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<h2> CHAPTER XVI. TREATS OF A MIDNIGHT BELL, AND OF A SCENE OF EARLY MORNING </h2>
<p>On a round of the mountains rising from Osteno, South eastward of Lugano,
the Esquart party rose from the natural grotto and headed their carriages
up and down the defiles, halting for a night at Rovio, a little village
below the Generoso, lively with waterfalls and watercourses; and they fell
so in love with the place, that after roaming along the flowery borderways
by moonlight, they resolved to rest there two or three days and try some
easy ascents. In the diurnal course of nature, being pleasantly tired,
they had the avowed intention of sleeping there; so they went early to
their beds, and carelessly wished one another good-night, none of them
supposing slumber to be anywhere one of the warlike arts, a paradoxical
thing you must battle for and can only win at last when utterly beaten.
Hard by their inn, close enough for a priestly homily to have been
audible, stood a church campanile, wherein hung a Bell, not ostensibly
communicating with the demons of the pit; in daylight rather a merry
comrade. But at night, when the children of nerves lay stretched, he threw
off the mask. As soon as they had fairly nestled, he smote their pillows a
shattering blow, loud for the retold preluding quarters, incredibly
clanging the number ten. Then he waited for neighbouring campanili to box
the ears of slumber's votaries in turn; whereupon, under pretence of
excessive conscientiousness, or else oblivious of his antecedent, damnable
misconduct, or perhaps in actual league and trapdoor conspiracy with the
surging goblin hosts beneath us, he resumed his blaring strokes, a
sonorous recapitulation of the number; all the others likewise. It was an
alarum fit to warn of Attila or Alaric; and not, simply the maniacal noise
invaded the fruitful provinces of sleep like Hun and Vandal, the
irrational repetition ploughed the minds of those unhappy somnivolents,
leaving them worse than sheared by barbarians, disrupt, as by earthquake,
with the unanswerable question to Providence, Why!—Why twice?</p>
<p>Designing slumberers are such infants. When they have undressed and
stretched themselves, flat, it seems that they have really gone back to
their mothers' breasts, and they fret at whatsoever does not smack of
nature, or custom. The cause of a repetition so senseless in its violence,
and so unnecessary, set them querying and kicking until the inevitable
quarters recommenced. Then arose an insurgent rabble in their bosoms, it
might be the loosened imps of darkness, urging them to speculate whether
the proximate monster about to dole out the eleventh hour in uproar would
again forget himself and repeat his dreary arithmetic a second time; for
they were unaware of his religious obligation, following the hour of the
district, to inform them of the tardy hour of Rome. They waited in
suspense, curiosity enabling them to bear the first crash callously. His
performance was the same. And now they took him for a crazy engine whose
madness had infected the whole neighbourhood. Now was the moment to fight
for sleep in contempt of him, and they began by simulating an entry into
the fortress they were to defend, plunging on their pillows, battening
down their eyelids, breathing with a dreadful regularity. Alas! it came to
their knowledge that the Bell was in possession and they the besiegers.
Every resonant quarter was anticipated up to the blow, without averting
its murderous abruptness; and an executioner Midnight that sounded, in
addition to the reiterated quarters, four and twenty ringing
hammerstrokes, with the aching pause between the twelves, left them the
prey of the legions of torturers which are summed, though not described,
in the title of a sleepless night.</p>
<p>From that period the curse was milder, but the victims raged. They swam on
vasty deeps, they knocked at rusty gates, they shouldered all the weapons
of black Insomnia's armoury and became her soldiery, doing her will upon
themselves. Of her originally sprang the inspired teaching of the doom of
men to excruciation in endlessness. She is the fountain of the infinite
ocean whereon the exceedingly sensitive soul is tumbled everlastingly,
with the diversion of hot pincers to appease its appetite for change.</p>
<p>Dacier was never the best of sleepers. He had taken to exercise his brains
prematurely, not only in learning, but also in reflection; and a
reflectiveness that is indulged before we have a rigid mastery of the
emotions, or have slain them, is apt to make a young man more than
commonly a child of nerves: nearly as much so as the dissipated, with the
difference that they are hilarious while wasting their treasury, which he
is not; and he may recover under favouring conditions, which is a point of
vantage denied to them. Physically he had stout reserves, for he had not
disgraced the temple. His intemperateness lay in the craving to rise and
lead: a precocious ambition. This apparently modest young man started with
an aim—and if in the distance and with but a slingstone, like the
slender shepherd fronting the Philistine, all his energies were in his aim—at
Government. He had hung on the fringe of an Administration. His party was
out, and he hoped for higher station on its return to power. Many
perplexities were therefore buzzing about his head; among them at present
one sufficiently magnified and voracious to swallow the remainder. He
added force to the interrogation as to why that Bell should sound its
inhuman strokes twice, by asking himself why he was there to hear it! A
strange suspicion of a bewitchment might have enlightened him if he had
been a man accustomed to yield to the peculiar kind of sorcery issuing
from that sex. He rather despised the power of women over men: and
nevertheless he was there, listening to that Bell, instead of having
obeyed the call of his family duties, when the latter were urgent. He had
received letters at Lugano, summoning him home, before he set forth on his
present expedition. The noisy alarum told him he floundered in quags, like
a silly creature chasing a marsh-lamp. But was it so? Was it not, on the
contrary, a serious pursuit of the secret of a woman's character?—Oh,
a woman and her character! Ordinary women and their characters might set
to work to get what relationship and likeness they could. They had no
secret to allure. This one had: she had the secret of lake waters under
rock, unfathomable in limpidness. He could not think of her without
shooting at nature, and nature's very sweetest and subtlest, for
comparison. As to her sex, his active man's contempt of the petticoated
secret attractive to boys and graylings, made him believe that in her he
hunted the mind and the spirit: perchance a double mind, a twilighted
spirit; but not a mere woman. She bore no resemblance to the bundle of
women. Well, she was worth studying; she had ideas, and could give ear to
ideas. Furthermore, a couple of the members of his family inclined to do
her injustice. At least, they judged her harshly, owing, he thought, to an
inveterate opinion they held regarding Lord Dannisburgh's obliquity in
relation to women. He shared it, and did not concur in, their verdict upon
the woman implicated. That is to say, knowing something of her now, he
could see the possibility of her innocence in the special charm that her
mere sparkle of features and speech, and her freshness would have for a
man like his uncle. The possibility pleaded strongly on her behalf, while
the darker possibility weighted by his uncle's reputation plucked at him
from below.</p>
<p>She was delightful to hear, delightful to see; and her friends loved her
and had faith in her. So clever a woman might be too clever for her
friends!...</p>
<p>The circle he moved in hummed of women, prompting novices as well as
veterans to suspect that the multitude of them, and notably the fairest,
yet more the cleverest, concealed the serpent somewhere.</p>
<p>She certainly had not directed any of her arts upon him. Besides he was
half engaged. And that was a burning perplexity; not because of abstract
scruples touching the necessity for love in marriage. The young lady,
great heiress though she was, and willing, as she allowed him to assume;
graceful too, reputed a beauty; struck him cold. He fancied her
transparent, only Arctic. Her transparency displayed to him all the common
virtues, and a serene possession of the inestimable and eminent one
outweighing all; but charm, wit, ardour, intercommunicative quickness, and
kindling beauty, airy grace, were qualities that a man, it seemed, had to
look for in women spotted by a doubt of their having the chief and
priceless.</p>
<p>However, he was not absolutely plighted. Nor did it matter to him whether
this or that woman concealed the tail of the serpent and trail, excepting
the singular interest this woman managed to excite, and so deeply as set
him wondering how that Resurrection Bell might be affecting her ability to
sleep. Was she sleeping?—or waking? His nervous imagination was a
torch that alternately lighted her lying asleep with the innocent, like a
babe, and tossing beneath the overflow of her dark hair, hounded by
haggard memories. She fluttered before him in either aspect; and another
perplexity now was to distinguish within himself which was the aspect he
preferred. Great Nature brought him thus to drink of her beauty, under the
delusion that the act was a speculation on her character.</p>
<p>The Bell, with its clash, throb and long swoon of sound, reminded him of
her name: Diana!—An attribute? or a derision?</p>
<p>It really mattered nothing to him, save for her being maligned; and if
most unfairly, then that face of the varying expressions, and the rich
voice, and the remembered gentle and taking words coming from her,
appealed to him with a supplicating vividness that pricked his heart to
leap.</p>
<p>He was dozing when the Bell burst through the thin division between
slumber and wakefulness, recounting what seemed innumerable peals, hard on
his cranium. Gray daylight blanched the window and the bed: his watch said
five of the morning. He thought of the pleasure of a bath beneath some
dashing spray-showers; and jumped up to dress, feeling a queer sensation
of skin in his clothes, the sign of a feverish night; and yawning he went
into the air. Leftward the narrow village street led to the footway along
which he could make for the mountain-wall. He cast one look at the head of
the campanile, silly as an owlish roysterer's glazed stare at the young
Aurora, and hurried his feet to check the yawns coming alarmingly fast, in
the place of ideas.</p>
<p>His elevation above the valley was about the kneecap of the Generoso.
Waters of past rain-clouds poured down the mountain-sides like veins of
metal, here and there flinging off a shower on the busy descent; only
dubiously animate in the lack lustre of the huge bulk piled against a
yellow East that wafted fleets of pinky cloudlets overhead. He mounted his
path to a level with inviting grassmounds where water circled, running
from scoops and cups to curves and brook-streams, and in his fancy calling
to him to hear them. To dip in them was his desire. To roll and shiver
braced by the icy flow was the spell to break that baleful incantation of
the intolerable night; so he struck across a ridge of boulders, wreck of a
landslip from the height he had hugged, to the open space of shadowed
undulations, and soon had his feet on turf. Heights to right and to left,
and between them, aloft, a sky the rosy wheelcourse of the chariot of
morn, and below, among the knolls, choice of sheltered nooks where waters
whispered of secresy to satisfy Diana herself. They have that whisper and
waving of secresy in secret scenery; they beckon to the bath; and they
conjure classic visions of the pudency of the Goddess irate or unsighted.
The semi-mythological state of mind, built of old images and favouring
haunts, was known to Dacier. The name of Diana, playing vaguely on his
consciousness, helped to it. He had no definite thought of the mortal
woman when the highest grass-roll near the rock gave him view of a bowered
source and of a pool under a chain of cascades, bounded by polished
shelves and slabs. The very spot for him, he decided at the first peep;
and at the second, with fingers instinctively loosening his waist-coat
buttons for a commencement, he shouldered round and strolled away, though
not at a rapid pace, nor far before he halted.</p>
<p>That it could be no other than she, the figure he had seen standing beside
the pool, he was sure. Why had he turned? Thoughts thick and swift as a
blush in the cheeks of seventeen overcame him; and queen of all, the
thought bringing the picture of this mountain-solitude to vindicate a
woman shamefully assailed.—She who found her pleasure in these
haunts of nymph and Goddess, at the fresh cold bosom of nature, must be
clear as day. She trusted herself to the loneliness here, and to the
honour of men, from a like irreflective sincereness. She was unable to
imagine danger where her own impelling thirst was pure...</p>
<p>The thoughts, it will be discerned, were but flashes of a momentary vivid
sensibility. Where a woman's charm has won half the battle, her character
is an advancing standard and sings victory, let her do no more than take a
quiet morning walk before breakfast.</p>
<p>But why had he turned his back on her? There was nothing in his presence
to alarm, nothing in her appearance to forbid. The motive and the movement
were equally quaint; incomprehensible to him; for after putting himself
out of sight, he understood the absurdity of the supposition that she
would seek the secluded sylvan bath for the same purpose as he. Yet now he
was, debarred from going to meet her. She might have an impulse to bathe
her feet. Her name was Diana....</p>
<p>Yes, and a married woman; and a proclaimed one!</p>
<p>And notwithstanding those brassy facts, he was ready to side with the
evidence declaring her free from stain; and further, to swear that her
blood was Diana's!</p>
<p>Nor had Dacier ever been particularly poetical about women. The present
Diana had wakened his curiosity, had stirred his interest in her, pricked
his admiration, but gradually, until a sleepless night with its flock of
raven-fancies under that dominant Bell, ended by colouring her, the moment
she stood in his eyes, as freshly as the morning heavens. We are much
influenced in youth by sleepless nights: they disarm, they predispose us
to submit to soft occasion; and in our youth occasion is always coming.</p>
<p>He heard her voice. She had risen up the grass-mound, and he hung brooding
half-way down. She was dressed in some texture of the hue of lavender. A
violet scarf loosely knotted over the bosom opened on her throat. The loop
of her black hair curved under a hat of gray beaver. Memorably radiant was
her face.</p>
<p>They met, exchanged greetings, praised the beauty of the morning, and
struck together on the Bell. She laughed: 'I heard it at ten; I slept till
four. I never wake later. I was out in the air by half-past. Were you
disturbed?'</p>
<p>He alluded to his troubles with the Bell.</p>
<p>'It sounded like a felon's heart in skeleton ribs,' he said.</p>
<p>'Or a proser's tongue in a hollow skull,' said she.</p>
<p>He bowed to her conversible readiness, and at once fell into the
background, as he did only with her, to perform accordant bass in their
dialogue; for when a woman lightly caps our strained remarks, we gallantly
surrender the leadership, lest she should too cuttingly assert her claim.</p>
<p>Some sweet wild cyclamen flowers were at her breast. She held in her left
hand a bunch of buds and blown cups of the pale purple meadow-crocus. He
admired them. She told him to look round. He confessed to not having
noticed them in the grass: what was the name? Colchicum, in Botany, she
said.</p>
<p>'These are plucked to be sent to a friend; otherwise I'm reluctant to take
the life of flowers for a whim. Wild flowers, I mean. I am not sentimental
about garden flowers: they are cultivated for decoration, grown for
clipping.'</p>
<p>'I suppose they don't carry the same signification,' said Dacier, in the
tone of a pupil to such themes.</p>
<p>'They carry no feeling,' said she. 'And that is my excuse for plucking
these, where they seem to spring like our town-dream of happiness. I
believe they are sensible of it too; but these must do service to my
invalid friend, who cannot travel. Are you ever as much interested in the
woes of great ladies as of country damsels? I am not—not unless they
have natural distinction. You have met Lady Dunstane?'</p>
<p>The question sounded artless. Dacier answered that he thought he had seen
her somewhere once, and Diana shut her lips on a rising under-smile.</p>
<p>'She is the coeur d'or of our time; the one soul I would sacrifice these
flowers to.'</p>
<p>'A bit of a blue-stocking, I think I have heard said.'</p>
<p>'She might have been admitted to the Hotel Rambouillet, without being
anything of a Precieuse. She is the woman of the largest heart now
beating.'</p>
<p>'Mr. Redworth talked of her.'</p>
<p>'As she deserved, I am sure.'</p>
<p>'Very warmly.'</p>
<p>'He would!'</p>
<p>'He told me you were the Damon and Pythias of women.'</p>
<p>'Her one fault is an extreme humility that makes her always play second to
me; and as I am apt to gabble, I take the lead; and I am froth in
comparison. I can reverence my superiors even when tried by intimacy with
them. She is the next heavenly thing to heaven that I know. Court her, if
ever you come across her. Or have you a man's horror of women with
brains?'</p>
<p>'Am I expressing it?' said he.</p>
<p>'Do not breathe London or Paris here on me.' She fanned the crocuses under
her chin. 'The early morning always has this—I wish I had a word!—touch...
whisper... gleam... beat of wings—I envy poets now more than ever!—of
Eden, I was going to say. Prose can paint evening and moonlight, but poets
are needed to sing the dawn. That is because prose is equal to melancholy
stuff. Gladness requires the finer language. Otherwise we have it coarse—anything
but a reproduction. You politicians despise the little distinctions “twixt
tweedledum and tweedledee,” I fancy.'</p>
<p>Of the poetic sort, Dacier's uncle certainly did. For himself he confessed
to not having thought much on them.</p>
<p>'But how divine is utterance!' she said. 'As we to the brutes, poets are
to us.'</p>
<p>He listened somewhat with the head of the hanged. A beautiful woman
choosing to rhapsodize has her way, and is not subjected to the critical
commentary within us. He wondered whether she had discoursed in such a
fashion to his uncle.</p>
<p>'I can read good poetry,' said he.</p>
<p>'If you would have this valley—or mountain-cleft, one should call it—described,
only verse could do it for you,' Diana pursued, and stopped, glanced at
his face, and smiled. She had spied the end of a towel peeping out of one
of his pockets. 'You came out for a bath! Go back, by all means, and mount
that rise of grass where you first saw me; and down on the other side, a
little to the right, you will find the very place for a bath, at a corner
of the rock—a natural fountain; a bubbling pool in a ring of
brushwood, with falling water, so tempting that I could have pardoned a
push: about five feet deep. Lose no time.'</p>
<p>He begged to assure her that he would rather stroll with her: it had been
only a notion of bathing by chance when he pocketed the towel.</p>
<p>'Dear me,' she cried, 'if I had been a man I should have scurried off at a
signal of release, quick as a hare I once woke up in a field with my foot
on its back.'</p>
<p>Dacier's eyebrows knotted a trifle over her eagerness to dismiss him: he
was not used to it, but rather to be courted by women, and to condescend.</p>
<p>'I shall not long, I'm afraid, have the pleasure of walking beside you and
hearing you. I had letters at Lugano. My uncle is unwell, I hear.'</p>
<p>'Lord Dannisburgh?'</p>
<p>The name sprang from her lips unhesitatingly.</p>
<p>His nodded affirmative altered her face and her voice.</p>
<p>'It is not a grave illness?'</p>
<p>'They rather fear it.'</p>
<p>'You had the news at Lugano?'</p>
<p>He answered the implied reproach: 'I can be of no, service.'</p>
<p>'But surely!'</p>
<p>'It's even doubtful that he would be bothered to receive me. We hold no
views in common—excepting one.'</p>
<p>'Could I?' she exclaimed. 'O that I might! If he is really ill! But if it
is actually serious he would perhaps have a wish... I can nurse. I know I
have the power to cheer him. You ought indeed to be in England.'</p>
<p>Dacier said he had thought it better to wait for later reports. 'I shall
drive to Lugano this afternoon, and act on the information I get there.
Probably it ends my holiday.'</p>
<p>'Will you do me the favour to write me word?—and especially tell me
if you think he would like to have me near him,' said Diana. 'And let him
know that if he wants nursing or cheerful companionship, I am at any
moment ready to come.'</p>
<p>The flattery of a beautiful young woman to wait on him would be very
agreeable to Lord Dannisburgh, Dacier conceived. Her offer to go was
possibly purely charitable. But the prudence of her occupation of the post
obscured whatever appeared admirable in her devotedness. Her choice of a
man like Lord Dannisburgh for the friend to whom she could sacrifice her
good name less falteringly than she gathered those field-flowers was
inexplicable; and she herself a darker riddle at each step of his reading.</p>
<p>He promised curtly to write. 'I will do my best to hit a flying address.'</p>
<p>'Your Club enables me to hit a permanent one that will establish the
communication,' said Diana. 'We shall not sleep another night at Rovio.
Lady Esquart is the lightest of sleepers, and if you had a restless time,
she and her husband must have been in purgatory. Besides, permit me to
say, you should be with your party. The times are troublous—not for
holidays! Your holiday has had a haunted look, creditably to your
conscience as a politician. These Corn Law agitations!'</p>
<p>'Ah, but no politics here!' said Dacier.</p>
<p>'Politics everywhere!—in the Courts of Faery! They are not discord
to me.'</p>
<p>'But not the last day—the last hour!' he pleaded.</p>
<p>'Well! only do not forget your assurance to me that you would give some
thoughts to Ireland—and the cause of women. Has it slipped from your
memory?'</p>
<p>'If I see the chance of serving you, you may trust to me.'</p>
<p>She sent up an interjection on the misfortune of her not having been born
a man.</p>
<p>It was to him the one smart of sourness in her charm as a woman.</p>
<p>Among the boulder-stones of the ascent to the path, he ventured to propose
a little masculine assistance in a hand stretched mutely. Although there
was no great need for help, her natural kindliness checked the inclination
to refuse it. When their hands disjoined she found herself reddening. She
cast it on the exertion. Her heart was throbbing. It might be the exertion
likewise.</p>
<p>He walked and talked much more airily along the descending pathway, as if
he had suddenly become more intimately acquainted with her.</p>
<p>She listened, trying to think of the manner in which he might be taught to
serve that cause she had at heart; and the colour deepened on her cheeks
till it set fire to her underlying consciousness: blood to spirit. A
tremour of alarm ran through her.</p>
<p>His request for one of the crocuses to keep as a souvenir of the morning
was refused. 'They are sacred; they were all devoted to my friend when I
plucked them.'</p>
<p>He pointed to a half-open one, with the petals in disparting pointing to
junction, and compared it to the famous tiptoe ballet-posture, arms above
head and fingers like swallows meeting in air, of an operatic danseuse of
the time.</p>
<p>'I do not see it, because I will not see it,' she said, and she found a
personal cooling and consolement in the phrase.—We have this power
of resisting invasion of the poetic by the commonplace, the spirit by the
blood, if we please, though you men may not think that we have! Her
alarmed sensibilities bristled and made head against him as an enemy. She
fancied (for the aforesaid reason—because she chose) that it was on
account of the offence to her shy morning pleasure by his Londonizing. At
any other moment her natural liveliness and trained social ease would have
taken any remark on the eddies of the tide of converse; and so she told
herself, and did not the less feel wounded, adverse, armed. He seemed
somehow—to have dealt a mortal blow to the happy girl she had become
again. The woman she was protested on behalf of the girl, while the girl
in her heart bent lowered sad eyelids to the woman; and which of them was
wiser of the truth she could not have said, for she was honestly not aware
of the truth, but she knew she was divided in halves, with one half
pitying the other, one rebuking: and all because of the incongruous
comparison of a wild flower to an opera dancer! Absurd indeed. We human
creatures are the silliest on earth, most certainly.</p>
<p>Dacier had observed the blush, and the check to her flowing tongue did not
escape him as they walked back to the inn down the narrow street of black
rooms, where the women gossiped at the fountain and the cobbler threaded
on his doorstep. His novel excitement supplied the deficiency, sweeping
him past minor reflections. He was, however, surprised to hear her tell
Lady Esquart, as soon as they were together at the breakfast-table, that
he had the intention of starting for England; and further surprised, and
slightly stung too, when on the poor lady's, moaning over her recollection
of the midnight Bell, and vowing she could not attempt to sleep another
night in the place, Diana declared her resolve to stay there one day
longer with her maid, and explore the neighbourhood for the wild flowers
in which it abounded. Lord and Lady Esquart agreed to anything agreeable
to her, after excusing themselves for the necessitated flight, piteously
relating the story of their sufferings. My lord could have slept, but he
had remained awake to comfort my lady.</p>
<p>'True knightliness!' Diana said, in praise of these long married lovers;
and she asked them what they had talked of during the night.</p>
<p>'You, my dear, partly,' said Lady Esquart.</p>
<p>'For an opiate?'</p>
<p>'An invocation of the morning,' said Dacier.</p>
<p>Lady Esquart looked at Diana and, at him. She thought it was well that her
fair friend should stay. It was then settled for Diana to rejoin them the
next evening at Lugano, thence to proceed to Luino on the Maggiore.</p>
<p>'I fear it is good-bye for me,' Dacier said to her, as he was about to
step into the carriage with the Esquarts.</p>
<p>'If you have not better news of your uncle, it must be,' she replied, and
gave him her hand promptly and formally, hardly diverting her eyes from
Lady Esquart to grace the temporary gift with a look. The last of her he
saw was a waving of her arm and finger pointing triumphantly at the Bell
in the tower. It said, to an understanding unpractised in the feminine
mysteries: 'I can sleep through anything.' What that revealed of her state
of conscience and her nature, his efforts to preserve the lovely optical
figure blocked his guessing. He was with her friends, who liked her the
more they knew her, and he was compelled to lean to their view of the
perplexing woman.</p>
<p>'She is a riddle to the world,' Lady Esquart said, 'but I know that she is
good. It is the best of signs when women take to her and are proud to be
her friend.'</p>
<p>My lord echoed his wife. She talked in this homely manner to stop any
notion of philandering that the young gentleman might be disposed to
entertain in regard to a lady so attractive to the pursuit as Diana's
beauty and delicate situation might make her seem.</p>
<p>'She is an exceedingly clever person, and handsomer than report, which is
uncommon,' said Dacier, becoming voluble on town-topics, Miss Asper
incidentally among them. He denied Lady Esquart's charge of an engagement;
the matter hung.</p>
<p>His letters at Lugano summoned him to England instantly.</p>
<p>'I have taken leave of Mrs. Warwick, but tell her I regret, et caetera,'
he said; 'and by the way, as my uncle's illness appears to be serious, the
longer she is absent the better, perhaps.'</p>
<p>'It would never do,' said Lady Esquart, understanding his drift
immediately. 'We winter in Rome. She will not abandon us—I have her
word for it. Next Easter we are in Paris; and so home, I suppose. There
will be no hurry before we are due at Cowes. We seem to have become
confirmed wanderers; for two of us at least it is likely to be our last
great tour.'</p>
<p>Dacier informed her that he had pledged his word to write to Mrs. Warwick
of his uncle's condition, and the several appointed halting-places of the
Esquarts between the lakes and Florence were named to him. Thus all things
were openly treated; all had an air of being on the surface; the
communications passing between Mrs. Warwick and the Hon. Percy Dacier
might have been perused by all the world. None but that portion of it,
sage in suspiciousness, which objects to such communications under any
circumstances, could have detected in their correspondence a spark of
coming fire or that there was common warmth. She did not feel it, nor did
he. The position of the two interdicted it to a couple honourably sensible
of social decencies; and who were, be it added, kept apart. The blood is
the treacherous element in the story of the nobly civilized, of which
secret Diana, a wife and no wife, a prisoner in liberty, a blooming woman
imagining herself restored to transcendent maiden ecstacies—the
highest youthful poetic—had received some faint intimation when the
blush flamed suddenly in her cheeks and her heart knelled like the towers
of a city given over to the devourer. She had no wish to meet him again.
Without telling herself why, she would have shunned the meeting.
Disturbers that thwarted her simple happiness in sublime scenery were best
avoided. She thought so the more for a fitful blur to the simplicity of
her sensations, and a task she sometimes had in restoring and toning them,
after that sweet morning time in Rovio.</p>
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