On reading this I had no reason to
disguise my joy and hope from Frederick Lawrence,
for I had none to be ashamed of. I felt no joy
but that his sister was at length released from her
afflictive, overwhelming toil — no hope but
that she would in time recover from the effects of
it, and be suffered to rest in peace and quietness,
at least, for the remainder of her life. I experienced
a painful commiseration for her unhappy husband (though
fully aware that he had brought every particle of
his sufferings upon himself, and but too well deserved
them all), and a profound sympathy for her own afflictions,
and deep anxiety for the consequences of those harassing
cares, those dreadful vigils, that incessant and deleterious
confinement beside a living corpse — for I was
persuaded she had not hinted half the sufferings she
had had to endure.
‘You will go to her, Lawrence?’
said I, as I put the letter into his hand.
‘Yes, immediately.’
’That’s right! I’ll
leave you, then, to prepare for your departure.’
’I’ve done that already,
while you were reading the letter, and before you
came; and the carriage is now coming round to the door.’
Inly approving his promptitude, I
bade him good-morning, and withdrew. He gave
me a searching glance as we pressed each other’s
hands at parting; but whatever he sought in my countenance,
he saw there nothing but the most becoming gravity
— it might be mingled with a little sternness
in momentary resentment at what I suspected to be
passing in his mind.
Had I forgotten my own prospects,
my ardent love, my pertinacious hopes? It seemed
like sacrilege to revert to them now, but I had not
forgotten them. It was, however, with a gloomy
sense of the darkness of those prospects, the fallacy
of those hopes, and the vanity of that affection,
that I reflected on those things as I remounted my
horse and slowly journeyed homewards. Mrs. Huntingdon
was free now; it was no longer a crime to think of
her — but did she ever think of me? Not
now — of course it was not to be expected —
but would she when this shock was over? In all
the course of her correspondence with her brother
(our mutual friend, as she herself had called him)
she had never mentioned me but once – and that was
from necessity. This alone afforded strong presumption
that I was already forgotten; yet this was not the
worst: it might have been her sense of duty that
had kept her silent: she might be only trying
to forget; but in addition to this, I had a gloomy
conviction that the awful realities she had seen and
felt, her reconciliation with the man she had once
loved, his dreadful sufferings and death, must eventually
efface from her mind all traces of her passing love
for me. She might recover from these horrors
so far as to be restored to her former health, her
tranquillity, her cheerfulness even — but never
to those feelings which would appear to her, henceforth,
as a fleeting fancy, a vain, illusive dream; especially
as there was no one to remind her of my existence
— no means of assuring her of my fervent constancy,
now that we were so far apart, and delicacy forbade
me to see her or to write to her, for months to come
at least. And how could I engage her brother
in my behalf? how could I break that icy crust of shy
reserve? Perhaps he would disapprove of my attachment
now as highly as before; perhaps he would think me
too poor — too lowly born, to match with his
sister. Yes, there was another barrier:
doubtless there was a wide distinction between the
rank and circumstances of Mrs. Huntingdon, the lady
of Grassdale Manor, and those of Mrs. Graham, the
artist, the tenant of Wildfell Hall. And it
might be deemed presumption in me to offer my hand
to the former, by the world, by her friends, if not
by herself; a penalty I might brave, if I were certain
she loved me; but otherwise, how could I? And,
finally, her deceased husband, with his usual selfishness,
might have so constructed his will as to place restrictions
upon her marrying again. So that you see I had
reasons enough for despair if I chose to indulge it.
Nevertheless, it was with no small
degree of impatience that I looked forward to Mr.
Lawrence’s return from Grassdale: impatience
that increased in proportion as his absence was prolonged.
He stayed away some ten or twelve days. All
very right that he should remain to comfort and help
his sister, but he might have written to tell me how
she was, or at least to tell me when to expect his
return; for he might have known I was suffering tortures
of anxiety for her, and uncertainty for my own future
prospects. And when he did return, all he told
me about her was, that she had been greatly exhausted
and worn by her unremitting exertions in behalf of
that man who had been the scourge of her life, and
had dragged her with him nearly to the portals of
the grave, and was still much shaken and depressed
by his melancholy end and the circumstances attendant
upon it; but no word in reference to me; no intimation
that my name had ever passed her lips, or even been
spoken in her presence. To be sure, I asked
no questions on the subject; I could not bring my
mind to do so, believing, as I did, that Lawrence was
indeed averse to the idea of my union with his sister.
I saw that he expected to be further
questioned concerning his visit, and I saw too, with
the keen perception of awakened jealousy, or alarmed
self-esteem, or by whatever name I ought to call it,
that he rather shrank from that impending scrutiny,
and was no less pleased than surprised to find it
did not come. Of course, I was burning with
anger, but pride obliged me to suppress my feelings,
and preserve a smooth face, or at least a stoic calmness,
throughout the interview. It was well it did,
for, reviewing the matter in my sober judgment, I
must say it would have been highly absurd and improper
to have quarrelled with him on such an occasion.
I must confess, too, that I wronged him in my heart:
the truth was, he liked me very well, but he was fully
aware that a union between Mrs. Huntingdon and me
would be what the world calls a mesalliance; and it
was not in his nature to set the world at defiance;
especially in such a case as this, for its dread laugh,
or ill opinion, would be far more terrible to him directed
against his sister than himself. Had he believed
that a union was necessary to the happiness of both,
or of either, or had he known how fervently I loved
her, he would have acted differently; but seeing me
so calm and cool, he would not for the world disturb
my philosophy; and though refraining entirely from
any active opposition to the match, he would yet do
nothing to bring it about, and would much rather take
the part of prudence, in aiding us to overcome our
mutual predilections, than that of feeling, to encourage
them. ‘And he was in the right of it,’
you will say. Perhaps he was; at any rate, I
had no business to feel so bitterly against him as
I did; but I could not then regard the matter in such
a moderate light; and, after a brief conversation upon
indifferent topics, I went away, suffering all the
pangs of wounded pride and injured friendship, in
addition to those resulting from the fear that I was
indeed forgotten, and the knowledge that she I loved
was alone and afflicted, suffering from injured health
and dejected spirits, and I was forbidden to console
or assist her: forbidden even to assure her of
my sympathy, for the transmission of any such message
through Mr. Lawrence was now completely out of the
question.
But what should I do? I would
wait, and see if she would notice me, which of course
she would not, unless by some kind message intrusted
to her brother, that, in all probability, he would
not deliver, and then, dreadful thought! she would
think me cooled and changed for not returning it,
or, perhaps, he had already given her to understand
that I had ceased to think of her. I would wait,
however, till the six months after our parting were
fairly passed (which would be about the close of February),
and then I would send her a letter, modestly reminding
her of her former permission to write to her at the
close of that period, and hoping I might avail myself
of it — at least to express my heartfelt sorrow
for her late afflictions, my just appreciation of
her generous conduct, and my hope that her health
was now completely re-established, and that she would,
some time, be permitted to enjoy those blessings of
a peaceful, happy life, which had been denied her
so long, but which none could more truly be said to
merit than herself — adding a few words of kind
remembrance to my little friend Arthur, with a hope
that he had not forgotten me, and perhaps a few more
in reference to bygone times, to the delightful hours
I had passed in her society, and my unfading recollection
of them, which was the salt and solace of my life,
and a hope that her recent troubles had not entirely
banished me from her mind. If she did not answer
this, of course I should write no more: if she
did (as surely she would, in some fashion), my future
proceedings should be regulated by her reply.
Ten weeks was long to wait in such
a miserable state of uncertainty; but courage! it
must be endured! and meantime I would continue to
see Lawrence now and then, though not so often as
before, and I would still pursue my habitual inquiries
after his sister, if he had lately heard from her,
and how she was, but nothing more.
I did so, and the answers I received
were always provokingly limited to the letter of the
inquiry: she was much as usual: she made
no complaints, but the tone of her last letter evinced
great depression of mind: she said she was better:
and, finally, she said she was well, and very busy
with her son’s education, and with the management
of her late husband’s property, and the regulation
of his affairs. The rascal had never told me
how that property was disposed, or whether Mr. Huntingdon
had died intestate or not; and I would sooner die
than ask him, lest he should misconstrue into covetousness
my desire to know. He never offered to show me
his sister’s letters now, and I never hinted
a wish to see them. February, however, was approaching;
December was past; January, at length, was almost
over — a few more weeks, and then, certain despair
or renewal of hope would put an end to this long agony
of suspense.
But alas! it was just about that time
she was called to sustain another blow in the death
of her uncle — a worthless old fellow enough
in himself, I daresay, but he had always shown more
kindness and affection to her than to any other creature,
and she had always been accustomed to regard him as
a parent. She was with him when he died, and
had assisted her aunt to nurse him during the last
stage of his illness. Her brother went to Staningley
to attend the funeral, and told me, upon his return,
that she was still there, endeavouring to cheer her
aunt with her presence, and likely to remain some
time. This was bad news for me, for while she
continued there I could not write to her, as I did
not know the address, and would not ask it of him.
But week followed week, and every time I inquired
about her she was still at Staningley.
‘Where is Staningley?’ I asked at last.
‘In -shire,’ was the brief
reply; and there was something so cold and dry in
the manner of it, that I was effectually deterred from
requesting a more definite account.
‘When will she return to Grassdale?’
was my next question.
‘I don’t know.’
‘Confound it!’ I muttered.
‘Why, Markham?’ asked
my companion, with an air of innocent surprise.
But I did not deign to answer him, save by a look
of silent, sullen contempt, at which he turned away,
and contemplated the carpet with a slight smile, half
pensive, half amused; but quickly looking up, he began
to talk of other subjects, trying to draw me into
a cheerful and friendly conversation, but I was too
much irritated to discourse with him, and soon took
leave.
You see Lawrence and I somehow could
not manage to get on very well together. The
fact is, I believe, we were both of us a little too
touchy. It is a troublesome thing, Halford, this
susceptibility to affronts where none are intended.
I am no martyr to it now, as you can bear me witness:
I have learned to be merry and wise, to be more easy
with myself and more indulgent to my neighbours, and
I can afford to laugh at both Lawrence and you.
Partly from accident, partly from
wilful negligence on my part (for I was really beginning
to dislike him), several weeks elapsed before I saw
my friend again. When we did meet, it was he
that sought me out. One bright morning, early
in June, he came into the field, where I was just
commencing my hay harvest.
‘It is long since I saw you,
Markham,’ said he, after the first few words
had passed between us. ’Do you never mean
to come to Woodford again?’
‘I called once, and you were out.’
’I was sorry, but that was long
since; I hoped you would call again, and now I have
called, and you were out, which you generally are,
or I would do myself the pleasure of calling more frequently;
but being determined to see you this time, I have left
my pony in the lane, and come over hedge and ditch
to join you; for I am about to leave Woodford for
a while, and may not have the pleasure of seeing you
again for a month or two.’
‘Where are you going?’
‘To Grassdale first,’
said he, with a half-smile he would willingly have
suppressed if he could.
‘To Grassdale! Is she there, then?’
’Yes, but in a day or two she
will leave it to accompany Mrs. Maxwell to F- for
the benefit of the sea air, and I shall go with them.’
(F- was at that time a quiet but respectable watering-place:
it is considerably more frequented now.)
Lawrence seemed to expect me to take
advantage of this circumstance to entrust him with
some sort of a message to his sister; and I believe
he would have undertaken to deliver it without any
material objections, if I had had the sense to ask
him, though of course he would not offer to do so,
if I was content to let it alone. But I could
not bring myself to make the request, and it was not
till after he was gone, that I saw how fair an opportunity
I had lost; and then, indeed, I deeply regretted my
stupidity and my foolish pride, but it was now too
late to remedy the evil.
He did not return till towards the
latter end of August. He wrote to me twice or
thrice from F-, but his letters were most provokingly
unsatisfactory, dealing in generalities or in trifles
that I cared nothing about, or replete with fancies
and reflections equally unwelcome to me at the time,
saying next to nothing about his sister, and little
more about himself. I would wait, however, till
he came back; perhaps I could get something more out
of him then. At all events, I would not write
to her now, while she was with him and her aunt, who
doubtless would be still more hostile to my presumptuous
aspirations than himself. When she was returned
to the silence and solitude of her own home, it would
be my fittest opportunity.
When Lawrence came, however, he was
as reserved as ever on the subject of my keen anxiety.
He told me that his sister had derived considerable
benefit from her stay at F- that her son was quite
well, and — alas! that both of them were gone,
with Mrs. Maxwell, back to Staningley, and there they
stayed at least three months. But instead of
boring you with my chagrin, my expectations and disappointments,
my fluctuations of dull despondency and flickering
hope, my varying resolutions, now to drop it, and now
to persevere – now to make a bold push, and now to
let things pass and patiently abide my time, —
I will employ myself in settling the business of one
or two of the characters introduced in the course of
this narrative, whom I may not have occasion to mention
again.
Some time before Mr. Huntingdon’s
death Lady Lowborough eloped with another gallant
to the Continent, where, having lived a while in reckless
gaiety and dissipation, they quarrelled and parted.
She went dashing on for a season, but years came
and money went: she sunk, at length, in difficulty
and debt, disgrace and misery; and died at last, as
I have heard, in penury, neglect, and utter wretchedness.
But this might be only a report: she may be
living yet for anything I or any of her relatives
or former acquaintances can tell; for they have all
lost sight of her long years ago, and would as thoroughly
forget her if they could. Her husband, however,
upon this second misdemeanour, immediately sought and
obtained a divorce, and, not long after, married again.
It was well he did, for Lord Lowborough, morose and
moody as he seemed, was not the man for a bachelor’s
life. No public interests, no ambitious projects,
or active pursuits, — or ties of friendship
even (if he had had any friends), could compensate
to him for the absence of domestic comforts and endearments.
He had a son and a nominal daughter, it is true,
but they too painfully reminded him of their mother,
and the unfortunate little Annabella was a source
of perpetual bitterness to his soul. He had obliged
himself to treat her with paternal kindness:
he had forced himself not to hate her, and even,
perhaps, to feel some degree of kindly regard for
her, at last, in return for her artless and unsuspecting
attachment to himself; but the bitterness of his self-condemnation
for his inward feelings towards that innocent being,
his constant struggles to subdue the evil promptings
of his nature (for it was not a generous one), though
partly guessed at by those who knew him, could be
known to God and his own heart alone; — so also
was the hardness of his conflicts with the temptation
to return to the vice of his youth, and seek oblivion
for past calamities, and deadness to the present misery
of a blighted heart a joyless, friendless life, and
a morbidly disconsolate mind, by yielding again to
that insidious foe to health, and sense, and virtue,
which had so deplorably enslaved and degraded him
before.
The second object of his choice was
widely different from the first. Some wondered
at his taste; some even ridiculed it — but in
this their folly was more apparent than his.
The lady was about his own age — i.e.,
between thirty and forty — remarkable neither
for beauty, nor wealth, nor brilliant accomplishments;
nor any other thing that I ever heard of, except genuine
good sense, unswerving integrity, active piety, warm-hearted
benevolence, and a fund of cheerful spirits.
These qualities, however, as you way readily imagine,
combined to render her an excellent mother to the
children, and an invaluable wife to his lordship.
He, with his usual self-depreciation, thought her
a world too good for him, and while he wondered at
the kindness of Providence in conferring such a gift
upon him, and even at her taste in preferring him to
other men, he did his best to reciprocate the good
she did him, and so far succeeded that she was, and
I believe still is, one of the happiest and fondest
wives in England; and all who question the good taste
of either partner may be thankful if their respective
selections afford them half the genuine satisfaction
in the end, or repay their preference with affection
half as lasting and sincere.
If you are at all interested in the
fate of that low scoundrel, Grimsby, I can only tell
you that he went from bad to worse, sinking from bathos
to bathos of vice and villainy, consorting only with
the worst members of his club and the lowest dregs
of society – happily for the rest of the world —
and at last met his end in a drunken brawl, from the
hands, it is said, of some brother scoundrel he had
cheated at play.
As for Mr. Hattersley, he had never
wholly forgotten his resolution to ‘come out
from among them,’ and behave like a man and a
Christian, and the last illness and death of his once
jolly friend Huntingdon so deeply and seriously impressed
him with the evil of their former practices, that
he never needed another lesson of the kind.
Avoiding the temptations of the town, he continued
to pass his life in the country, immersed in the usual
pursuits of a hearty, active, country gentleman; his
occupations being those of farming, and breeding horses
and cattle, diversified with a little hunting and
shooting, and enlivened by the occasional companionship
of his friends (better friends than those of his youth),
and the society of his happy little wife (now cheerful
and confiding as heart could wish), and his fine family
of stalwart sons and blooming daughters. His
father, the banker, having died some years ago and
left him all his riches, he has now full scope for
the exercise of his prevailing tastes, and I need
not tell you that Ralph Hattersley, Esq., is celebrated
throughout the country for his noble breed of horses.