Five or six days after this Mr. Lawrence
paid us the honour of a call; and when he and I were
alone together — which I contrived as soon as
possible by bringing him out to look at my cornstacks
— he showed me another letter from his sister.
This one he was quite willing to submit to my longing
gaze; he thought, I suppose, it would do me good.
The only answer it gave to my message was this:-
’Mr. Markham is at liberty to
make such revelations concerning me as he judges necessary.
He will know that I should wish but little to be
said on the subject. I hope he is well; but tell
him he must not think of me.’
I can give you a few extracts from
the rest of the letter, for I was permitted to keep
this also — perhaps, as an antidote to all pernicious
hopes and fancies.
* * * *
He is decidedly better, but very low
from the depressing effects of his severe illness
and the strict regimen he is obliged to observe -
so opposite to all his previous habits. It is
deplorable to see how completely his past life has
degenerated his once noble constitution, and vitiated
the whole system of his organization. But the
doctor says he may now be considered out of danger,
if he will only continue to observe the necessary
restrictions. Some stimulating cordials he must
have, but they should be judiciously diluted and sparingly
used; and I find it very difficult to keep him to
this. At first, his extreme dread of death rendered
the task an easy one; but in proportion as he feels
his acute suffering abating, and sees the danger receding,
the more intractable he becomes. Now, also,
his appetite for food is beginning to return; and
here, too, his long habits of self-indulgence are greatly
against him. I watch and restrain him as well
as I can, and often get bitterly abused for my rigid
severity; and sometimes he contrives to elude my vigilance,
and sometimes acts in opposition to my will.
But he is now so completely reconciled to my attendance
in general that he is never satisfied when I am not
by his side. I am obliged to be a little stiff
with him sometimes, or he would make a complete slave
of me; and I know it would be unpardonable weakness
to give up all other interests for him. I have
the servants to overlook, and my little Arthur to attend
to, — and my own health too, all of which would
be entirely neglected were I to satisfy his exorbitant
demands. I do not generally sit up at night,
for I think the nurse who has made it her business
is better qualified for such undertakings than I am;
— but still, an unbroken night’s rest
is what I but seldom enjoy, and never can venture
to reckon upon; for my patient makes no scruple of
calling me up at an hour when his wants or his fancies
require my presence. But he is manifestly afraid
of my displeasure; and if at one time he tries my
patience by his unreasonable exactions, and fretful
complaints and reproaches, at another he depresses
me by his abject submission and deprecatory self-abasement
when he fears he has gone too far. But all this
I can readily pardon; I know it is chiefly the result
of his enfeebled frame and disordered nerves.
What annoys me the most, is his occasional attempts
at affectionate fondness that I can neither credit
nor return; not that I hate him: his sufferings
and my own laborious care have given him some claim
to my regard — to my affection even, if he would
only be quiet and sincere, and content to let things
remain as they are; but the more he tries to conciliate
me, the more I shrink from him and from the future.
‘Helen, what do you mean to
do when I get well?’ he asked this morning.
‘Will you run away again?’
‘It entirely depends upon your own conduct.’
‘Oh, I’ll be very good.’
’But if I find it necessary
to leave you, Arthur, I shall not “run away”:
you know I have your own promise that I may go whenever
I please, and take my son with me.’
‘Oh, but you shall have no cause.’
And then followed a variety of professions, which
I rather coldly checked.
‘Will you not forgive me, then?’ said
he.
’Yes, — I have forgiven
you: but I know you cannot love me as you once
did — and I should be very sorry if you were
to, for I could not pretend to return it: so
let us drop the subject, and never recur to it again.
By what I have done for you, you may judge of what
I will do — if it be not incompatible with the
higher duty I owe to my son (higher, because he never
forfeited his claims, and because I hope to do more
good to him than I can ever do to you); and if you
wish me to feel kindly towards you, it is deeds not
words which must purchase my affection and esteem.’
His sole reply to this was a slight
grimace, and a scarcely perceptible shrug. Alas,
unhappy man! words, with him, are so much cheaper
than deeds; it was as if I had said, ’Pounds,
not pence, must buy the article you want.’
And then he sighed a querulous, self-commiserating
sigh, as if in pure regret that he, the loved and
courted of so many worshippers, should be now abandoned
to the mercy of a harsh, exacting, cold-hearted woman
like that, and even glad of what kindness she chose
to bestow.
‘It’s a pity, isn’t
it?’ said I; and whether I rightly divined his
musings or not, the observation chimed in with his
thoughts, for he answered — ‘It can’t
be helped,’ with a rueful smile at my penetration.
* * *
I have I seen Esther Hargrave twice.
She is a charming creature, but her blithe spirit
is almost broken, and her sweet temper almost spoiled,
by the still unremitting persecutions of her mother
in behalf of her rejected suitor — not violent,
but wearisome and unremitting like a continual dropping.
The unnatural parent seems determined to make her
daughter’s life a burden, if she will not yield
to her desires.
‘Mamma does all she can,’
said she, ’to make me feel myself a burden and
incumbrance to the family, and the most ungrateful,
selfish, and undutiful daughter that ever was born;
and Walter, too, is as stern and cold and haughty
as if he hated me outright. I believe I should
have yielded at once if I had known, from the beginning,
how much resistance would have cost me; but now, for
very obstinacy’s sake, I will stand out!’
‘A bad motive for a good resolve,’
I answered. ’But, however, I know you
have better motives, really, for your perseverance:
and I counsel you to keep them still in view.’
’Trust me I will. I threaten
mamma sometimes that I’ll run away, and disgrace
the family by earning my own livelihood, if she torments
me any more; and then that frightens her a little.
But I will do it, in good earnest, if they don’t
mind.’
‘Be quiet and patient a while,’
said I, ’and better times will come.’
Poor girl! I wish somebody that
was worthy to possess her would come and take her
away — don’t you, Frederick?
* * * *
If the perusal of this letter filled
me with dismay for Helen’s future life and mine,
there was one great source of consolation: it
was now in my power to clear her name from every foul
aspersion. The Millwards and the Wilsons should
see with their own eyes the bright sun bursting from
the cloud — and they should be scorched and
dazzled by its beams; — and my own friends too
should see it — they whose suspicions had been
such gall and wormwood to my soul. To effect
this I had only to drop the seed into the ground, and
it would soon become a stately, branching herb:
a few words to my mother and sister, I knew, would
suffice to spread the news throughout the whole neighbourhood,
without any further exertion on my part.
Rose was delighted; and as soon as
I had told her all I thought proper — which
was all I affected to know — she flew with alacrity
to put on her bonnet and shawl, and hasten to carry
the glad tidings to the Millwards and Wilsons —
glad tidings, I suspect, to none but herself and Mary
Millward — that steady, sensible girl, whose
sterling worth had been so quickly perceived and duly
valued by the supposed Mrs. Graham, in spite of her
plain outside; and who, on her part, had been better
able to see and appreciate that lady’s true
character and qualities than the brightest genius among
them.
As I may never have occasion to mention
her again, I may as well tell you here that she was
at this time privately engaged to Richard Wilson —
a secret, I believe, to every one but themselves.
That worthy student was now at Cambridge, where his
most exemplary conduct and his diligent perseverance
in the pursuit of learning carried him safely through,
and eventually brought him with hard-earned honours,
and an untarnished reputation, to the close of his
collegiate career. In due time he became Mr.
Millward’s first and only curate — for
that gentleman’s declining years forced him at
last to acknowledge that the duties of his extensive
parish were a little too much for those vaunted energies
which he was wont to boast over his younger and less
active brethren of the cloth. This was what
the patient, faithful lovers had privately planned
and quietly waited for years ago; and in due time
they were united, to the astonishment of the little
world they lived in, that had long since declared
them both born to single blessedness; affirming it
impossible that the pale, retiring bookworm should
ever summon courage to seek a wife, or be able to
obtain one if he did, and equally impossible that
the plain-looking, plain-dealing, unattractive, unconciliating
Miss Millward should ever find a husband.
They still continued to live at the
vicarage, the lady dividing her time between her father,
her husband, and their poor parishioners, – and subsequently
her rising family; and now that the Reverend Michael
Millward has been gathered to his fathers, full of
years and honours, the Reverend Richard Wilson has
succeeded him to the vicarage of Linden-hope, greatly
to the satisfaction of its inhabitants, who had so
long tried and fully proved his merits, and those
of his excellent and well-loved partner.
If you are interested in the after
fate of that lady’s sister, I can only tell
you — what perhaps you have heard from another
quarter — that some twelve or thirteen years
ago she relieved the happy couple of her presence
by marrying a wealthy tradesman of L-; and I don’t
envy him his bargain. I fear she leads him a
rather uncomfortable life, though, happily, he is
too dull to perceive the extent of his misfortune.
I have little enough to do with her myself:
we have not met for many years; but, I am well assured,
she has not yet forgotten or forgiven either her former
lover, or the lady whose superior qualities first
opened his eyes to the folly of his boyish attachment.
As for Richard Wilson’s sister,
she, having been wholly unable to recapture Mr. Lawrence,
or obtain any partner rich and elegant enough to suit
her ideas of what the husband of Jane Wilson ought
to be, is yet in single blessedness. Shortly
after the death of her mother she withdrew the light
of her presence from Ryecote Farm, finding it impossible
any longer to endure the rough manners and unsophisticated
habits of her honest brother Robert and his worthy
wife, or the idea of being identified with such vulgar
people in the eyes of the world, and took lodgings
in — the county town, where she lived, and still
lives, I suppose, in a kind of close-fisted, cold,
uncomfortable gentility, doing no good to others,
and but little to herself; spending her days in fancy-work
and scandal; referring frequently to her ‘brother
the vicar,’ and her ‘sister, the vicar’s
lady,’ but never to her brother the farmer and
her sister the farmer’s wife; seeing as much
company as she can without too much expense, but loving
no one and beloved by none — a cold-hearted,
supercilious, keenly, insidiously censorious old maid.