<h2><SPAN name="LETTER_XLIX" id="LETTER_XLIX"></SPAN>LETTER XLIX.</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Dearest:</span> I suppose your mother's continued absence, and her
unexplanation of her further stay, must be taken for unyielding
disapproval, and tells us what to expect of February. It is not a
cordial form of "truce": but since it lets me see just twice as much of
you as I should otherwise, I will not complain so long as it does not
make you unhappy. You write to her often and kindly, do you not?</p>
<p>Well, if this last letter of hers frees you sufficiently, it is quite
settled at this end that you are to be with us for Christmas:—read into
that the warmest corners of a heart already fully occupied. I do not
think of it too much, till I am assured it is to be.</p>
<p>Did you go over to Pembury for the day? Your letter does not say
anything: but your letters have a wonderful way with them of leaving out
things of outside importance. I shall hear from the rattle of returning
fire-engines some day that Hatterling has been burned down: and <SPAN name="Page_185" id="Page_185"></SPAN>you
will arrive cool the next day and say, "Oh yes, it is so!"</p>
<p>I am sure you have been right to secure this pledge of independence to
yourself: but it hurts me to think what a deadly offense it may be both
to her tenderness for you and her pride and stern love of power. To
realize suddenly that Hatterling does not mean to you so much as the
power to be your own master and happy in your own way, which is
altogether opposite to <i>her</i> way, will be so much of a blow that at
first you will be able to do nothing to soften it.</p>
<p>February fill-dyke is likely to be true to its name, this coming one, in
all that concerns us and our fortunes. Meanwhile, if at Pembury you
brought things any nearer settlement, and are not coming so soon as
to-morrow, let me know: for some things of "outside importance" do
affect me unfavorably while in suspense. I have not your serene
determination to abide the workings of Kismet when once all that can be
done is done.</p>
<p>The sun sets now, when it does so visibly, just where Pembury <i>is</i>. I
take it as an omen. In your diary to-morrow you may write down in the
business column that you have had a business letter from <i>me</i>, or as
near to one as I can go:—chiefly for that it requires an answer on this
matter of "outside importance," which otherwise <SPAN name="Page_186" id="Page_186"></SPAN>you will altogether
leave out. But you will do better still to come. My whole heart goes out
to fetch you: my dearest dear, ever your own.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_187" id="Page_187"></SPAN></p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="LETTER_L" id="LETTER_L"></SPAN>LETTER L.</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Beloved:</span> No, not Browning but Tennyson was in my thoughts at
our last ride together: and I found myself shy, as I have been for a
long time wishing to say things I could not. What has never entered your
head to ask becomes difficult when I wish to get it spoken. So I bring
Tennyson to tell you what I mean:—</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">"Dosn't thou 'ear my 'erse's legs, as they canters awaäy?<br/></span>
<span class="ihalf">Proputty, proputty, proputty—that's what I 'ears 'em saäy"<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>The tune of this kept me silent all the while we galloped: this and
Pembury, a name that glows to me now like the New Jerusalem.</p>
<p>And do you understand, Beloved? or must I say more? My freedom has made
its nest under my uncle's roof: but I <i>am</i> a quite independent person in
other ways besides character.</p>
<p>Well, Pembury was settled on your own initiative: and I looked on proud
and glad. Now I have my own little word to add, merely a tail that wags
and makes merry over a thing decided and done. Do you forgive me for
this: and for <SPAN name="Page_188" id="Page_188"></SPAN>the greater offense of being quite shy at having to write
it?</p>
<p>My Aunt thanks you for the game: for my part I cannot own that it will
taste sweeter to me for being your own shooting. And please, whatever
else you do big and grand and dangerous, respect my superstitions and
don't shoot any larks this winter. In the spring I would like to think
that here or there an extra lark bubbles over because I and my whims
find occasional favor in your sight. When I ask great favors you always
grant them; and so, Ahasuerus, grant this little one to your beautifully
loving.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>Give me the credit of being conscious of it, Beloved: postscripts I
never <i>do</i> write. I am glad you noticed it. If I find anything left out
I start another letter: <i>this</i> is that other letter: it goes into the
same envelope merely for company, and signs itself yours in all state.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_189" id="Page_189"></SPAN></p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="LETTER_LI" id="LETTER_LI"></SPAN>LETTER LI.</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Dearest:</span> It was so nice and comedy to see the Mother-Aunt this
morning importantly opening a letter from you all to herself with the
pleasure quite unmixed by any inclosure for me, or any other letter in
the house <i>to</i> me so far as she was aware. I listened to you with new
ears, discovering that you write quite beautifully in the style which I
never get from you. Don't, because I admire you in your more formal
form, alter in your style to me. I prefer you much, for my own part,
formless: and feel nearer to your heart in an unfinished sentence than
in one that is perfectly balanced. Still I want you to know that your
cordial warmed her dear old heart and makes her not think now that she
has let me see too much of you. She was just beginning to worry herself
jealously into that belief the last two days: and Arthur's taking to you
helped to the same end. Very well; I seem to understand everybody's
oddities now,—having made a complete study of yours.</p>
<p>Best Beloved, I have your little letter lying <SPAN name="Page_190" id="Page_190"></SPAN>close, and feel dumb when
I try to answer. You with your few words make me feel a small thing with
all my unpenned rabble about me. Only you do know so very well that I
love you better than I can ever write. This is my first letter of the
new year: will our letter-writing go on all this year, or will it, as we
dearly dream, die a divine death somewhere before autumn?</p>
<p>In any case, I am, dearest, your most happy and loving.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_191" id="Page_191"></SPAN></p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="LETTER_LII" id="LETTER_LII"></SPAN>LETTER LII.</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">My Dearest:</span> Arthur and the friend went off together yesterday.
I am glad the latter stayed just long enough after you left for me to
have leisure to find him out human. Here is the whole story: he came and
unbosomed to me three days ago: and he said nothing about not telling,
so I tell you. As water goes from a duck's back, so go all things worth
hearing from me to you.</p>
<p>Arthur had said to him, "Come down for a week," and he had answered,
"Can't, because of clothes!" explaining that beyond evening-dress he had
only those he stood in. "Well," said Arthur, "stand in them, then; you
look all right." "The question is," said his friend, "can I sit down?"
However, he came; and was appalled to find that a man unpacked his
trunk, and would in all probability be carrying away his clothes each
night to brush them. He, conscious of interiors, a lining hanging in
rags, and even a patching somewhere, had not the heart to let his one
and only day-jacket go down to the servants' hall to be sniffed over:
and so every evening when <SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192"></SPAN>he dressed for dinner he hid his jacket
laboriously under the permanent layers of a linen wardrobe which stood
in his room.</p>
<p>I had all this in the frankest manner from him in the hour when he
became human: and my fancy fired at the vision. Graves with a fierce eye
set on duty probing hither and thither in search after the missing coat;
and each night the search becoming' more strenuous and the mystery more
baffling than ever. It had a funny likeness to the Jack Raikes episode
in "Evan Harrington," and pleased me the more thus cropping up in real
life.</p>
<p>Well, I demanded there and then to be shown the subject of so much
romance and adventure: and had the satisfaction of mending it, he
sitting by in his shirt-sleeves the while, and watching delighted and
without craven apologies.</p>
<p>I notice it is not his own set he is ashamed of, but only the moneyed,
high-sniffing servant-class who have no understanding for honorable
poverty: and to be misunderstood pricks him in the thinnest of thin
places.</p>
<p>He told me also that he brought only three white ties to last him for
seven days: and that Graves placed them out in order of freshness and
cleanliness night after night:—first three new ones consecutively, then
three once worn. After that, on the seventh day, Graves resigned all
fur<SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193"></SPAN>ther responsibility, and laid out all three of them for him to
choose from. On the last three days of his stay he did me the honor to
leave his coat out, declaring that my mendings had made it presentable
before an emperor. Out of this dates the whole of his character, and I
understand, what I did not, why Arthur and he get on together.</p>
<p>Now the house is empty, and your comings will be—I cannot say more
welcome: but there will be more room for them to be after my own heart.</p>
<p>Heaven be over us both. Faithfully your most loving.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194"></SPAN></p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="LETTER_LIII" id="LETTER_LIII"></SPAN>LETTER LIII.</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Beloved:</span> I wish you could have been with me to look out into
this garden last night when the spirit moved me there. I had started for
bed, but became sensitive of something outside not normal. Whether my
ear missed the usual echoes and so guessed a muffled world I do not
know. To open the door was like slicing into a wedding-cake;
then,—where was I to put a foot into that new-laid carpet of
ankle-deepness? I hobbled out in a pair of my uncle's. I suppose it is
because I know every tree and shrub in its true form that snow seems to
pile itself nowhere as it does here: it becomes a garden of entombments.
Now and then some heap would shuffle feebly under its shroud, but
resurrection was not to be: the Lawson cypress held out great
boxing-glove hands for me to shake and set free; and the silence was
wonderful. I padded about till I froze: this morning I can see my big
hoof-marks all over the place, and Benjy has been scampering about in
them as if he found some flavor of me there. The trees are already
be<SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195"></SPAN>ginning to shake themselves loose, and the spell is over: but it had
a wonderful hold while it lasted. I take a breath back into last night,
and feel myself again full of a romance without words that I cannot
explain. If you had been there, even, I think I could have forgotten I
had you by me, the place was so weighed down with its sense of solitude.
It struck eleven while I was outside, and in that, too, I could hear a
muffle as if snow choked all the belfry lattices and lay even on the
outer edge of the bell itself. Across the park there are dead boughs
cracking down under the weight of snow; and it would be very like you to
tramp over just because the roads will be so impossible.</p>
<p>I heard yesterday a thing which made me just a little more free and easy
in mind, though I had nothing sensibly on my conscience. Such a good
youth who two years ago believed I was his only possible future
happiness, is now quite happy with a totally different sort of person. I
had a little letter from him, shy and stately, announcing the event. I
thought it such a friendly act, for some have never the grace to unsay
their grievances, however much actually blessed as a consequence of
them.</p>
<p>With that off my mind I can come to you swearing that there have been no
accidents on anybody's line of life through a mistake in sig<SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196"></SPAN>nals, or a
flying in the face of them, where I have had any responsibility. As for
you, and as you know well by now, my signals were ready and waiting
before you sought for them. "Oh, whistle, and I'll come to you!" was
their giveaway attitude.</p>
<p>I am going down to play snowballs with Benjy. Good-by. If you come you
will find this letter on the hall table, and me you will probably hear
barking behind the rhododendrons.—So much your most loving.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197"></SPAN></p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="LETTER_LIV" id="LETTER_LIV"></SPAN>LETTER LIV.</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Beloved:</span> We have been having a great day of tidyings out,
rummaging through years and years of accumulations—things quite useless
but which I have not liked to throw away. My soul has been getting such
dusty answers to all sorts of doubtful inquiries as to where on earth
this, that, and the other lay hidden. And there were other things, the
memory of which had lain quite dead or slept, till under the light of
day they sprouted hack into life like corn from the grave of an Egyptian
mummy.</p>
<p>Very deep in one box I found a stealthy little collection of secret
playthings which it used to be my fond belief that nobody knew of but
myself. It may have been Anna's graspingness, when four years of
seniority gave her double my age, or Arthur's genial instinct for
destructiveness, which drove me into such deep concealment of my dearest
idols. But, whether for those or more mystic reasons, I know I had dolls
which I nursed only in the strictest privacy and lavished my firmest
love upon. It was because of them <SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198"></SPAN>that I bore the reproach of being but
a lukewarm mother of dolls and careless of their toilets; the truth
being that my motherly passion expended itself in secret on certain
outcasts of society whom others despised or had forgotten. They, on
their limp and dissolute bodies, wore all the finery I could find to
pile on them: and one shady transaction done on their behalf I remember
now without pangs. There was one creature of state whom an inconsiderate
relative had presented to Anna and myself in equal shares. Of course
Anna's became more and more lionlike. I had very little love for the
bone of contention myself, but the sense of injustice rankled in me. So
one day, at an unclothing, Anna discovered that certain undergarments
were gone altogether away. She sat aghast, questioned me, and, when I
refused to disgorge, screamed down vengeance from the authorities. I was
morally certain I had taken no more than my just share, and resolution
sat on my lips under all threats. For a punishment the whole ownership
of the big doll was made over to Anna: I was no worse off, and was very
contented with my obstinacy. To-day I found the beautifully wrought
bodice, which I had carried beyond reach of even the supreme court of
appeal, clothing with ridiculous looseness a rag-doll whose head
tottered on its stem like an over-ripe plum, and whose legs had no
<SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199"></SPAN>deportment at all: and am sending it off in charitable surrender to
Anna to be given, bag and rag, to whichever one of the children she
likes to select.</p>
<p>Also I found:—would you care to have a lock of hair taken from the head
of a child then two years old, which, bright golden, does not match what
I have on now in the least? I can just remember her: but she is much of
a stranger to both of us. Why I value it is that the name and date on
the envelope inclosing it are in my mother's handwriting: and I suppose
<i>she</i> loved very much the curly treasure she then put away. Some of the
other things, quite funny, I will show you the next time you come over.
How I wish that vanished mite had mixed some of her play-hours with
yours:—you only six miles away all the time: had one but known!—Now
grown very old and loving, always your own.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200"></SPAN></p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />