said, as the approaching steps of Rachel were heard
in answer to the summons. There was nothing for
it but to turn round and desire the maid to light
the fire.
I owe Rachel a grudge to this day
for the look she cast upon me ere she departed on
her mission, the sour, suspicious, inquisitorial look
that plainly demanded, ‘What are you here for,
I wonder?’ Her mistress did not fail to notice
it, and a shade of uneasiness darkened her brow.
‘You must not stay long, Gilbert,’
said she, when the door was closed upon us.
‘I’m not going to,’
said I, somewhat testily, though without a grain of
anger in my heart against any one but the meddling
old woman. ‘But, Helen, I’ve something
to say to you before I go.’
‘What is it?’
’No, not now — I don’t
know yet precisely what it is, or how to say it,’
replied I, with more truth than wisdom; and then, fearing
lest she should turn me out of the house, I began
talking about indifferent matters in order to gain
time. Meanwhile Rachel came in to kindle the
fire, which was soon effected by thrusting a red-hot
poker between the bars of the grate, where the fuel
was already disposed for ignition. She honoured
me with another of her hard, inhospitable looks in
departing, but, little moved thereby, I went on talking;
and setting a chair for Mrs. Graham on one side of
the hearth, and one for myself on the other, I ventured
to sit down, though half suspecting she would rather
see me go.
In a little while we both relapsed
into silence, and continued for several minutes gazing
abstractedly into the fire — she intent upon
her own sad thoughts, and I reflecting how delightful
it would be to be seated thus beside her with no other
presence to restrain our intercourse — not even
that of Arthur, our mutual friend, without whom we
had never met before — if only I could venture
to speak my mind, and disburden my full heart of the
feelings that had so long oppressed it, and which
it now struggled to retain, with an effort that it
seemed impossible to continue much longer, —
and revolving the pros and cons for opening my heart
to her there and then, and imploring a return of affection,
the permission to regard her thenceforth as my own,
and the right and the power to defend her from the
calumnies of malicious tongues. On the one hand,
I felt a new-born confidence in my powers of persuasion
— a strong conviction that my own fervour of
spirit would grant me eloquence — that my very
determination — the absolute necessity for succeeding,
that I felt must win me what I sought; while, on the
other, I feared to lose the ground I had already gained
with so much toil and skill, and destroy all future
hope by one rash effort, when time and patience might
have won success. It was like setting my life
upon the cast of a die; and yet I was ready to resolve
upon the attempt. At any rate, I would entreat
the explanation she had half promised to give me before;
I would demand the reason of this hateful barrier,
this mysterious impediment to my happiness, and, as
I trusted, to her own.
But while I considered in what manner
I could best frame my request, my companion, wakened
from her reverie with a scarcely audible sigh, and
looking towards the window, where the blood-red harvest
moon, just rising over one of the grim, fantastic
evergreens, was shining in upon us, said, — ’Gilbert,
it is getting late.’
‘I see,’ said I. ‘You want
me to go, I suppose?’
’I think you ought. If
my kind neighbours get to know of this visit —
as no doubt they will — they will not turn it
much to my advantage.’
It was with what the vicar would doubtless
have called a savage sort of smile that she said this.
‘Let them turn it as they will,’
said I. ’What are their thoughts to you
or me, so long as we are satisfied with ourselves —
and each other. Let them go to the deuce with
their vile constructions and their lying inventions!’
This outburst brought a flush of colour to her face.
‘You have heard, then, what they say of me?’
’I heard some detestable falsehoods;
but none but fools would credit them for a moment,
Helen, so don’t let them trouble you.’
’I did not think Mr. Millward
a fool, and he believes it all; but however little
you may value the opinions of those about you —
however little you may esteem them as individuals,
it is not pleasant to be looked upon as a liar and
a hypocrite, to be thought to practise what you abhor,
and to encourage the vices you would discountenance,
to find your good intentions frustrated, and your
hands crippled by your supposed unworthiness, and to
bring disgrace on the principles you profess.’
’True; and if I, by my thoughtlessness
and selfish disregard to appearances, have at all
assisted to expose you to these evils, let me entreat
you not only to pardon me, but to enable me to make
reparation; authorise me to clear your name from every
imputation: give me the right to identify your
honour with my own, and to defend your reputation
as more precious than my life!’
’Are you hero enough to unite
yourself to one whom you know to be suspected and
despised by all around you, and identify your interests
and your honour with hers? Think! it is a serious
thing.’
’I should be proud to do it,
Helen! — most happy — delighted beyond
expression! — and if that be all the obstacle
to our union, it is demolished, and you must —
you shall be mine!’
And starting from my seat in a frenzy
of ardour, I seized her hand and would have pressed
it to my lips, but she as suddenly caught it away,
exclaiming in the bitterness of intense affliction,
— ’No, no, it is not all!’
’What is it, then? You
promised I should know some time, and — ’
‘You shall know some time —
but not now — my head aches terribly,’
she said, pressing her hand to her forehead, ’and
I must have some repose — and surely I have
had misery enough to-day!’ she added, almost
wildly.
‘But it could not harm you to
tell it,’ I persisted: ’it would
ease your mind; and I should then know how to comfort
you.’
She shook her head despondingly.
’If you knew all, you, too, would blame me
— perhaps even more than I deserve — though
I have cruelly wronged you,’ she added in a
low murmur, as if she mused aloud.
‘You, Helen? Impossible?’
’Yes, not willingly; for I did
not know the strength and depth of your attachment.
I thought — at least I endeavoured to think
your regard for me was as cold and fraternal as you
professed it to be.’
‘Or as yours?’
’Or as mine — ought to
have been — of such a light and selfish, superficial
nature, that — ’
‘There, indeed, you wronged me.’
I know I did; and, sometimes, I suspected
it then; but I thought, upon the whole, there could
be no great harm in leaving your fancies and your
hopes to dream themselves to nothing — or flutter
away to some more fitting object, while your friendly
sympathies remained with me; but if I had known the
depth of your regard, the generous, disinterested
affection you seem to feel — ’
‘Seem, Helen?’
‘That you do feel, then, I would have acted
differently.’
’How? You could not have
given me less encouragement, or treated me with greater
severity than you did! And if you think you have
wronged me by giving me your friendship, and occasionally
admitting me to the enjoyment of your company and
conversation, when all hopes of closer intimacy were
vain — as indeed you always gave me to understand
— if you think you have wronged me by this, you
are mistaken; for such favours, in themselves alone,
are not only delightful to my heart, but purifying,
exalting, ennobling to my soul; and I would rather
have your friendship than the love of any other woman
in the world!’
Little comforted by this, she clasped
her hands upon her knee, and glancing upward, seemed,
in silent anguish, to implore divine assistance; then,
turning to me, she calmly said, — ’To-morrow,
if you meet me on the moor about mid-day, I will tell
you all you seek to know; and perhaps you will then
see the necessity of discontinuing our intimacy —
if, indeed, you do not willingly resign me as one
no longer worthy of regard.’
’I can safely answer no to that:
you cannot have such grave confessions to make —
you must be trying my faith, Helen.’
‘No, no, no,’ she earnestly
repeated — ’I wish it were so! Thank
heaven!’ she added, ’I have no great crime
to confess; but I have more than you will like to
hear, or, perhaps, can readily excuse, — and
more than I can tell you now; so let me entreat you
to leave me!’
‘I will; but answer me this
one question first; — do you love me?’
‘I will not answer it!’
‘Then I will conclude you do; and so good-night.’
She turned from me to hide the emotion
she could not quite control; but I took her hand and
fervently kissed it.
‘Gilbert, do leave me!’
she cried, in a tone of such thrilling anguish that
I felt it would be cruel to disobey.
But I gave one look back before I
closed the door, and saw her leaning forward on the
table, with her hands pressed against her eyes, sobbing
convulsively; yet I withdrew in silence. I felt
that to obtrude my consolations on her then would
only serve to aggravate her sufferings.
To tell you all the questionings and
conjectures — the fears, and hopes, and wild
emotions that jostled and chased each other through
my mind as I descended the hill, would almost fill
a volume in itself. But before I was half-way
down, a sentiment of strong sympathy for her I had
left behind me had displaced all other feelings, and
seemed imperatively to draw me back: I began
to think, ’Why am I hurrying so fast in this
direction? Can I find comfort or consolation
— peace, certainty, contentment, all —
or anything that I want at home? and can I leave all
perturbation, sorrow, and anxiety behind me there?’
And I turned round to look at the
old Hall. There was little besides the chimneys
visible above my contracted horizon. I walked
back to get a better view of it. When it rose
in sight, I stood still a moment to look, and then
continued moving towards the gloomy object of attraction.
Something called me nearer — nearer still —
and why not, pray? Might I not find more benefit
in the contemplation of that venerable pile with the
full moon in the cloudless heaven shining so calmly
above it — with that warm yellow lustre peculiar
to an August night — and the mistress of my soul
within, than in returning to my home, where all comparatively
was light, and life, and cheerfulness, and therefore
inimical to me in my present frame of mind, —
and the more so that its inmates all were more or
less imbued with that detestable belief, the very
thought of which made my blood boil in my veins —
and how could I endure to hear it openly declared,
or cautiously insinuated — which was worse?
— I had had trouble enough already, with some
babbling fiend that would keep whispering in my ear,
‘It may be true,’ till I had shouted aloud,
’It is false! I defy you to make me suppose
it!’
I could see the red firelight dimly
gleaming from her parlour window. I went up
to the garden wall, and stood leaning over it, with
my eyes fixed upon the lattice, wondering what she
was doing, thinking, or suffering now, and wishing
I could speak to her but one word, or even catch one
glimpse of her, before I went.
I had not thus looked, and wished,
and wondered long, before I vaulted over the barrier,
unable to resist the temptation of taking one glance
through the window, just to if she were more composed
than when we parted; — and if I found her still
in deep distress, perhaps I might venture attempt
a word of comfort — to utter one of the many
things I should have said before, instead of aggravating
her sufferings by my stupid impetuosity. I looked.
Her chair was vacant: so was the room.
But at that moment some one opened the outer door,
and a voice — her voice — said, —
’Come out — I want to see the moon, and
breathe the evening air: they will do me good
— if anything will.’
Here, then, were she and Rachel coming
to take a walk in the garden. I wished myself
safe back over the wall. I stood, however, in
the shadow of the tall holly-bush, which, standing
between the window and the porch, at present screened
me from observation, but did not prevent me from seeing
two figures come forth into the moonlight: Mrs.
Graham followed by another — not Rachel, but
a young man, slender and rather tall. O heavens,
how my temples throbbed! Intense anxiety darkened
my sight; but I thought — yes, and the voice
confirmed it — it was Mr. Lawrence!
‘You should not let it worry
you so much, Helen,’ said he; ’I will
be more cautious in future; and in time — ’
I did not hear the rest of the sentence;
for he walked close beside her and spoke so gently
that I could not catch the words. My heart was
splitting with hatred; but I listened intently for
her reply. I heard it plainly enough.
‘But I must leave this place,
Frederick,’ she said — ’I never can
be happy here, — nor anywhere else, indeed,’
she added, with a mirthless laugh, — ‘but
I cannot rest here.’
‘But where could you find a
better place?’ replied he, ’so secluded
- so near me, if you think anything of that.’
‘Yes,’ interrupted she,
’it is all I could wish, if they could only
have left me alone.’
’But wherever you go, Helen,
there will be the same sources of annoyance.
I cannot consent to lose you: I must go with
you, or come to you; and there are meddling fools
elsewhere, as well as here.’
While thus conversing they had sauntered
slowly past me, down the walk, and I heard no more
of their discourse; but I saw him put his arm round
her waist, while she lovingly rested her hand on his
shoulder; — and then, a tremulous darkness obscured
my sight, my heart sickened and my head burned like
fire: I half rushed, half staggered from the
spot, where horror had kept me rooted, and leaped
or tumbled over the wall — I hardly know which
— but I know that, afterwards, like a passionate
child, I dashed myself on the ground and lay there
in a paroxysm of anger and despair — how long,
I cannot undertake to say; but it must have been a
considerable time; for when, having partially relieved
myself by a torment of tears, and looked up at the
moon, shining so calmly and carelessly on, as little
influenced by my misery as I was by its peaceful radiance,
and earnestly prayed for death or forgetfulness, I
had risen and journeyed homewards — little regarding
the way, but carried instinctively by my feet to the
door, I found it bolted against me, and every one
in bed except my mother, who hastened to answer my
impatient knocking, and received me with a shower of
questions and rebukes.
’Oh, Gilbert! how could you
do so? Where have you been? Do come in
and take your supper. I’ve got it all ready,
though you don’t deserve it, for keeping me
in such a fright, after the strange manner you left
the house this evening. Mr. Millward was quite
— Bless the boy! how ill he looks. Oh,
gracious! what is the matter?’
‘Nothing, nothing — give me a candle.’
‘But won’t you take some supper?’
‘No; I want to go to bed,’
said I, taking a candle and lighting it at the one
she held in her hand.
‘Oh, Gilbert, how you tremble!’
exclaimed my anxious parent. ’How white
you look! Do tell me what it is? Has anything
happened?’
‘It’s nothing,’
cried I, ready to stamp with vexation because the
candle would not light. Then, suppressing my
irritation, I added, ‘I’ve been walking
too fast, that’s all. Good-night,’
and marched off to bed, regardless of the ’Walking
too fast! where have you been?’ that was called
after me from below.
My mother followed me to the very
door of my room with her questionings and advice concerning
my health and my conduct; but I implored her to let
me alone till morning; and she withdrew, and at length
I had the satisfaction to hear her close her own door.
There was no sleep for me, however, that night as I
thought; and instead of attempting to solicit it,
I employed myself in rapidly pacing the chamber, having
first removed my boots, lest my mother should hear
me. But the boards creaked, and she was watchful.
I had not walked above a quarter of an hour before
she was at the door again.
‘Gilbert, why are you not in
bed — you said you wanted to go?’
‘Confound it! I’m going,’
said I.
’But why are you so long about
it? You must have something on your mind —
’
‘For heaven’s sake, let
me alone, and get to bed yourself.’
‘Can it be that Mrs. Graham that distresses
you so?’
‘No, no, I tell you — it’s nothing.’
‘I wish to goodness it mayn’t,’
murmured she, with a sigh, as she returned to her
own apartment, while I threw myself on the bed, feeling
most undutifully disaffected towards her for having
deprived me of what seemed the only shadow of a consolation
that remained, and chained me to that wretched couch
of thorns.
Never did I endure so long, so miserable
a night as that. And yet it was not wholly sleepless.
Towards morning my distracting thoughts began to
lose all pretensions to coherency, and shape themselves
into confused and feverish dreams, and, at length,
there followed an interval of unconscious slumber.
But then the dawn of bitter recollection that succeeded
— the waking to find life a blank, and worse
than a blank, teeming with torment and misery —
not a mere barren wilderness, but full of thorns and
briers — to find myself deceived, duped, hopeless,
my affections trampled upon, my angel not an angel,
and my friend a fiend incarnate — it was worse
than if I had not slept at all.
It was a dull, gloomy morning; the
weather had changed like my prospects, and the rain
was pattering against the window. I rose, nevertheless,
and went out; not to look after the farm, though that
would serve as my excuse, but to cool my brain, and
regain, if possible, a sufficient degree of composure
to meet the family at the morning meal without exciting
inconvenient remarks. If I got a wetting, that,
in conjunction with a pretended over-exertion before
breakfast, might excuse my sudden loss of appetite;
and if a cold ensued, the severer the better —
it would help to account for the sullen moods and
moping melancholy likely to cloud my brow for long
enough.