<SPAN name="chap48"></SPAN>
<h3>CHAPTER XLVIII</h3>
<h2><i>QUESTION AND ANSWER</i></h2>
<p> </p>
<p>My uncle, after all, was not ill that day, after the strange fashion
of his malady, be it what it might. Old Wyat repeated in her
sour laconic way that there was 'nothing to speak of amiss with
him.' But there remained with me a sense of pain and fear.
Doctor Bryerly, notwithstanding my uncle's sarcastic reflections,
remained, in my estimation, a true and wise friend. I had all my
life been accustomed to rely upon others, and here, haunted by
many unavowed and ill-defined alarms and doubts, the disappearance
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page319" id="page319"></SPAN></span>
of an active and able friend caused my heart to sink.</p>
<p>Still there remained my dear Cousin Monica, and my pleasant
and trusted friend, Lord Ilbury; and in less than a week arrived
an invitation from Lady Mary to the Grange, for me and Milly,
to meet Lady Knollys. It was accompanied, she told me, by a
note from Lord Ilbury to my uncle, supporting her request;
and in the afternoon I received a message to attend my uncle
in his room.</p>
<p>'An invitation from Lady Mary Carysbroke for you and Milly
to meet Monica Knollys; have you received it?' asked my uncle,
so soon as I was seated. Answered in the affirmative, he continued—</p>
<p>'Now, Maud Ruthyn, I expect the truth from you; I have
been frank, so shall you. Have you ever heard me spoken ill
of by Lady Knollys?'</p>
<p>I was quite taken aback.</p>
<p>I felt my cheeks flushing. I was returning his fierce cold gaze
with a stupid stare, and remained dumb.</p>
<p>'Yes, Maud, you <i>have</i>.'</p>
<p>I looked down in silence.</p>
<p>'I <i>know</i> it; but it is right you should answer; have you or
have you not?'</p>
<p>I had to clear my voice twice or thrice. There was a kind of
spasm in my throat.</p>
<p>'I am trying to recollect,' I said at last.</p>
<p>'<i>Do</i> recollect,' he replied imperiously.</p>
<p>There was a little interval of silence. I would have given the
world to be, on any conditions, anywhere else in the world.</p>
<p>'Surely, Maud, you don't wish to deceive your guardian?
Come, the question is a plain one, and I know the truth already.
I ask you again—have you ever heard me spoken ill of by Lady
Knollys?'</p>
<p>'Lady Knollys,' I said, half articulately,' speaks very freely,
and often half in jest; but,' I continued, observing something
menacing in his face, 'I have heard her express disapprobation
of some things you have done.'</p>
<p>'Come, Maud,' he continued, in a stern, though still a low
key, 'did she not insinuate that charge—then, I suppose, in a
state of incubation, the other day presented here full-fledged,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page320" id="page320"></SPAN></span>
with beak and claws, by that scheming apothecary—the statement
that I was defrauding you by cutting down timber upon
the grounds?'</p>
<p>'She certainly did mention the circumstance; but she also
argued that it might have been through ignorance of the extent
of your rights.'</p>
<p>'Come, come, Maud, you must not prevaricate, girl. I <i>will</i>
have it. Does she not habitually speak disparagingly of me, in
your presence, and <i>to</i> you? <i>Answer</i>.'</p>
<p>I hung my head.</p>
<p>'Yes or no?'</p>
<p>'Well, perhaps so—yes,' I faltered, and burst into tears.</p>
<p>'There, don't cry; it may well shock you. Did she not, to your
knowledge, say the same things in presence of my child Millicent?
I know it, I repeat—there is no use in hesitating; and
I command you to answer.'</p>
<p>Sobbing, I told the truth.</p>
<p>'Now sit still, while I write my reply.'</p>
<p>He wrote, with the scowl and smile so painful to witness, as
he looked down upon the paper, and then he placed the note
before me—</p>
<p>'Read that, my dear.'</p>
<p>It began—</p>
<p> </p>
<p>'M<small>Y DEAR</small> L<small>ADY</small> K<small>NOLLYS</small>.—You have favoured me with a note,
adding your request to that of Lord Ilbury, that I should permit
my ward and my daughter to avail themselves of Lady
Mary's invitation. Being perfectly cognisant of the ill-feeling
you have always and unaccountably cherished toward me, and
also of the terms in which you have had the delicacy and the
conscience to speak of me before and to my child and my ward,
I can only express my amazement at the modesty of your request,
while peremptorily refusing it. And I shall conscientiously
adopt effectual measures to prevent your ever again having an
opportunity of endeavouring to destroy my influence and authority
over my ward and my child, by direct or insinuated
slander.</p>
<p class="closer">'Your defamed and injured kinsman,</p>
<p class="signature">S<small>ILAS</small> R<small>UTHYN</small>.'</p>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page321" id="page321"></SPAN></span>
<p> </p>
<p>I was stunned; yet what could I plead against the blow that
was to isolate me? I wept aloud, with my hands clasped, looking
on the marble face of the old man.</p>
<p>Without seeming to hear, he folded and sealed his note, and
then proceeded to answer Lord Ilbury.</p>
<p>When that note was written, he placed it likewise before me,
and I read it also through. It simply referred him to Lady
Knollys 'for an explanation of the unhappy circumstances
which compelled him to decline an invitation which it would
have made his niece and his daughter so happy to accept.'</p>
<p>'You see, my dear Maud, how frank I am with you,' he said,
waving the open note, which I had just read, slightly before he
folded it. 'I think I may ask you to reciprocate my candour.'</p>
<p>Dismissed from this interview, I ran to Milly, who burst into
tears from sheer disappointment, so we wept and wailed together.
But in my grief I think there was more reason.</p>
<p>I sat down to the dismal task of writing to my dear Lady
Knollys. I implored her to make her peace with my uncle. I
told her how frank he had been with me, and how he had
shown me his sad reply to her letter. I told her of the interview
to which he had himself invited me with Dr. Bryerly; how little
disturbed he was by the accusation—no sign of guilt; quite the
contrary, perfect confidence. I implored of her to think the best,
and remembering my isolation, to accomplish a reconciliation
with Uncle Silas. 'Only think,' I wrote, 'I only nineteen, and
two years of solitude before me. What a separation!' No broken
merchant ever signed the schedule of his bankruptcy with a
heavier heart than did I this letter.</p>
<p>The griefs of youth are like the wounds of the gods—there
is an ichor which heals the scars from which it flows: and thus
Milly and I consoled ourselves, and next day enjoyed our
ramble, our talk and readings, with a wonderful resignation
to the inevitable.</p>
<p>Milly and I stood in the relation of <i>Lord Duberly</i> to <i>Doctor
Pangloss</i>. I was to mend her 'cackleology,' and the occupation
amused us both. I think at the bottom of our submission to destiny
lurked a hope that Uncle Silas, the inexorable, would relent,
or that Cousin Monica, that siren, would win and melt
him to her purpose.</p>
<p>Whatever comfort, however, I derived from the absence of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page322" id="page322"></SPAN></span>
Dudley was not to be of very long duration; for one morning,
as I was amusing myself alone, with a piece of worsted work,
thinking, and just at that moment not unpleasantly, of many
things, my cousin Dudley entered the room.</p>
<p>'Back again, like a bad halfpenny, ye see. And how a' ye bin
ever since, lass? Purely, I warrant, be your looks. I'm jolly glad
to see ye, I am; no cattle going like ye, Maud.'</p>
<p>'I think I must ask you to let go my hand, as I can't continue
my work,' I said, very stiffly, hoping to chill his enthusiasm a
little.</p>
<p>'Anything to pleasure ye, Maud, 'tain't in my heart to refuse
ye nout. I a'bin to Wolverhampton, lass—jolly row there—and
run over to Leamington; a'most broke my neck, faith, wi' a
borrowed horse arter the dogs; ye would na care, Maud, if I
broke my neck, would ye? Well, 'appen, jest a little,' he good-naturedly
supplied, as I was silent.</p>
<p>'Little over a week since I left here, by George; and to me
it's half the almanac like; can ye guess the reason, Maud?'</p>
<p>'Have you seen your sister, Milly, or your father, since your
return?' I asked coldly.</p>
<p>'<i>They'll</i> keep, Maud, never mind 'em; it be you I want to see—it
be you I wor thinkin' on a' the time. I tell ye, lass, I'm
all'ays a thinkin' on ye.'</p>
<p>'I think you ought to go and see your father; you have been
away, you say, some time. I don't think it is respectful,' I said, a
little sharply.</p>
<p>'If ye bid me go I'd a'most go, but I could na quite; there's
nout on earth I would na do for you, Maud, excep' leaving
you.'</p>
<p>'And that,' I said, with a petulant flush, 'is the only thing on
earth I would ask you to do.'</p>
<p>'Blessed if you baint a blushin', Maud,' he drawled, with an
odious grin.</p>
<p>His stupidity was proof against everything.</p>
<p>'It is <i>too</i> bad!' I muttered, with an indignant little pat of
my foot and mimic stamp.</p>
<p>'Well, you lasses be queer cattle; ye're angry wi' me now,
cos ye think I got into mischief—ye do, Maud; ye know't, ye
buxsom little fool, down there at Wolverhampton; and jest for
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page323" id="page323"></SPAN></span>
that ye're ready to turn me off again the minute I come back;
'tisn't fair.'</p>
<p>'I don't <i>understand</i> you, sir; and I <i>beg</i> that you'll leave
me.'</p>
<p>'Now, didn't I tell ye about leavin' ye, Maud? 'tis the only
thing I can't compass for yer sake. I'm jest a child in yere hands,
I am, ye know. I can lick a big fellah to pot as limp as a rag,
by George!'—(his oaths were not really so mild)—'ye see summat
o' that t'other day. Well, don't be vexed, Maud; 'twas all
along o' you; ye know, I wor a bit jealous, 'appen; but anyhow
I can do it; and look at me here, jest a child, I say, in yer
hands.'</p>
<p>'I wish you'd go away. Have you nothing to do, and no one
to see? Why <i>can't</i> you leave me alone, sir?'</p>
<p>''Cos I can't, Maud, that's jest why; and I wonder, Maud,
how can you be so ill-natured, when you see me like this; how
can ye?'</p>
<p>'I wish Milly would come,' said I peevishly, looking toward
the door.</p>
<p>'Well, I'll tell you how it is, Maud. I may as well have it out.
I like you better than any lass that ever I saw, a deal; you're
nicer by chalks; there's none like ye—there isn't; and I wish
you'd have me. I ha'n't much tin—father's run through a deal,
he's pretty well up a tree, ye know; but though I baint so rich
as some folk, I'm a better man, 'appen; and if ye'd take a tidy
lad, that likes ye awful, and 'id die for your sake, why here he
is.'</p>
<p>'What can you mean, sir?' I exclaimed, rising in indignant
bewilderment.</p>
<p>'I mean, Maud, if ye'll marry me, you'll never ha' cause to
complain; I'll never let ye want for nout, nor gi'e ye a wry
word.'</p>
<p>'Actually a proposal!' I ejaculated, like a person speaking in
a dream.</p>
<p>I stood with my hand on the back of a chair, staring at Dudley;
and looking, I dare say, as stupefied as I felt.</p>
<p>'There's a good lass, ye would na deny me,' said the odious
creature, with one knee on the seat of the chair behind which I
was standing, and attempting to place his arm lovingly round
my neck.</p>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page324" id="page324"></SPAN></span>
<p>This effectually roused me, and starting back, I stamped upon
the ground with actual fury.</p>
<p>'What has there ever been, sir, in my conduct, words, or looks,
to warrant this unparalleled audacity? But that you are as
stupid as you are impertinent, brutal, and ugly, you must, long
ago, sir, have seen how I dislike you. How dare you, sir? Don't
presume to obstruct me; I'm going to my uncle.'</p>
<p>I had never spoken so violently to mortal before.</p>
<p>He in turn looked a little confounded; and I passed his extended
but motionless arm with a quick and angry step.</p>
<p>He followed me a pace or two, however, before I reached the
door, looking horridly angry, but stopped, and only swore after
me some of those 'wry words' which I was never to have heard.
I was myself, however, too much incensed, and moving at too
rapid a pace, to catch their import; and I had knocked at my
uncle's door before I began to collect my thoughts.</p>
<p>'Come in,' replied my uncle's voice, clear, thin, and peevish.</p>
<p>I entered and confronted him.</p>
<p>'Your son, sir, has insulted me.'</p>
<p>He looked at me with a cold curiosity steadly for a few seconds,
as I stood panting before him with flaming cheeks.</p>
<p>'Insulted you?' repeated he. 'Egad, you surprise me!'</p>
<p>The ejaculation savoured of 'the old man,' to borrow his
scriptural phrase, more than anything I had heard from him
before.</p>
<p>'<i>How?</i>' he continued; 'how has Dudley <i>insulted</i> you, my
dear child? Come, you're excited; sit down; take time, and tell
me all about it. I did not know that Dudley was here.'</p>
<p>'I—he—it <i>is</i> an insult. He knew very well—he <i>must</i> know I
dislike him; and he presumed to make a proposal of marriage
to me.'</p>
<p>'O—o—oh!' exclaimed my uncle, with a prolonged intonation
which plainly said, Is that the mighty matter?</p>
<p>He looked at me as he leaned back with the same steady
curiosity, this time smiling, which somehow frightened me, and
his countenance looked to me wicked, like the face of a witch,
with a guilt I could not understand.</p>
<p>'And that is the amount of your complaint. He made you a
formal proposal of marriage!'</p>
<p>'Yes; he proposed for me.'</p>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page325" id="page325"></SPAN></span>
<p>As I cooled, I began to feel just a very little disconcerted, and
a suspicion was troubling me that possibly an indifferent person
might think that, having no more to complain of, my language
was perhaps a little exaggerated, and my demeanour a
little too tempestuous.</p>
<p>My uncle, I dare say, saw some symptoms of this misgiving,
for, smiling still, he said—</p>
<p>'My dear Maud, however just, you appear to me a little
cruel; you don't seem to remember how much you are yourself
to blame; you have one faithful friend at least, whom I advise
your consulting—I mean your looking-glass. The foolish fellow
is young, quite ignorant in the world's ways. He is in love—desperately
enamoured.</p>
<div class="poem">
<center>Aimer c'est craindre, et craindre c'est souffrir.</center></div>
<p>And suffering prompts to desperate remedies. We must not be
too hard on a rough but romantic young fool, who talks according
to his folly and his pain.'</p>
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