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<h2> CHAPTER IV. CONTAINING HINTS OF DIANA'S EXPERIENCES AND OF WHAT THEY LED TO </h2>
<p>A fortnight after this memorable Ball the principal actors of both sexes
had crossed the Channel back to England, and old Ireland was left to her
rains from above and her undrained bogs below; her physical and her mental
vapours; her ailments and her bog-bred doctors; as to whom the governing
country trusted they would be silent or discourse humorously.</p>
<p>The residence of Sir Lukin Dunstane, in the county of Surrey, inherited by
him during his recent term of Indian services, was on the hills, where a
day of Italian sky, or better, a day of our breezy South-west, washed from
the showery night, gives distantly a tower to view, and a murky web, not
without colour: the ever-flying banner of the metropolis, the smoke of the
city's chimneys, if you prefer plain language. At a first inspection of
the house, Lady Dunstane did not like it, and it was advertized to be let,
and the auctioneer proclaimed it in his dialect. Her taste was delicate;
she had the sensitiveness of an invalid: twice she read the stalking
advertizement of the attractions of Copsley, and hearing Diana call it
'the plush of speech,' she shuddered; she decided that a place where her
husband's family had lived ought not to stand forth meretriciously
spangled and daubed, like a show-booth at a fair, for a bait; though the
grandiloquent man of advertizing letters assured Sir Lukin that a public
agape for the big and gaudy mouthful is in no milder way to be caught; as
it is apparently the case. She withdrew the trumpeting placard. Retract we
likewise 'banner of the metropolis.' That plush of speech haunts all
efforts to swell and illuminate citizen prose to a princely poetic.</p>
<p>Yet Lady Dunstane herself could name the bank of smoke, when looking
North-eastward from her summerhouse, the flag of London: and she was a
person of the critical mind, well able to distinguish between the simple
metaphor and the superobese. A year of habitation induced her to conceal
her dislike of the place in love: cat's love, she owned. Here, she
confessed to Diana, she would wish to live to her end. It seemed remote,
where an invigorating upper air gave new bloom to her cheeks; but she kept
one secret from her friend.</p>
<p>Copsley was an estate of nearly twelve hundred acres, extending across the
ridge of the hills to the slopes North and South. Seven counties rolled
their backs under this commanding height, and it would have tasked a
pigeon to fly within an hour the stretch of country visible at the Copsley
windows. Sunrise to right, sunset leftward, the borders of the grounds
held both flaming horizons. So much of the heavens and of earth is rarely
granted to a dwelling. The drawback was the structure, which had no charm,
scarce a face. 'It is written that I should live in barracks,' Lady
Dunstane said. The colour of it taught white to impose a sense of gloom.
Her cat's love of the familiar inside corners was never able to embrace
the outer walls. Her sensitiveness, too, was racked by the presentation of
so pitiably ugly a figure to the landscape. She likened it to a
coarse-featured country wench, whose cleaning and decorating of her
countenance makes complexion grin and ruggedness yawn. Dirty, dilapidated,
hung with weeds and parasites, it would have been more tolerable. She
tried the effect of various creepers, and they were as a staring paint.
What it was like then, she had no heart to say.</p>
<p>One may, however, fall on a pleasurable resignation in accepting great
indemnities, as Diana bade her believe, when the first disgust began to
ebb. 'A good hundred over there would think it a Paradise for an asylum':
she signified London. Her friend bore such reminders meekly. They were
readers of books of all sorts, political, philosophical, economical,
romantic; and they mixed the diverse readings in thought, after the
fashion of the ardently youthful. Romance affected politics, transformed
economy, irradiated philosophy. They discussed the knotty question, Why
things were not done, the things being confessedly to do; and they cut the
knot: Men, men calling themselves statesmen, declined to perform that
operation, because, forsooth, other men objected to have it performed on
them. And common humanity declared it to be for the common weal! If so,
then it is clearly indicated as a course of action: we shut our eyes
against logic and the vaunted laws of economy. They are the knot we cut;
or would cut, had we the sword. Diana did it to the tune of Garryowen or
Planxty Kelly. O for a despot! The cry was for a beneficent despot,
naturally: a large-minded benevolent despot. In short, a despot to obey
their bidding. Thoughtful young people who think through the heart soon
come to this conclusion. The heart is the beneficent despot they would be.
He cures those miseries; he creates the novel harmony. He sees all
difficulties through his own sanguine hues. He is the musical poet of the
problem, demanding merely to have it solved that he may sing: clear proof
of the necessity for solving it immediately.</p>
<p>Thus far in their pursuit of methods for the government of a nation, to
make it happy, Diana was leader. Her fine ardour and resonance, and more
than the convincing ring of her voice, the girl's impassioned rapidity in
rushing through any perceptible avenue of the labyrinth, or beating down
obstacles to form one, and coming swiftly to some solution, constituted
her the chief of the pair of democratic rebels in questions that clamoured
for instant solution. By dint of reading solid writers, using the brains
they possessed, it was revealed to them gradually that their particular
impatience came perhaps of the most earnest desire to get to a comfortable
termination of the inquiry: the heart aching for mankind sought a nest for
itself. At this point Lady Dunstane took the lead. Diana had to be tugged
to follow. She could not accept a 'perhaps' that cast dubiousness on her
disinterested championship. She protested a perfect certainty of the
single aim of her heart outward. But she reflected. She discovered that
her friend had gone ahead of her.</p>
<p>The discovery was reached, and even acknowledged, before she could
persuade herself to swallow the repulsive truth. O self! self! self! are
we eternally masking in a domino that reveals your hideous old face when
we could be most positive we had escaped you? Eternally! the desolating
answer knelled. Nevertheless the poor, the starving, the overtaxed in
labour, they have a right to the cry of Now! now! They have; and if a cry
could conduct us to the secret of aiding, healing, feeding, elevating
them, we might swell the cry. As it is, we must lay it on our wits
patiently to track and find the secret; and meantime do what the
individual with his poor pittance can. A miserable contribution! sighed
the girl. Old Self was perceived in the sigh. She was haunted.</p>
<p>After all, one must live one's life. Placing her on a lower pedestal in
her self-esteem, the philosophy of youth revived her; and if the abatement
of her personal pride was dispiriting, she began to see an advantage in
getting inward eyes.</p>
<p>'It's infinitely better I should know it, Emmy—I'm a reptile!
Pleasure here, pleasure there, I'm always thinking of pleasure. I shall
give up thinking and take to drifting. Neither of us can do more than open
purses; and mine's lean. If the old Crossways had no tenant, it would be a
purse all mouth. And charity is haunted, like everything we do. Only I say
with my whole strength yes, I am sure, in spite of the men professing that
they are practical, the rich will not move without a goad. I have and hold—you
shall hunger and covet, until you are strong enough to force my hand:—that
's the speech of the wealthy. And they are Christians. In name. Well, I
thank heaven I'm at war, with myself.'</p>
<p>'You always manage to strike out a sentence worth remembering, Tony,' said
Lady Dunstane. 'At war with ourselves, means the best happiness we can
have.'</p>
<p>It suited her, frail as her health was, and her wisdom striving to the
spiritual of happiness. War with herself was far from happiness in the
bosom of Diana. She wanted external life, action, fields for energies, to
vary the struggle. It fretted and rendered her ill at ease. In her
solitary rides with Sir Lukin through a long winter season, she appalled
that excellent but conventionally-minded gentleman by starting, nay
supporting, theories next to profane in the consideration of a land-owner.
She spoke of Reform: of the Repeal of the Corn Laws as the simple
beginning of the grants due to the people. She had her ideas, of course,
from that fellow Redworth, an occasional visitor at Copsley; and a man
might be a donkey and think what he pleased, since he had a vocabulary to
back his opinions. A woman, Sir Lukin held, was by nature a mute in
politics. Of the thing called a Radical woman, he could not believe that
she was less than monstrous: 'with a nose,' he said; and doubtless, horse
teeth, hatchet jaws, slatternly in the gown, slipshod, awful. As for a
girl, an unmarried, handsome girl, admittedly beautiful, her
interjections, echoing a man, were ridiculous, and not a little annoying
now and them, for she could be piercingly sarcastic. Her vocabulary in
irony was a quiverful. He admired her and liked her immensely; complaining
only of her turn for unfeminine topics. He pardoned her on the score of
the petty difference rankling between them in reference to his abandonment
of his Profession, for here she was patriotically wrong-headed. Everybody
knew that he had sold out in order to look after his estates of Copsley
and Dunena, secondly: and in the first place, to nurse and be a companion
to his wife. He had left her but four times in five months; he had spent
just three weeks of that time away from her in London. No one could doubt
of his having kept his pledge, although his wife occupied herself with
books and notions and subjects foreign to his taste—his
understanding, too, he owned. And Redworth had approved of his retirement,
had a contempt for soldiering. 'Quite as great as yours for civilians, I
can tell you,' Sir Lukin said, dashing out of politics to the vexatious
personal subject. Her unexpressed disdain was ruffling.</p>
<p>'Mr. Redworth recommends work: he respects the working soldier,' said
Diana.</p>
<p>Sir Lukin exclaimed that he had been a working soldier; he was ready to
serve if his country wanted him. He directed her to anathematize Peace,
instead of scorning a fellow for doing the duties next about him: and the
mention of Peace fetched him at a bound back to politics. He quoted a
distinguished Tory orator, to the effect, that any lengthened term of
peace bred maggots in the heads of the people.</p>
<p>'Mr. Redworth spoke of it: he translated something from Aristophanes for a
retort,' said Diana.</p>
<p>'Well, we're friends, eh?' Sir Lukin put forth a hand.</p>
<p>She looked at him surprised at the unnecessary call for a show, of
friendship; she touched his hand with two tips of her fingers, remarking,
'I should think so, indeed.'</p>
<p>He deemed it prudent to hint to his wife that Diana Merion appeared to be
meditating upon Mr. Redworth.</p>
<p>'That is a serious misfortune, if true,' said Lady Dunstane. She thought
so for two reasons: Mr. Redworth generally disagreed in opinion with
Diana, and contradicted her so flatly as to produce the impression of his
not even sharing the popular admiration of her beauty; and, further, she
hoped for Diana to make a splendid marriage. The nibbles threatened to be
snaps and bites. There had been a proposal, in an epistle, a quaint
effusion, from a gentleman avowing that he had seen her, and had not
danced with her on the night of the Irish ball. He was rejected, but Diana
groaned over the task of replying to the unfortunate applicant, so as not
to wound him. 'Shall I have to do this often, I wonder?' she said.</p>
<p>'Unless you capitulate,' said her friend.</p>
<p>Diana's exclamation: 'May I be heart-free for another ten years!'
encouraged Lady Dunstane to suppose her husband quite mistaken.</p>
<p>In the Spring Diana, went on a first pilgrimage to her old home, The
Crossways, and was kindly entertained by the uncle and aunt of a treasured
nephew, Mr. Augustus Warwick. She rode with him on the Downs. A visit of a
week humanized her view of the intruders. She wrote almost tenderly of her
host and hostess to Lady Dunstane; they had but 'the one fault—of
spoiling their nephew.' Him she described as a 'gentlemanly official,' a
picture of him. His age was thirty-four. He seemed 'fond of her scenery.'
Then her pen swept over the Downs like a flying horse. Lady Dunstane
thought no more of the gentlemanly official. He was a barrister who did
not practise: in nothing the man for Diana. Letters came from the house of
the Pettigrews in Kent; from London; from Halford Manor in Hertfordshire;
from Lockton Grange in Lincolnshire: after which they ceased to be the
thrice weekly; and reading the latest of them, Lady Dunstane imagined a
flustered quill. The letter succeeding the omission contained no excuse,
and it was brief. There was a strange interjection, as to the wearifulness
of constantly wandering, like a leaf off the tree. Diana spoke of looking
for a return of the dear winter days at Copsley. That was her station.
Either she must have had some disturbing experience, or Copsley was dear
for a Redworth reason, thought the anxious peruser; musing, dreaming,
putting together divers shreds of correspondence and testing them with her
intimate knowledge of Diana's character, Lady Dunstane conceived that the
unprotected beautiful girl had suffered a persecution, it might be an
insult. She spelt over the names of the guests at the houses. Lord
Wroxeter was of evil report: Captain Rampan, a Turf captain, had the like
notoriety. And it is impossible in a great house for the hostess to spread
her aegis to cover every dame and damsel present. She has to depend on the
women being discreet, the men civilized.</p>
<p>'How brutal men can be!' was one of Diana's incidental remarks, in a
subsequent letter, relating simply to masculine habits. In those days the
famous ancestral plea of 'the passion for his charmer' had not been
altogether socially quashed down among the provinces, where the bottle
maintained a sort of sway, and the beauty which inflamed the sons of men
was held to be in coy expectation of violent effects upon their boiling
blood. There were, one hears that there still are, remnants of the
pristine male, who, if resisted in their suing, conclude that they are
scorned, and it infuriates them: some also whose 'passion for the charmer'
is an instinct to pull down the standard of the sex, by a bully imposition
of sheer physical ascendancy, whenever they see it flying with an air of
gallant independence: and some who dedicate their lives to a study of the
arts of the Lord Of Reptiles, until they have worked the crisis for a
display of him in person. Assault or siege, they have achieved their
triumphs; they have dominated a frailer system of nerves, and a young
woman without father, or brother, or husband, to defend her, is cryingly a
weak one, therefore inviting to such an order of heroes. Lady Dunstane was
quick-witted and had a talkative husband; she knew a little of the upper
social world of her time. She was heartily glad to have Diana by her side
again.</p>
<p>Not a word of any serious experience was uttered. Only on one occasion
while they conversed, something being mentioned of her tolerance, a flush
of swarthy crimson shot over Diana, and she frowned, with the outcry 'Oh!
I have discovered that I can be a tigress!'</p>
<p>Her friend pressed her hand, saying, 'The cause a good one!'</p>
<p>'Women have to fight.'</p>
<p>Diana said no more. There had been a bad experience of her isolated
position in the world.</p>
<p>Lady Dunstane now indulged a partial hope that Mr. Redworth might see in
this unprotected beautiful girl a person worthy of his esteem. He had his
opportunities, and evidently he liked her. She appeared to take more
cordially to him. She valued the sterling nature of the man. But they were
a hopeless couple, they were so friendly. Both ladies noticed in him an
abstractedness of look, often when conversing, as of a man in calculation;
they put it down to an ambitious mind. Yet Diana said then, and said
always, that it was he who had first taught her the art of observing. On
the whole, the brilliant marriage seemed a fairer prospect for her; how
reasonable to anticipate, Lady Dunstane often thought when admiring the
advance of Diana's beauty in queenliness, for never did woman carry her
head more grandly, more thrillingly make her presence felt; and if only
she had been an actress showing herself nightly on a London stage, she
would before now have met the superb appreciation, melancholy to reflect
upon!</p>
<p>Diana regained her happy composure at Copsley. She had, as she imagined,
no ambition. The dulness of the place conveyed a charm to a nature
recovering from disturbance to its clear smooth flow. Air, light, books,
and her friend, these good things she had; they were all she wanted. She
rode, she walked, with Sir Lukin or Mr. Redworth, for companion; or with
Saturday and Sunday guests, Lord Larrian, her declared admirer, among
them. 'Twenty years younger!' he said to her, shrugging, with a merry
smile drawn a little at the corners to sober sourness; and she vowed to
her friend that she would not have had the heart to refuse him. 'Though,'
said she, 'speaking generally, I cannot tell you what a foreign animal a
husband would appear in my kingdom.' Her experience had wakened a sexual
aversion, of some slight kind, enough to make her feminine pride stipulate
for perfect independence, that she might have the calm out of which
imagination spreads wing. Imagination had become her broader life, and on
such an earth, under such skies, a husband who is not the fountain of it,
certainly is a foreign animal: he is a discordant note. He contracts the
ethereal world, deadens radiancy. He is gross fact, a leash, a muzzle,
harness, a hood; whatever is detestable to the free limbs and senses. It
amused Lady Dunstane to hear Diana say, one evening when their
conversation fell by hazard on her future, that the idea of a convent was
more welcome to her than the most splendid marriage. 'For,' she added, 'as
I am sure I shall never know anything of this love they rattle about and
rave about, I shall do well to keep to my good single path; and I have a
warning within me that a step out of it will be a wrong one—for me,
dearest!'</p>
<p>She wished her view of the yoke to be considered purely personal, drawn
from no examples and comparisons. The excellent Sir Lukin was passing a
great deal of his time in London. His wife had not a word of blame for
him; he was a respectful husband, and attentive when present; but so
uncertain, owing to the sudden pressure of engagements, that Diana, bound
on a second visit to The Crossways, doubted whether she would be able to
quit her friend, whose condition did not allow of her being left solitary
at Copsley. He came nevertheless a day before Diana's appointed departure
on her round of visits. She was pleased with him, and let him see it, for
the encouragement of a husband in the observance of his duties. One of the
horses had fallen lame, so they went out for a walk, at Lady Dunstane's
request. It was a delicious afternoon of Spring, with the full red disk of
sun dropping behind the brown beech-twigs. She remembered long afterward
the sweet simpleness of her feelings as she took in the scent of wild
flowers along the lanes and entered the woods jaws of another monstrous
and blackening experience. He fell into the sentimental vein, and a man
coming from that heated London life to these glorified woods, might be
excused for doing so, though it sounded to her just a little ludicrous in
him. She played tolerantly second to it; she quoted a snatch of poetry,
and his whole face was bent to her, with the petition that she would
repeat the verse. Much struck was this giant ex-dragoon. Ah! how fine!
grand! He would rather hear that than any opera: it was diviner! 'Yes, the
best poetry is,' she assented. 'On your lips,' he said. She laughed. 'I am
not a particularly melodious reciter.' He vowed he could listen to her
eternally, eternally. His face, on a screw of the neck and shoulders, was
now perpetually three-quarters fronting. Ah! she was going to leave. 'Yes,
and you will find my return quite early enough,' said Diana, stepping a
trifle more briskly. His fist was raised on the length of the arm, as if
in invocation. 'Not in the whole of London is there a woman worthy to
fasten your shoe-buckles! My oath on it! I look; I can't spy one.' Such
was his flattering eloquence.</p>
<p>She told him not to think it necessary to pay her compliments. 'And here,
of all places!' They were in the heart of the woods. She found her hand
seized—her waist. Even then, so impossible is it to conceive the
unimaginable even when the apparition of it smites us, she expected some
protesting absurdity, or that he had seen something in her path.—What
did she hear? And from her friend's husband!</p>
<p>If stricken idiotic, he was a gentleman; the tigress she had detected in
her composition did not require to be called forth; half-a-dozen words,
direct, sharp as fangs and teeth, with the eyes burning over them,
sufficed for the work of defence. 'The man who swore loyalty to Emma!' Her
reproachful repulsion of eyes was unmistakeable, withering; as masterful
as a superior force on his muscles.—What thing had he been taking
her for?—She asked it within: and he of himself, in a reflective
gasp. Those eyes of hers appeared as in a cloud, with the wrath above: she
had: the look of a Goddess in anger. He stammered, pleaded across her
flying shoulder—Oh! horrible, loathsome, pitiable to hear!... 'A
momentary aberration... her beauty... he deserved to be shot!... could not
help admiring... quite lost his head.. on his honour! never again!'</p>
<p>Once in the roadway, and Copsley visible, she checked her arrowy pace for
breath, and almost commiserated the dejected wretch in her thankfulness to
him for silence. Nothing exonerated him, but at least he had the grace not
to beg secresy. That would have been an intolerable whine of a poltroon,
adding to her humiliation. He abstained; he stood at her mercy without
appealing.</p>
<p>She was not the woman to take poor vengeance. But, Oh! she was profoundly
humiliated, shamed through and through. The question, was I guilty of any
lightness—anything to bring this on me? would not be laid. And how
she pitied her friend! This house, her heart's home, was now a wreck to
her: nay, worse, a hostile citadel. The burden of the task of meeting Emma
with an open face, crushed her like very guilt. Yet she succeeded. After
an hour in her bedchamber she managed to lock up her heart and summon the
sprite of acting to her tongue and features: which ready attendant on the
suffering female host performed his liveliest throughout the evening, to
Emma's amusement, and to the culprit ex-dragoon's astonishment; in whom,
to tell the truth of him, her sparkle and fun kindled the sense of his
being less criminal than he had supposed, with a dim vision of himself as
the real proven donkey for not having been a harmless dash more so. But,
to be just as well as penetrating, this was only the effect of her
personal charm on his nature. So it spurred him a moment, when it struck
this doleful man that to have secured one kiss of those fresh and witty
sparkling lips he would endure forfeits, pangs, anything save the hanging
of his culprit's head before his Emma. Reflection washed him clean.
Secresy is not a medical restorative, by no means a good thing for the
baffled amorously-adventurous cavalier, unless the lady's character shall
have been firmly established in or over his hazy wagging noddle.
Reflection informed him that the honourable, generous, proud girl spared
him for the sake of the house she loved. After a night of tossing, he rose
right heartily repentant. He showed it in the best manner, not
dramatically. On her accepting his offer to drive her down to the valley
to meet the coach, a genuine illumination of pure gratitude made a better
man of him, both to look at and in feeling. She did not hesitate to
consent; and he had half expected a refusal. She talked on the way quite
as usual, cheerfully, if not altogether so spiritedly. A flash of her
matchless wit now and then reduced him to that abject state of man beside
the fair person he has treated high cavalierly, which one craves
permission to describe as pulp. He was utterly beaten.</p>
<p>The sight of Redworth on the valley road was a relief to them both. He had
slept in one of the houses of the valley, and spoke of having had the
intention to mount to Copsley. Sir Lukin proposed to drive him back. He
glanced at Diana, still with that calculating abstract air of his; and he
was rallied. He confessed to being absorbed in railways, the new lines of
railways projected to thread the land and fast mapping it.</p>
<p>'You 've not embarked money in them?' said Sir Lukin.</p>
<p>The answer was: 'I have; all I possess.' And Redworth for a sharp instant
set his eyes on Diana, indifferent to Sir Lukin's bellow of stupefaction
at such gambling on the part of a prudent fellow.</p>
<p>He asked her where she was to be met, where written to, during the Summer,
in case of his wishing to send her news.</p>
<p>She replied: 'Copsley will be the surest. I am always in communication
with Lady Dunstane.' She coloured deeply. The recollection of the change
of her feeling for Copsley suffused her maiden mind.</p>
<p>The strange blush prompted an impulse in Redworth to speak to her at once
of his venture in railways. But what would she understand of them, as
connected with the mighty stake he was playing for? He delayed. The coach
came at a trot of the horses, admired by Sir Lukin, round a corner. She
entered it, her maid followed, the door banged, the horses trotted. She
was off.</p>
<p>Her destiny of the Crossways tied a knot, barred a gate, and pointed to a
new direction of the road on that fine spring morning, when beech-buds
were near the burst, cowslips yellowed the meadow-flats, and skylarks
quivered upward.</p>
<p>For many long years Redworth had in his memory, for a comment on
procrastination and excessive scrupulousness in his calculating faculty,
the blue back of a coach.</p>
<p>He declined the vacated place beside Sir Lukin, promising to come and
spend a couple of days at Copsley in a fortnight—Saturday week. He
wanted, he said, to have a talk with Lady Dunstane. Evidently he had
railways on the brain, and Sir Lukin warned his wife to be guarded against
the speculative mania, and advise the man, if she could.</p>
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