August 25th. — I am now quite
settled down to my usual routine of steady occupations
and quiet amusements — tolerably contented and
cheerful, but still looking forward to spring with
the hope of returning to town, not for its gaieties
and dissipations, but for the chance of meeting Mr.
Huntingdon once again; for still he is always in my
thoughts and in my dreams. In all my employments,
whatever I do, or see, or hear, has an ultimate reference
to him; whatever skill or knowledge I acquire is some
day to be turned to his advantage or amusement; whatever
new beauties in nature or art I discover are to be
depicted to meet his eye, or stored in my memory to
be told him at some future period. This, at least,
is the hope that I cherish, the fancy that lights
me on my lonely way. It may be only an ignis
fatuus, after all, but it can do no harm to follow
it with my eyes and rejoice in its lustre, as long
as it does not lure me from the path I ought to keep;
and I think it will not, for I have thought deeply
on my aunt’s advice, and I see clearly, now,
the folly of throwing myself away on one that is unworthy
of all the love I have to give, and incapable of responding
to the best and deepest feelings of my inmost heart
— so clearly, that even if I should see him
again, and if he should remember me and love me still
(which, alas! is too little probable, considering
how he is situated, and by whom surrounded), and if
he should ask me to marry him — I am determined
not to consent until I know for certain whether my
aunt’s opinion of him or mine is nearest the
truth; for if mine is altogether wrong, it is not he
that I love; it is a creature of my own imagination.
But I think it is not wrong — no, no —
there is a secret something — an inward instinct
that assures me I am right. There is essential
goodness in him; — and what delight to unfold
it! If he has wandered, what bliss to recall
him! If he is now exposed to the baneful influence
of corrupting and wicked companions, what glory to
deliver him from them! Oh! if I could but believe
that Heaven has designed me for this!
* * * *
To-day is the first of September;
but my uncle has ordered the gamekeeper to spare the
partridges till the gentlemen come. ’What
gentlemen?’ I asked when I heard it. A
small party he had invited to shoot. His friend
Mr. Wilmot was one, and my aunt’s friend, Mr.
Boarham, another. This struck me as terrible
news at the moment; but all regret and apprehension
vanished like a dream when I heard that Mr. Huntingdon
was actually to be a third! My aunt is greatly
against his coming, of course: she earnestly
endeavoured to dissuade my uncle from asking him;
but he, laughing at her objections, told her it was
no use talking, for the mischief was already done:
he had invited Huntingdon and his friend Lord Lowborough
before we left London, and nothing now remained but
to fix the day for their coming. So he is safe,
and I am sure of seeing him. I cannot express
my joy. I find it very difficult to conceal
it from my aunt; but I don’t wish to trouble
her with my feelings till I know whether I ought to
indulge them or not. If I find it my absolute
duty to suppress them, they shall trouble no one but
myself; and if I can really feel myself justified in
indulging this attachment, I can dare anything, even
the anger and grief of my best friend, for its object
— surely, I shall soon know. But they
are not coming till about the middle of the month.
We are to have two lady visitors also:
Mr. Wilmot is to bring his niece and her cousin Milicent.
I suppose my aunt thinks the latter will benefit
me by her society, and the salutary example of her
gentle deportment and lowly and tractable spirit; and
the former I suspect she intends as a species of counter-attraction
to win Mr. Huntingdon’s attention from me.
I don’t thank her for this; but I shall be
glad of Milicent’s company: she is a sweet,
good girl, and I wish I were like her — more
like her, at least, than I am.
* * * *
19th. — They are come.
They came the day before yesterday. The gentlemen
are all gone out to shoot, and the ladies are with
my aunt, at work in the drawing-room. I have
retired to the library, for I am very unhappy, and
I want to be alone. Books cannot divert me;
so having opened my desk, I will try what may be done
by detailing the cause of my uneasiness. This
paper will serve instead of a confidential friend
into whose ear I might pour forth the overflowings
of my heart. It will not sympathise with my
distresses, but then it will not laugh at them, and,
if I keep it close, it cannot tell again; so it is,
perhaps, the best friend I could have for the purpose.
First, let me speak of his arrival
— how I sat at my window, and watched for nearly
two hours, before his carriage entered the park-gates
— for they all came before him, — and how
deeply I was disappointed at every arrival, because
it was not his. First came Mr. Wilmot and the
ladies. When Milicent had got into her room,
I quitted my post a few minutes to look in upon her
and have a little private conversation, for she was
now my intimate friend, several long epistles having
passed between us since our parting. On returning
to my window, I beheld another carriage at the door.
Was it his? No; it was Mr. Boarham’s
plain dark chariot; and there stood he upon the steps,
carefully superintending the dislodging of his various
boxes and packages. What a collection!
One would have thought he projected a visit of six
months at least. A considerable time after,
came Lord Lowborough in his barouche. Is he
one of the profligate friends, I wonder? I should
think not; for no one could call him a jolly companion,
I’m sure, — and, besides, he appears too
sober and gentlemanly in his demeanour to merit such
suspicions. He is a tall, thin, gloomy-looking
man, apparently between thirty and forty, and of a
somewhat sickly, careworn aspect.
At last, Mr. Huntingdon’s light
phaeton came bowling merrily up the lawn. I
had but a transient glimpse of him: for the moment
it stopped, he sprang out over the side on to the
portico steps, and disappeared into the house.
I now submitted to be dressed for
dinner — a duty which Rachel had been urging
upon me for the last twenty minutes; and when that
important business was completed, I repaired to the
drawing-room, where I found Mr. and Miss Wilmot and
Milicent Hargrave already assembled. Shortly
after, Lord Lowborough entered, and then Mr. Boarham,
who seemed quite willing to forget and forgive my former
conduct, and to hope that a little conciliation and
steady perseverance on his part might yet succeed
in bringing me to reason. While I stood at the
window, conversing with Milicent, he came up to me,
and was beginning to talk in nearly his usual strain,
when Mr. Huntingdon entered the room.
‘How will he greet me, I wonder?’
said my bounding heart; and, instead of advancing
to meet him, I turned to the window to hide or subdue
my emotion. But having saluted his host and hostess,
and the rest of the company, he came to me, ardently
squeezed my hand, and murmured he was glad to see
me once again. At that moment dinner was announced:
my aunt desired him to take Miss Hargrave into the
dining-room, and odious Mr. Wilmot, with unspeakable
grimaces, offered his arm to me; and I was condemned
to sit between himself and Mr. Boarham. But
afterwards, when we were all again assembled in the
drawing-room, I was indemnified for so much suffering
by a few delightful minutes of conversation with Mr.
Huntingdon.
In the course of the evening, Miss
Wilmot was called upon to sing and play for the amusement
of the company, and I to exhibit my drawings, and,
though he likes music, and she is an accomplished
musician, I think I am right in affirming, that he
paid more attention to my drawings than to her music.
So far so good; — but hearing
him pronounce, sotto voce, but with peculiar emphasis,
concerning one of the pieces, ’This is better
than all!’ — I looked up, curious to see
which it was, and, to my horror, beheld him complacently
gazing at the back of the picture:- it was his own
face that I had sketched there and forgotten to rub
out! To make matters worse, in the agony of the
moment, I attempted to snatch it from his hand; but
he prevented me, and exclaiming, ‘No —
by George, I’ll keep it!’ placed it against
his waistcoat and buttoned his coat upon it with a
delighted chuckle.
Then, drawing a candle close to his
elbow, he gathered all the drawings to himself, as
well what he had seen as the others, and muttering,
‘I must look at both sides now,’ he eagerly
commenced an examination, which I watched, at first,
with tolerable composure, in the confidence that his
vanity would not be gratified by any further discoveries;
for, though I must plead guilty to having disfigured
the backs of several with abortive attempts to delineate
that too fascinating physiognomy, I was sure that,
with that one unfortunate exception, I had carefully
obliterated all such witnesses of my infatuation.
But the pencil frequently leaves an impression upon
cardboard that no amount of rubbing can efface.
Such, it seems, was the case with most of these; and,
I confess, I trembled when I saw him holding them
so close to the candle, and poring so intently over
the seeming blanks; but still, I trusted, he would
not be able to make out these dim traces to his own
satisfaction. I was mistaken, however.
Having ended his scrutiny, he quietly remarked, —
‘I perceive the backs of young ladies’
drawings, like the postscripts of their letters, are
the most important and interesting part of the concern.’
Then, leaning back in his chair, he
reflected a few minutes in silence, complacently smiling
to himself, and while I was concocting some cutting
speech wherewith to check his gratification, he rose,
and passing over to where Annabella Wilmot sat vehemently
coquetting with Lord Lowborough, seated himself on
the sofa beside her, and attached himself to her for
the rest of the evening.
‘So then,’ thought I,
’he despises me, because he knows I love him.’
And the reflection made me so miserable
I knew not what to do. Milicent came and began
to admire my drawings, and make remarks upon them;
but I could not talk to her — I could talk to
no one, and, upon the introduction of tea, I took
advantage of the open door and the slight diversion
caused by its entrance to slip out — for I was
sure I could not take any — and take refuge in
the library. My aunt sent Thomas in quest of
me, to ask if I were not coming to tea; but I bade
him say I should not take any to-night, and, happily,
she was too much occupied with her guests to make any
further inquiries at the time.
As most of the company had travelled
far that day, they retired early to rest; and having
heard them all, as I thought, go up-stairs, I ventured
out, to get my candlestick from the drawing-room sideboard.
But Mr. Huntingdon had lingered behind the rest.
He was just at the foot of the stairs when I opened
the door, and hearing my step in the hall —
though I could hardly hear it myself – he instantly
turned back.
‘Helen, is that you?’
said he. ‘Why did you run away from us?’
‘Good-night, Mr. Huntingdon,’
said I, coldly, not choosing to answer the question.
And I turned away to enter the drawing-room.
‘But you’ll shake hands,
won’t you?’ said he, placing himself in
the doorway before me. And he seized my hand
and held it, much against my will.
‘Let me go, Mr. Huntingdon,’
said I. ‘I want to get a candle.’
‘The candle will keep,’ returned he.
I made a desperate effort to free my hand from his
grasp.
‘Why are you in such a hurry
to leave me, Helen?’ he said, with a smile of
the most provoking self-sufficiency. ’You
don’t hate me, you know.’
‘Yes, I do — at this moment.’
‘Not you. It is Annabella Wilmot you hate,
not me.’
‘I have nothing to do with Annabella
Wilmot,’ said I, burning with indignation.
‘But I have, you know,’ returned he, with
peculiar emphasis.
‘That is nothing to me, sir,’ I retorted.
‘Is it nothing to you, Helen? Will you
swear it? Will you?’
‘No I won’t, Mr. Huntingdon!
and I will go,’ cried I, not knowing whether
to laugh, or to cry, or to break out into a tempest
of fury.
‘Go, then, you vixen!’
he said; but the instant he released my hand he had
the audacity to put his arm round my neck, and kiss
me.
Trembling with anger and agitation,
and I don’t know what besides, I broke away,
and got my candle, and rushed up-stairs to my room.
He would not have done so but for that hateful picture.
And there he had it still in his possession, an eternal
monument to his pride and my humiliation.
It was but little sleep I got that
night, and in the morning I rose perplexed and troubled
with the thoughts of meeting him at breakfast.
I knew not how it was to be done. An assumption
of dignified, cold indifference would hardly do, after
what he knew of my devotion — to his face, at
least. Yet something must be done to check his
presumption — I would not submit to be tyrannised
over by those bright, laughing eyes. And, accordingly,
I received his cheerful morning salutation as calmly
and coldly as my aunt could have wished, and defeated
with brief answers his one or two attempts to draw
me into conversation, while I comported myself with
unusual cheerfulness and complaisance towards every
other member of the party, especially Annabella Wilmot,
and even her uncle and Mr. Boarham were treated with
an extra amount of civility on the occasion, not from
any motives of coquetry, but just to show him that
my particular coolness and reserve arose from no general
ill-humour or depression of spirits.
He was not, however, to be repelled
by such acting as this. He did not talk much
to me, but when he did speak it was with a degree of
freedom and openness, and kindliness too, that plainly
seemed to intimate he knew his words were music to
my ears; and when his looks met mine it was with a
smile — presumptuous, it might be — but
oh! so sweet, so bright, so genial, that I could not
possibly retain my anger; every vestige of displeasure
soon melted away beneath it like morning clouds before
the summer sun.
Soon after breakfast all the gentlemen
save one, with boyish eagerness, set out on their
expedition against the hapless partridges; my uncle
and Mr. Wilmot on their shooting ponies, Mr. Huntingdon
and Lord Lowborough on their legs: the one exception
being Mr. Boarham, who, in consideration of the rain
that had fallen during the night, thought it prudent
to remain behind a little and join them in a while
when the sun had dried the grass. And he favoured
us all with a long and minute disquisition upon the
evils and dangers attendant upon damp feet, delivered
with the most imperturbable gravity, amid the jeers
and laughter of Mr. Huntingdon and my uncle, who,
leaving the prudent sportsman to entertain the ladies
with his medical discussions, sallied forth with their
guns, bending their steps to the stables first, to
have a look at the horses and let out the dogs.
Not desirous of sharing Mr. Boarham’s
company for the whole of the morning, I betook myself
to the library, and there brought forth my easel and
began to paint. The easel and the painting apparatus
would serve as an excuse for abandoning the drawing-room
if my aunt should come to complain of the desertion,
and besides I wanted to finish the picture.
It was one I had taken great pains with, and I intended
it to be my masterpiece, though it was somewhat presumptuous
in the design. By the bright azure of the sky,
and by the warm and brilliant lights and deep long
shadows, I had endeavoured to convey the idea of a
sunny morning. I had ventured to give more of
the bright verdure of spring or early summer to the
grass and foliage than is commonly attempted in painting.
The scene represented was an open glade in a wood.
A group of dark Scotch firs was introduced in the
middle distance to relieve the prevailing freshness
of the rest; but in the foreground was part of the
gnarled trunk and of the spreading boughs of a large
forest-tree, whose foliage was of a brilliant golden
green — not golden from autumnal mellowness,
but from the sunshine and the very immaturity of the
scarce expanded leaves. Upon this bough, that
stood out in bold relief against the sombre firs, were
seated an amorous pair of turtle doves, whose soft
sad-coloured plumage afforded a contrast of another
nature; and beneath it a young girl was kneeling on
the daisy-spangled turf, with head thrown back and
masses of fair hair falling on her shoulders, her hands
clasped, lips parted, and eyes intently gazing upward
in pleased yet earnest contemplation of those feathered
lovers — too deeply absorbed in each other to
notice her.
I had scarcely settled to my work,
which, however, wanted but a few touches to the finishing,
when the sportsmen passed the window on their return
from the stables. It was partly open, and Mr.
Huntingdon must have seen me as he went by, for in
half a minute he came back, and setting his gun against
the wall, threw up the sash and sprang in, and set
himself before my picture.
‘Very pretty, i’faith,’
said he, after attentively regarding it for a few
seconds; ’and a very fitting study for a young
lady. Spring just opening into summer —
morning just approaching noon — girlhood just
ripening into womanhood, and hope just verging on fruition.
She’s a sweet creature! but why didn’t
you make her black hair?’
’I thought light hair would
suit her better. You see I have made her blue-eyed
and plump, and fair and rosy.’
’Upon my word — a very
Hebe! I should fall in love with her if I hadn’t
the artist before me. Sweet innocent! she’s
thinking there will come a time when she will be wooed
and won like that pretty hen-dove by as fond and fervent
a lover; and she’s thinking how pleasant it
will be, and how tender and faithful he will find her.’
‘And perhaps,’ suggested
I, ’how tender and faithful she shall find him.’
’Perhaps, for there is no limit
to the wild extravagance of Hope’s imaginings
at such an age.’
‘Do you call that, then, one
of her wild, extravagant delusions?’
’No; my heart tells me it is
not. I might have thought so once, but now,
I say, give me the girl I love, and I will swear eternal
constancy to her and her alone, through summer and
winter, through youth and age, and life and death!
if age and death must come.’
He spoke this in such serious earnest
that my heart bounded with delight; but the minute
after he changed his tone, and asked, with a significant
smile, if I had ‘any more portraits.’
‘No,’ replied I, reddening with confusion
and wrath.
But my portfolio was on the table:
he took it up, and coolly sat down to examine its
contents.
‘Mr. Huntingdon, those are my
unfinished sketches,’ cried I, ’and I
never let any one see them.’
And I placed my hand on the portfolio
to wrest it from him, but he maintained his hold,
assuring me that he ’liked unfinished sketches
of all things.’
‘But I hate them to be seen,’
returned I. ’I can’t let you have
it, indeed!’
‘Let me have its bowels then,’
said he; and just as I wrenched the portfolio from
his hand, he deftly abstracted the greater part of
its contents, and after turning them over a moment
he cried out, — ‘Bless my stars, here’s
another;’ and slipped a small oval of ivory
paper into his waistcoat pocket — a complete
miniature portrait that I had sketched with such tolerable
success as to be induced to colour it with great pains
and care. But I was determined he should not
keep it.
‘Mr. Huntingdon,’ cried
I, ’I insist upon having that back! It
is mine, and you have no right to take it. Give
it me directly — I’ll never forgive you
if you don’t!’
But the more vehemently I insisted,
the more he aggravated my distress by his insulting,
gleeful laugh. At length, however, he restored
it to me, saying, — ’Well, well, since
you value it so much, I’ll not deprive you of
it.’
To show him how I valued it, I tore
it in two and threw it into the fire. He was
not prepared for this. His merriment suddenly
ceasing, he stared in mute amazement at the consuming
treasure; and then, with a careless ‘Humph!
I’ll go and shoot now,’ he turned on his
heel and vacated the apartment by the window as he
came, and setting on his hat with an air, took up
his gun and walked away, whistling as he went —
and leaving me not too much agitated to finish my
picture, for I was glad, at the moment, that I had
vexed him.
When I returned to the drawing-room,
I found Mr. Boarham had ventured to follow his comrades
to the field; and shortly after lunch, to which they
did not think of returning, I volunteered to accompany
the ladies in a walk, and show Annabella and Milicent
the beauties of the country. We took a long
ramble, and re-entered the park just as the sportsmen
were returning from their expedition. Toil-spent
and travel-stained, the main body of them crossed over
the grass to avoid us, but Mr. Huntingdon, all spattered
and splashed as he was, and stained with the blood
of his prey — to the no small offence of my
aunt’s strict sense of propriety — came
out of his way to meet us, with cheerful smiles and
words for all but me, and placing himself between
Annabella Wilmot and myself, walked up the road and
began to relate the various exploits and disasters
of the day, in a manner that would have convulsed me
with laughter if I had been on good terms with him;
but he addressed himself entirely to Annabella, and
I, of course, left all the laughter and all the badinage
to her, and affecting the utmost indifference to whatever
passed between them, walked along a few paces apart,
and looking every way but theirs, while my aunt and
Milicent went before, linked arm in arm and gravely
discoursing together. At length Mr. Huntingdon
turned to me, and addressing me in a confidential
whisper, said, — ‘Helen, why did you burn
my picture?’
‘Because I wished to destroy
it,’ I answered, with an asperity it is useless
now to lament.
‘Oh, very good!’ was the
reply; ’if you don’t value me, I must turn
to somebody that will.’
I thought it was partly in jest —
a half-playful mixture of mock resignation and pretended
indifference: but immediately he resumed his
place beside Miss Wilmot, and from that hour to this
— during all that evening, and all the next
day, and the next, and the next, and all this morning
(the 22nd), he has never given me one kind word or
one pleasant look — never spoken to me, but from
pure necessity — never glanced towards me but
with a cold, unfriendly look I thought him quite incapable
of assuming.
My aunt observes the change, and though
she has not inquired the cause or made any remark
to me on the subject, I see it gives her pleasure.
Miss Wilmot observes it, too, and triumphantly ascribes
it to her own superior charms and blandishments; but
I am truly miserable — more so than I like to
acknowledge to myself. Pride refuses to aid
me. It has brought me into the scrape, and will
not help me out of it.
He meant no harm — it was only
his joyous, playful spirit; and I, by my acrimonious
resentment — so serious, so disproportioned to
the offence — have so wounded his feelings, so
deeply offended him, that I fear he will never forgive
me — and all for a mere jest! He thinks
I dislike him, and he must continue to think so.
I must lose him for ever, and Annabella may win him,
and triumph as she will.
But it is not my loss nor her triumph
that I deplore so greatly as the wreck of my fond
hopes for his advantage, and her unworthiness of his
affection, and the injury he will do himself by trusting
his happiness to her. She does not love him:
she thinks only of herself. She cannot appreciate
the good that is in him: she will neither see
it, nor value it, nor cherish it. She will neither
deplore his faults nor attempt their amendment, but
rather aggravate them by her own. And I doubt
whether she will not deceive him after all.
I see she is playing double between him and Lord Lowborough,
and while she amuses herself with the lively Huntingdon,
she tries her utmost to enslave his moody friend; and
should she succeed in bringing both to her feet, the
fascinating commoner will have but little chance against
the lordly peer. If he observes her artful by-play,
it gives him no uneasiness, but rather adds new zest
to his diversion by opposing a stimulating check to
his otherwise too easy conquest.
Messrs. Wilmot and Boarham have severally
taken occasion by his neglect of me to renew their
advances; and if I were like Annabella and some others
I should take advantage of their perseverance to endeavour
to pique him into a revival of affection; but, justice
and honesty apart, I could not bear to do it.
I am annoyed enough by their present persecutions
without encouraging them further; and even if I did
it would have precious little effect upon him.
He sees me suffering under the condescending attentions
and prosaic discourses of the one, and the repulsive
obtrusions of the other, without so much as a shadow
of commiseration for me, or resentment against my
tormentors. He never could have loved me, or
he would not have resigned me so willingly, and he
would not go on talking to everybody else so cheerfully
as he does — laughing and jesting with Lord
Lowborough and my uncle, teasing Milicent Hargrave,
and flirting with Annabella Wilmot — as if nothing
were on his mind. Oh! why can’t I hate
him? I must be infatuated, or I should scorn
to regret him as I do. But I must rally all the
powers I have remaining, and try to tear him from
my heart. There goes the dinner-bell, and here
comes my aunt to scold me for sitting here at my desk
all day, instead of staying with the company:
wish the company were — gone.