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<h2> CHAPTER XL. IN WHICH WE SEE NATURE MAKING OF A WOMAN A MAID AGAIN, AND A THRICE WHIMSICAL </h2>
<p>On their way from London, after leaving the station, the drive through the
valley led them past a field, where cricketers were at work bowling and
batting under a vertical sun: not a very comprehensible sight to ladies,
whose practical tendencies, as observers of the other sex, incline them to
question the gain of such an expenditure of energy. The dispersal of the
alphabet over a printed page is not less perplexing to the illiterate. As
soon as Emma Dunstane discovered the Copsley head-gamekeeper at one
wicket, and, actually, Thomas Redworth facing him, bat in hand, she sat
up, greatly interested. Sir Lukin stopped the carriage at the gate, and
reminded his wife that it was the day of the year for the men of his
estate to encounter a valley Eleven. Redworth, like the good fellow he
was, had come down by appointment in the morning out of London, to fill
the number required, Copsley being weak this year. Eight of their wickets
had fallen for a lament able figure of twenty-nine runs; himself
clean-bowled the first ball. But Tom Redworth had got fast hold of his
wicket, and already scored fifty to his bat. 'There! grand hit!' Sir Lukin
cried, the ball flying hard at the rails. 'Once a cricketer, always a
cricketer, if you've legs to fetch the runs. And Pullen's not doing badly.
His business is to stick. We shall mark them a hundred yet. I do hate a
score on our side without the two 00's.' He accounted for Redworth's mixed
colours by telling the ladies he had lent him his flannel jacket; which,
against black trousers, looked odd but not ill.</p>
<h3> Gradually the enthusiasm of the booth and bystanders converted the flying of a leather ball into a subject of honourable excitement. </h3>
<p>'And why are you doing nothing?' Sir Lukin was asked; and he explained:</p>
<p>'My stumps are down: I'm married.' He took his wife's hand prettily.</p>
<p>Diana had a malicious prompting. She smothered the wasp, and said: 'Oh!
look at that!'</p>
<p>'Grand hit again! Oh! good! good!' cried Sir Lukin, clapping to it, while
the long-hit-off ran spinning his legs into one for an impossible catch;
and the batsmen were running and stretching bats, and the ball flying
away, flying back, and others after it, and still the batsmen running,
till it seemed that the ball had escaped control and was leading the
fielders on a coltish innings of its own, defiant of bowlers.</p>
<p>Diana said merrily: 'Bravo our side!'</p>
<p>'Bravo, old Tom Redworth'; rejoined Sir Lukin. 'Four, and a three! And
capital weather, haven't we: Hope we shall have same sort day next month—return
match, my ground. I've seen Tom Redworth score—old days—over
two hundred t' his bat. And he used to bowl too. But bowling wants
practice. And, Emmy, look at the old fellows lining the booth, pipe in
mouth and cheering. They do enjoy a day like this. We'll have a supper for
fifty at Copsley's:—it's fun. By Jove! we must have reached up to
near the hundred.'</p>
<p>He commissioned a neighbouring boy to hie to the booth for the latest
figures, and his emissary taught lightning a lesson.</p>
<p>Diana praised the little fellow.</p>
<p>'Yes, he's a real English boy,' said Emma.</p>
<p>'We 've thousands of 'em, thousands, ready to your hand,' exclaimed Sir
Lukin, 'and a confounded Radicalized country...' he murmured gloomily of
'lets us be kicked!... any amount of insult, meek as gruel!... making of
the finest army the world has ever seen! You saw the papers this morning?
Good heaven! how a nation with an atom of self-respect can go on standing
that sort of bullying from foreigners! We do. We're insulted and we're
threatened, and we call for a hymn!—Now then, my man, what is it?'</p>
<p>The boy had flown back. 'Ninety-two marked, sir; ninety-nine runs; one
more for the hundred.'</p>
<p>'Well reckoned; and mind you're up at Copsley for the return match.—And
Tom Redworth says, they may bite their thumbs to the bone—they don't
hurt us. I tell him, he has no sense of national pride. He says, we're not
prepared for war: We never are! And whose the fault? Says, we're a
peaceful people, but 'ware who touches us! He doesn't feel a kick.—Oh!
clever snick! Hurrah for the hundred!—Two-three. No, don't force the
running, you fools!—though they 're wild with the ball: ha!—no?—all
right!' The wicket stood. Hurrah!</p>
<p>The heat of the noonday sun compelled the ladies to drive on.</p>
<p>'Enthusiasm has the privilege of not knowing monotony,' said Emma. 'He
looks well in flannels.'</p>
<p>'Yes, he does,' Diana replied, aware of the reddening despite her having
spoken so simply. 'I think the chief advantage men have over us is in
their amusements.'</p>
<p>'Their recreations.'</p>
<p>'That is the better word.' Diana fanned her cheeks and said she was warm.
'I mean, the permanent advantage. For you see that age does not affect
them.'</p>
<p>'Tom Redworth is not a patriarch, my dear.'</p>
<p>'Well, he is what would be called mature.'</p>
<p>'He can't be more than thirty-two or three; and that, for a man of his
constitution, means youth.'</p>
<p>'Well, I can imagine him a patriarch playing cricket.'</p>
<p>'I should imagine you imagine the possible chances. He is the father who
would play with his boys.'</p>
<p>'And lock up his girls in the nursery.' Diana murmured of the
extraordinary heat.</p>
<p>Emma begged her to remember her heterodox views of the education for
girls.</p>
<p>'He bats admirably,' said Diana. 'I wish I could bat half as well.'</p>
<p>'Your batting is with the tongue.'</p>
<p>'Not so good. And a solid bat, or bludgeon, to defend the poor stumps, is
surer. But there is the difference of cricket:—when your stumps are
down, you are idle, at leisure; not a miserable prisoner.'</p>
<p>'Supposing all marriages miserable.'</p>
<p>'To the mind of me,' said Diana, and observed Emma's rather saddened
eyelids for a proof that schemes to rob her of dear liberty were certainly
planned.</p>
<p>They conversed of expeditions to Redworth's Berkshire mansion, and to The
Crossways, untenanted at the moment, as he had informed Emma, who fancied
it would please Tony to pass a night in the house she loved; but as he was
to be of the party she coldly acquiesced.</p>
<p>The woman of flesh refuses pliancy when we want it of her, and will not,
until it is her good pleasure, be bent to the development called a climax,
as the puppet-woman, mother of Fiction and darling of the multitude! ever
amiably does, at a hint of the Nuptial Chapter. Diana in addition
sustained the weight of brains. Neither with waxen optics nor with
subservient jointings did she go through her pathways of the world. Her
direct individuality rejected the performance of simpleton, and her lively
blood, the warmer for its containment quickened her to penetrate things
and natures; and if as yet, in justness to the loyal male friend, she
forbore to name him conspirator, she read both him and Emma, whose inner
bosom was revealed to her, without an effort to see. But her
characteristic chasteness of mind, not coldness of the 'blood,—which
had supported an arduous conflict, past all existing rights closely to
depict, and which barbed her to pierce to the wishes threatening her
freedom, deceived her now to think her flaming blushes came of her
relentless divination on behalf of her recovered treasure: whereby the
clear reading of others distracted the view of herself. For one may be the
cleverest alive, and still hoodwinked while blood is young and warm.</p>
<p>The perpetuity of the contrast presented to her reflections, of Redworth's
healthy, open, practical, cheering life, and her own freakishly
interwinding, darkly penetrative, simulacrum of a life, cheerless as well
as useless, forced her humiliated consciousness by degrees, in spite of
pride, to the knowledge that she was engaged in a struggle with him; and
that he was the stronger;—it might be, the worthier: she thought him
the handsomer. He throve to the light of day, and she spun a silly web
that meshed her in her intricacies. Her intuition of Emma's wishes led to
this; he was constantly before her. She tried to laugh at the image of the
concrete cricketer, half-flannelled, and red of face: the 'lucky
calculator,' as she named him to Emma, who shook her head, and sighed. The
abstract, healthful and powerful man, able to play besides profitably
working, defied those poor efforts. Consequently, at once she sent up a
bubble to the skies, where it became a spheral realm, of far too fine an
atmosphere for men to breathe in it; and thither she transported herself
at will, whenever the contrast, with its accompanying menace of a tyrannic
subjugation, overshadowed her. In the above, the kingdom composed of her
shattered romance of life and her present aspirings, she was free and
safe. Nothing touched her there—nothing that Redworth did. She could
not have admitted there her ideal of a hero. It was the sublimation of a
virgin's conception of life, better fortified against the enemy. She
peopled it with souls of the great and pure, gave it illimitable horizons,
dreamy nooks, ravishing landscapes, melodies of the poets of music. Higher
and more-celestial than the Salvatore, it was likewise, now she could
assure herself serenely, independent of the horrid blood-emotions. Living
up there, she had not a feeling.</p>
<p>The natural result of this habit of ascending to a superlunary home, was
the loss of an exact sense of how she was behaving below. At the Berkshire
mansion, she wore a supercilious air, almost as icy as she accused the
place of being. Emma knew she must have seen in the library a row of her
literary ventures, exquisitely bound; but there was no allusion to the
books. Mary Paynham's portrait of Mrs. Warwick hung staring over the
fireplace, and was criticized, as though its occupancy of that position
had no significance.</p>
<p>'He thinks she has a streak of genius,' Diana said to Emma.</p>
<p>'It may be shown in time,' Emma replied, for a comment on the work. 'He
should know, for the Spanish pictures are noble acquisitions.'</p>
<p>'They are, doubtless, good investments.'</p>
<p>He had been foolish enough to say, in Diana's hearing, that he considered
the purchase of the Berkshire estate a good investment. It had not yet a
name. She suggested various titles for Emma to propose: 'The Funds'; or
'Capital Towers'; or 'Dividend Manor'; or 'Railholm'; blind to the
evidence of inflicting pain. Emma, from what she had guess concerning the
purchaser of The Crossways, apprehended a discovery there which might make
Tony's treatment of him unkinder, seeing that she appeared actuated
contrariously; and only her invalid's new happiness in the small
excursions she was capable of taking to a definite spot, of some homely
attractiveness, moved her to follow her own proposal for the journey.
Diana pleaded urgently, childishly in tone, to have Arthur Rhodes with
them, 'so as to be sure of a sympathetic companion for a walk on the
Downs.' At The Crossways, they were soon aware that Mr. Redworth's
domestics were in attendance to serve them. Manifestly the house was his
property, and not much of an investment! The principal bed-room, her
father's once, and her own, devoted now to Emma's use, appalled her with a
resemblance to her London room. She had noticed some of her furniture at
'Dividend Manor,' and chosen to consider it in the light of a bargain from
a purchase at the sale of her goods. Here was her bed, her writing-table,
her chair of authorship, desks, books, ornaments, water-colour sketches.
And the drawing-room was fitted with her brackets and etageres, holding
every knickknack she had possessed and scattered, small bronzes, antiques,
ivory junks, quaint ivory figures Chinese and Japanese, bits of porcelain,
silver incense-urns, dozens of dainty sundries. She had a shamed curiosity
to spy for an omission of one of them; all were there. The Crossways had
been turned into a trap.</p>
<p>Her reply to this blunt wooing, conspired, she felt justifled in thinking,
between him and Emma, was emphatic in muteness. She treated it as if
unobserved. At night, in bed, the scene of his mission from Emma to her
under this roof, barred her customary ascent to her planetary kingdom.
Next day she took Arthur after breakfast for a walk on the Downs and
remained absent till ten minutes before the hour of dinner. As to that
young gentleman, he was near to being caressed in public. Arthur's
opinions, his good sayings, were quoted; his excellent companionship on
really poetical walks, and perfect sympathy, praised to his face.
Challenged by her initiative to a kind of language that threw Redworth
out, he declaimed: 'We pace with some who make young morning stale.'</p>
<p>'Oh! stale as peel of fruit long since consumed,' she chimed.</p>
<p>And go they proceeded; and they laughed, Emma smiled a little, Redworth
did the same beneath one of his questioning frowns—a sort of
fatherly grimace.</p>
<p>A suspicion that this man, when infatuated, was able to practise the
absurdest benevolence, the burlesque of chivalry, as a man-admiring sex
esteems it, stirred very naughty depths of the woman in Diana, labouring
under her perverted mood. She put him to proof, for the chance of arming
her wickedest to despise him. Arthur was petted, consulted, cited,
flattered all round; all but caressed. She played, with a reserve, the
maturish young woman smitten by an adorable youth; and enjoyed doing it
because she hoped for a visible effect—more paternal benevolence—and
could do it so dispassionately. Coquettry, Emma thought, was most
unworthily shown; and it was of the worst description. Innocent of
conspiracy, she had seen the array of Tony's lost household treasures she
wondered at a heartlessness that would not even utter common thanks to the
friendly man for the compliment of prizing her portrait and the things she
had owned; and there seemed an effort to wound him.</p>
<p>The invalided woman, charitable with allowances for her erratic husband,
could offer none for the woman of a long widowhood, that had become a
trebly sensitive maidenhood; abashed by her knowledge of the world,
animated by her abounding blood; cherishing her new freedom, dreading the
menacer; feeling that though she held the citadel, she was daily less sure
of its foundations, and that her hope of some last romance in life was
going; for in him shone not a glimpse. He appeared to Diana as a fatal
power, attracting her without sympathy, benevolently overcoming: one of
those good men, strong men, who subdue and do not kindle. The enthralment
revolted a nature capable of accepting subjection only by burning. In
return for his moral excellence, she gave him the moral sentiments:
esteem, gratitude, abstract admiration, perfect faith. But the man? She
could not now say she had never been loved; and a flood of tenderness rose
in her bosom, swelling from springs that she had previously reproved with
a desperate severity: the unhappy, unsatisfied yearning to be more than
loved, to love. It was alive, out of the wreck of its first trial. This,
the secret of her natural frailty, was bitter to her pride:
chastely-minded as she was, it whelmed her. And then her comic imagination
pictured Redworth dramatically making love. And to a widow! It proved him
to be senseless of romance. Poetic men take aim at maidens. His
devotedness to a widow was charged against him by the widow's shudder at
antecedents distasteful to her soul, a discolouration of her life. She
wished to look entirely forward, as upon a world washed clear of night,
not to be cast back on her antecedents by practical wooings or words of
love; to live spiritually; free of the shower at her eyelids attendant on
any idea of her loving. The woman who talked of the sentimentalist's
'fiddling harmonics,' herself stressed the material chords, in her attempt
to escape out of herself and away from her pursuer.</p>
<p>Meanwhile she was as little conscious of what she was doing as of how she
appeared. Arthur went about with the moony air of surcharged sweetness,
and a speculation on it, alternately tiptoe and prostrate. More of her
intoxicating wine was administered to him, in utter thoughtlessness of
consequences to one who was but a boy and a friend, almost of her own
rearing. She told Emma, when leaving The Crossways, that she had no desire
to look on the place again: she wondered at Mr. Redworth's liking such a
solitude. In truth, the look back on it let her perceive that her husband
haunted it, and disfigured the man, of real generosity, as her heart
confessed, but whom she accused of a lack of prescient delicacy, for not
knowing she would and must be haunted there. Blaming him, her fountain of
colour shot up, at a murmur of her unjustness and the poor man's hopes.</p>
<p>A week later, the youth she publicly named 'her Arthur' came down to
Copsley with news of his having been recommended by Mr. Redworth for the
post of secretary to an old Whig nobleman famous for his patronage of men
of letters. And besides, he expected to inherit, he said, and gazed in a
way to sharpen her instincts. The wine he had drunk of late from her
flowing vintage was in his eyes. They were on their usual rambles out
along the heights. 'Accept, by all means, and thank Mr. Redworth,' said
she, speeding her tongue to intercept him. 'Literature is a good stick and
a bad horse. Indeed, I ought to know. You can always write; I hope you
will.'</p>
<p>She stepped fast, hearing: 'Mrs. Warwick—Diana! May I take your
hand?'</p>
<p>This was her pretty piece of work! 'Why should you? If you speak my
Christian name, no: you forfeit any pretext. And pray, don't loiter. We
are going at the pace of the firm of Potter and Dawdle, and you know they
never got their shutters down till it was time to put them up again.'</p>
<p>Nimble-footed as she was, she pressed ahead too fleetly for amorous
eloquence to have a chance. She heard 'Diana!' twice, through the rattling
of her discourse and flapping of her dress.</p>
<p>'Christian names are coin that seem to have an indifferent valuation of
the property they claim,' she said in the Copsley garden; 'and as for
hands, at meeting and parting, here is the friendliest you could have.
Only don't look rueful. My dear Arthur, spare me that, or I shall blame
myself horribly.'</p>
<p>His chance had gone, and he composed his face. No hope in speaking had
nerved him; merely the passion to speak. Diana understood the state, and
pitied the naturally modest young fellow, and chafed at herself as a
senseless incendiary, who did mischief right and left, from seeking to
shun the apparently inevitable. A sidethought intruded, that he would have
done his wooing poetically—not in the burly storm, or bull-Saxon,
she apprehended. Supposing it imperative with her to choose? She looked
up, and the bird of broader wing darkened the whole sky, bidding her know
that she had no choice.</p>
<p>Emma was requested to make Mr. Redworth acquainted with her story, all of
it:—'So that this exalted friendship of his may be shaken to a
common level. He has an unbearably high estimate of me, and it hurts me.
Tell him all; and more than even you have known:—but for his coming
to me, on the eve of your passing under the surgeon's hands, I should have
gone—flung the world my glove! A matter of minutes. Ten minutes
later! The train was to start for France at eight, and I was awaited. I
have to thank heaven that the man was one of those who can strike icily.
Tell Mr. Redworth what I say. You two converse upon every subject. One may
be too loftily respected—in my case. By and by—for he is a
tolerant reader of life and women, I think—we shall be humdrum
friends of the lasting order.'</p>
<p>Emma's cheeks were as red as Diana's. 'I fancy Tom Redworth has not much
to learn concerning any person he cares for,' she said. 'You like him? I
have lost touch of you, my dear, and ask.'</p>
<p>'I like him: that I can say. He is everything I am not. But now I am free,
the sense of being undeservedly over-esteemed imposes fetters, and I don't
like them. I have been called a Beauty. Rightly or other, I have had a
Beauty's career; and a curious caged beast's life I have found it. Will
you promise me to speak to him? And also, thank him for helping Arthur
Rhodes to a situation.'</p>
<p>At this, the tears fell from her. And so enigmatical had she grown to
Emma, that her bosom friend took them for a confessed attachment to the
youth.</p>
<p>Diana's wretched emotion shamed her from putting any inquiries whether
Redworth had been told. He came repeatedly, and showed no change of face,
always continuing in the form of huge hovering griffin; until an idea,
instead of the monster bird, struck her. Might she not, after all, be
cowering under imagination? The very maidenly idea wakened her womanliness—to
reproach her remainder of pride, not to see more accurately. It was the
reason why she resolved, against Emma's extreme entreaties, to take
lodgings in the South valley below the heights, where she could be
independent of fancies and perpetual visitors, but near her beloved at any
summons of urgency; which Emma would not habitually send because of the
coming of a particular gentleman. Dresses were left at Copsley for dining
and sleeping there upon occasion, and poor Danvers, despairing over the
riddle of her mistress, was condemned to the melancholy descent.</p>
<p>'It's my belief,' she confided to Lady Dunstane's maid Bartlett, 'she'll
hate men all her life after that Mr. Dacier.'</p>
<p>If women were deceived, and the riddle deceived herself, there is excuse
for a plain man like Redworth in not having the slightest clue to the
daily shifting feminine maze he beheld. The strange thing was, that during
her maiden time she had never been shifty or flighty, invariably limpid
and direct.</p>
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