<p><SPAN name="c45" id="c45"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER XLV</h3>
<h3>The Stanhopes at Home<br/> </h3>
<p>We must now return to the Stanhopes and see how they behaved
themselves on their return from Ullathorne.</p>
<p>Charlotte, who came back in the first homeward journey with her
sister, waited in palpitating expectation till the carriage drove up
to the door a second time. She did not run down, or stand at the
window, or show in any outward manner that she looked for anything
wonderful to occur; but when she heard the carriage wheels, she stood
up with erect ears, listening for Eleanor's footfall on the pavement,
or the cheery sound of Bertie's voice welcoming her in. Had she
heard either, she would have felt that all was right; but neither
sound was there for her to hear. She heard only her father's slow
step as he ponderously let himself down from the carriage and slowly
walked along the hall, till he got into his own private room on the
ground floor. "Send Miss Stanhope to me," he said to the servant.</p>
<p>"There's something wrong now," said Madeline, who was lying on her
sofa in the back drawing-room.</p>
<p>"It's all up with Bertie," replied Charlotte. "I know, I know," she
said to the servant as he brought up the message. "Tell my father I
will be with him immediately."</p>
<p>"Bertie's wooing has gone astray," said Madeline. "I knew it would."</p>
<p>"It has been his own fault then. She was ready enough, I am quite
sure," said Charlotte with that sort of ill-nature which is not
uncommon when one woman speaks of another.</p>
<p>"What will you say to him now?" By "him," the signora meant their
father.</p>
<p>"That will be as I find him. He was ready to pay two hundred pounds
for Bertie to stave off the worst of his creditors, if this marriage
had gone on. Bertie must now have the money instead and go and take
his chance."</p>
<p>"Where is he now?"</p>
<p>"Heaven knows! Smoking in the bottom of Mr. Thorne's ha-ha, or
philandering with some of those Miss Chadwicks. Nothing will ever
make an impression on him. But he'll be furious if I don't go down."</p>
<p>"No, nothing ever will. But don't be long, Charlotte, for I want my
tea."</p>
<p>And so Charlotte went down to her father. There was a very black
cloud on the old man's brow—blacker than his daughter could
ever yet remember to have seen there. He was sitting in his own
armchair, not comfortably over the fire, but in the middle of the room,
waiting till she should come and listen to him.</p>
<p>"What has become of your brother?" he said as soon as the door was
shut.</p>
<p>"I should rather ask you," said Charlotte. "I left you both at
Ullathorne when I came away. What have you done with Mrs. Bold?"</p>
<p>"Mrs. Bold! Nonsense. The woman has gone home as she ought to do.
And heartily glad I am that she should not be sacrificed to so
heartless a reprobate."</p>
<p>"Oh, Papa!"</p>
<p>"A heartless reprobate! Tell me now where he is and what he is going
to do. I have allowed myself to be fooled between you. Marriage,
indeed! Who on earth that has money, or credit, or respect in the
world to lose would marry him?"</p>
<p>"It is no use your scolding me, Papa. I have done the best I could
for him and you."</p>
<p>"And Madeline is nearly as bad," said the prebendary, who was in
truth very, very angry.</p>
<p>"Oh, I suppose we are all bad," replied Charlotte.</p>
<p>The old man emitted a huge, leonine sigh. If they were all bad, who
had made them so? If they were unprincipled, selfish, and
disreputable, who was to be blamed for the education which had had so
injurious an effect?</p>
<p>"I know you'll ruin me among you," said he.</p>
<p>"Why, Papa, what nonsense that is. You are living within your income
this minute, and if there are any new debts, I don't know of them.
I am sure there ought to be none, for we are dull enough here."</p>
<p>"Are those bills of Madeline's paid?"</p>
<p>"No, they are not. Who was to pay them?"</p>
<p>"Her husband may pay them."</p>
<p>"Her husband! Would you wish me to tell her you say so? Do you wish
to turn her out of your house?"</p>
<p>"I wish she would know how to behave herself."</p>
<p>"Why, what on earth has she done now? Poor Madeline! To-day is only
the second time she has gone out since we came to this vile town."</p>
<p>He then sat silent for a time, thinking in what shape he would
declare his resolve. "Well, Papa," said Charlotte, "shall I stay
here, or may I go upstairs and give Mamma her tea?"</p>
<p>"You are in your brother's confidence. Tell me what he is going to
do."</p>
<p>"Nothing, that I am aware of."</p>
<p>"Nothing—nothing! Nothing but eat and drink and spend every
shilling of my money he can lay his hands upon. I have made up my
mind, Charlotte. He shall eat and drink no more in this house."</p>
<p>"Very well. Then I suppose he must go back to Italy."</p>
<p>"He may go where he pleases."</p>
<p>"That's easily said, Papa, but what does it mean? You can't let
him—"</p>
<p>"It means this?" said the doctor, speaking more loudly than was his
wont and with wrath flashing from his eyes; "that as sure as God
rules in heaven I will not maintain him any longer in idleness."</p>
<p>"Oh, ruling in heaven!" said Charlotte. "It is no use talking about
that. You must rule him here on earth; and the question is, how can
you do it. You can't turn him out of the house penniless, to beg
about the street."</p>
<p>"He may beg where he likes."</p>
<p>"He must go back to Carrara. That is the cheapest place he can live
at, and nobody there will give him credit for above two or three
hundred pauls. But you must let him have the means of going."</p>
<p>"As sure as—"</p>
<p>"Oh, Papa, don't swear. You know you must do it. You were ready to
pay two hundred pounds for him if this marriage came off. Half that
will start him to Carrara."</p>
<p>"What? Give him a hundred pounds?"</p>
<p>"You know we are all in the dark, Papa," said she, thinking it
expedient to change the conversation. "For anything we know he may
be at this moment engaged to Mrs. Bold."</p>
<p>"Fiddlestick," said the father, who had seen the way in which Mrs.
Bold had got into the carriage while his son stood apart without even
offering her his hand.</p>
<p>"Well, then, he must go to Carrara," said Charlotte.</p>
<p>Just at this moment the lock of the front door was heard, and
Charlotte's quick ears detected her brother's catlike step in the
hall. She said nothing, feeling that for the present Bertie had
better keep out of her father's way. But Dr. Stanhope also heard the
sound of the lock.</p>
<p>"Who's that?" he demanded. Charlotte made no reply, and he asked
again, "Who is that that has just come in? Open the door. Who is
it?"</p>
<p>"I suppose it is Bertie."</p>
<p>"Bid him come here," said the father. But Bertie, who was close to
the door and heard the call, required no further bidding, but walked
in with a perfectly unconcerned and cheerful air. It was this
peculiar <i>insouciance</i> which angered Dr. Stanhope, even more than
his son's extravagance.</p>
<p>"Well, sir?" said the doctor.</p>
<p>"And how did you get home, sir, with your fair companion?" said
Bertie. "I suppose she is not upstairs, Charlotte?"</p>
<p>"Bertie," said Charlotte, "Papa is in no humour for joking. He is
very angry with you."</p>
<p>"Angry!" said Bertie, raising his eyebrows as though he had never
yet given his parent cause for a single moment's uneasiness.</p>
<p>"Sit down, if you please, sir," said Dr. Stanhope very sternly but
not now very loudly. "And I'll trouble you to sit down, too,
Charlotte. Your mother can wait for her tea a few minutes."</p>
<p>Charlotte sat down on the chair nearest to the door in somewhat of a
perverse sort of manner, as much as though she would say—"Well,
here I am; you shan't say I don't do what I am bid; but I'll be whipped
if I give way to you." And she was determined not to give way. She too
was angry with Bertie, but she was not the less ready on that account
to defend him from his father. Bertie also sat down. He drew his chair
close to the library-table, upon which he put his elbow, and then
resting his face comfortably on one hand, he began drawing little
pictures on a sheet of paper with the other. Before the scene was over
he had completed admirable figures of Miss Thorne, Mrs. Proudie, and
Lady De Courcy, and begun a family piece to comprise the whole set of
the Lookalofts.</p>
<p>"Would it suit you, sir," said the father, "to give me some idea as
to what your present intentions are? What way of living you propose
to yourself?"</p>
<p>"I'll do anything you can suggest, sir," replied Bertie.</p>
<p>"No, I shall suggest nothing further. My time for suggesting has
gone by. I have only one order to give, and that is that you leave
my house."</p>
<p>"To-night?" said Bertie, and the simple tone of the question left
the doctor without any adequately dignified method of reply.</p>
<p>"Papa does not quite mean to-night," said Charlotte; "at least I
suppose not."</p>
<p>"To-morrow, perhaps," suggested Bertie.</p>
<p>"Yes, sir, to-morrow," said the doctor. "You shall leave this
to-morrow."</p>
<p>"Very well, sir. Will the 4.30 P.M. train be soon enough?" and
Bertie, as he asked, put the finishing touch to Miss Thorne's
high-heeled boots.</p>
<p>"You may go how and when and where you please, so that you leave my
house to-morrow. You have disgraced me, sir; you have disgraced
yourself, and me, and your sisters."</p>
<p>"I am glad at least, sir, that I have not disgraced my mother," said
Bertie.</p>
<p>Charlotte could hardly keep her countenance, but the doctor's brow
grew still blacker than ever. Bertie was executing his <i>chef
d'oeuvre</i> in the delineation of Mrs. Proudie's nose and mouth.</p>
<p>"You are a heartless reprobate, sir; a heartless, thankless,
good-for-nothing reprobate. I have done with you. You are my
son—that I cannot help—but you shall have no more part or
parcel in me as my child, nor I in you as your father."</p>
<p>"Oh, Papa, Papa! You must not, shall not say so," said Charlotte.</p>
<p>"I will say so, and do say so," said the father, rising from his
chair. "And now leave the room, sir."</p>
<p>"Stop, stop," said Charlotte. "Why don't you speak, Bertie? Why
don't you look up and speak? It is your manner that makes Papa so
angry."</p>
<p>"He is perfectly indifferent to all decency, to all propriety," said
the doctor; then he shouted out, "Leave the room, sir! Do you hear
what I say?"</p>
<p>"Papa, Papa, I will not let you part so. I know you will be sorry
for it." And then she added, getting up and whispering into his ear,
"Is he only to blame? Think of that. We have made our own bed, and,
such as it is, we must lie on it. It is no use for us to quarrel
among ourselves," and as she finished her whisper, Bertie finished
off the countess's bustle, which was so well done that it absolutely
seemed to be swaying to and fro on the paper with its usual lateral
motion.</p>
<p>"My father is angry at the present time," said Bertie, looking up
for a moment from his sketches, "because I am not going to marry Mrs.
Bold. What can I say on the matter? It is true that I am not going to
marry her. In the first place—"</p>
<p>"That is not true, sir," said Dr. Stanhope, "but I will not argue
with you."</p>
<p>"You were angry just this moment because I would not speak," said
Bertie, going on with a young Lookaloft.</p>
<p>"Give over drawing," said Charlotte, going up to him and taking the
paper from under his hand. The caricatures, however, she preserved
and showed them afterwards to the friends of the Thornes, the
Proudies, and De Courcys. Bertie, deprived of his occupation, threw
himself back in his chair and waited further orders.</p>
<p>"I think it will certainly be for the best that Bertie should leave
this at once; perhaps to-morrow," said Charlotte; "but pray, Papa,
let us arrange some scheme together."</p>
<p>"If he will leave this to-morrow, I will give him £10, and he shall
be paid £5 a month by the banker at Carrara as long as he stays
permanently in that place."</p>
<p>"Well, sir, it won't be long," said Bertie, "for I shall be starved
to death in about three months."</p>
<p>"He must have marble to work with," said Charlotte.</p>
<p>"I have plenty there in the studio to last me three months," said
Bertie. "It will be no use attempting anything large in so limited a
time—unless I do my own tombstone."</p>
<p>Terms, however, were ultimately come to somewhat more liberal than
those proposed, and the doctor was induced to shake hands with his
son and bid him good night. Dr. Stanhope would not go up to tea, but
had it brought to him in his study by his daughter.</p>
<p>But Bertie went upstairs and spent a pleasant evening. He finished
the Lookalofts, greatly to the delight of his sisters, though the
manner of portraying their <i>décolleté</i> dresses was
not the most refined. Finding how matters were going, he by degrees
allowed it to escape from him that he had not pressed his suit upon the
widow in a very urgent way.</p>
<p>"I suppose, in point of fact, you never proposed at all?" said
Charlotte.</p>
<p>"Oh, she understood that she might have me if she wished," said he.</p>
<p>"And she didn't wish," said the Signora.</p>
<p>"You have thrown me over in the most shameful manner," said
Charlotte. "I suppose you told her all about my little plan?"</p>
<p>"Well, it came out somehow—at least the most of it."</p>
<p>"There's an end of that alliance," said Charlotte, "but it doesn't
matter much. I suppose we shall all be back at Como soon."</p>
<p>"I am sure I hope so," said the signora. "I'm sick of the sight of
black coats. If that Mr. Slope comes here any more, he'll be the
death of me."</p>
<p>"You've been the ruin of him, I think," said Charlotte.</p>
<p>"And as for a second black-coated lover of mine, I am going to make
a present of him to another lady with most singular disinterestedness."</p>
<p>The next day, true to his promise, Bertie packed up and went off by
the 4.30 P.M. train, with £20 in his pocket, bound for the marble
quarries of Carrara. And so he disappears from our scene.</p>
<p>At twelve o'clock on the day following that on which Bertie went,
Mrs. Bold, true also to her word, knocked at Dr. Stanhope's door with
a timid hand and palpitating heart. She was at once shown up to the
back drawing-room, the folding doors of which were closed, so that in
visiting the signora Eleanor was not necessarily thrown into any
communion with those in the front room. As she went up the stairs,
she saw none of the family and was so far saved much of the annoyance
which she had dreaded.</p>
<p>"This is very kind of you, Mrs. Bold; very kind, after what has
happened," said the lady on the sofa with her sweetest smile.</p>
<p>"You wrote in such a strain that I could not but come to you."</p>
<p>"I did, I did; I wanted to force you to see me."</p>
<p>"Well, signora, I am here."</p>
<p>"How cold you are to me. But I suppose I must put up with that.
I know you think you have reason to be displeased with us all.
Poor Bertie; if you knew all, you would not be angry with him."</p>
<p>"I am not angry with your brother—not in the least. But
I hope you did not send for me here to talk about him."</p>
<p>"If you are angry with Charlotte, that is worse, for you have no
warmer friend in all Barchester. But I did not send for you to talk
about this—pray bring your chair nearer, Mrs. Bold, so
that I may look at you. It is so unnatural to see you keeping so far
off from me."</p>
<p>Eleanor did as she was bid and brought her chair close to the sofa.</p>
<p>"And now, Mrs. Bold, I am going to tell you something which you may
perhaps think indelicate, but yet I know that I am right in doing
so."</p>
<p>Hereupon Mrs. Bold said nothing but felt inclined to shake in her
chair. The signora, she knew, was not very particular, and that
which to her appeared to be indelicate might to Mrs. Bold appear to
be extremely indecent.</p>
<p>"I believe you know Mr. Arabin?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Bold would have given the world not to blush, but her blood was
not at her own command. She did blush up to her forehead, and the
signora, who had made her sit in a special light in order that she
might watch her, saw that she did so.</p>
<p>"Yes, I am acquainted with him. That is, slightly. He is an intimate
friend of Dr. Grantly, and Dr. Grantly is my brother-in-law."</p>
<p>"Well, if you know Mr. Arabin, I am sure you must like him. I know
and like him much. Everybody that knows him must like him."</p>
<p>Mrs. Bold felt it quite impossible to say anything in reply to this.
Her blood was rushing about her body she knew not how or why. She
felt as though she were swinging in her chair, and she knew that she
was not only red in the face but also almost suffocated with heat.
However, she sat still and said nothing.</p>
<p>"How stiff you are with me, Mrs. Bold," said the signora; "and I the
while am doing for you all that one woman can do to serve another."</p>
<p>A kind of thought came over the widow's mind that perhaps the
signora's friendship was real, and that at any rate it could not hurt
her; and another kind of thought, a glimmering of a thought, came to
her also—that Mr. Arabin was too precious to be lost. She
despised the signora, but might she not stoop to conquer? It should be
but the smallest fraction of a stoop!</p>
<p>"I don't want to be stiff," she said, "but your questions are so
very singular."</p>
<p>"Well, then, I will ask you one more singular still," said Madeline
Neroni, raising herself on her elbow and turning her own face full
upon her companion's. "Do you love him, love him with all your heart
and soul, with all the love your bosom can feel? For I can tell you
that he loves you, adores you, worships you, thinks of you and
nothing else, is now thinking of you as he attempts to write his
sermon for next Sunday's preaching. What would I not give to be
loved in such a way by such a man, that is, if I were an object fit
for any man to love!"</p>
<p>Mrs. Bold got up from her seat and stood speechless before the woman
who was now addressing her in this impassioned way. When the signora
thus alluded to herself, the widow's heart was softened, and she put
her own hand, as though caressingly, on that of her companion, which
was resting on the table. The signora grasped it and went on
speaking.</p>
<p>"What I tell you is God's own truth; and it is for you to use it as
may be best for your own happiness. But you must not betray me. He
knows nothing of this. He knows nothing of my knowing his inmost
heart. He is simple as a child in these matters. He told me his
secret in a thousand ways because he could not dissemble, but he does
not dream that he has told it. You know it now, and I advise you to
use it."</p>
<p>Eleanor returned the pressure of the other's hand with an
infinitesimal <i>soupçon</i> of a squeeze.</p>
<p>"And remember," continued the signora, "he is not like other men.
You must not expect him to come to you with vows and oaths and pretty
presents, to kneel at your feet, and kiss your shoe-strings. If you
want that, there are plenty to do it, but he won't be one of them."
Eleanor's bosom nearly burst with a sigh, but Madeline, not heeding
her, went on. "With him, yea will stand for yea, and nay for nay.
Though his heart should break for it, the woman who shall reject him
once will have rejected him once and for all. Remember that. And
now, Mrs. Bold, I will not keep you, for you are fluttered. I partly
guess what use you will make of what I have said to you. If ever you
are a happy wife in that man's house, we shall be far away, but I
shall expect you to write me one line to say that you have forgiven
the sins of the family."</p>
<p>Eleanor half-whispered that she would, and then, without uttering
another word, crept out of the room and down the stairs, opened the
front door for herself without hearing or seeing anyone, and found
herself in the close.</p>
<p>It would be difficult to analyse Eleanor's feelings as she walked
home. She was nearly stupefied by the things that had been said to
her. She felt sore that her heart should have been so searched and
riddled by a comparative stranger, by a woman whom she had never
liked and never could like. She was mortified that the man whom she
owned to herself that she loved should have concealed his love from
her and shown it to another. There was much to vex her proud spirit.
But there was, nevertheless, an under stratum of joy in all this
which buoyed her up wondrously. She tried if she could disbelieve
what Madame Neroni had said to her, but she found that she could not.
It was true; it must be true. She could not, would not, did not
doubt it.</p>
<p>On one point she fully resolved to follow the advice given her. If
it should ever please Mr. Arabin to put such a question to her as
that suggested, her "yea" should be "yea." Would not all her
miseries be at an end if she could talk of them to him openly, with
her head resting on his shoulder?</p>
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