<h2><SPAN name="link2HCH0046" id="link2HCH0046"></SPAN>CHAPTER XLVI</h2>
<p>As Fanny could not doubt that her answer was conveying a real disappointment,
she was rather in expectation, from her knowledge of Miss Crawford’s
temper, of being urged again; and though no second letter arrived for the space
of a week, she had still the same feeling when it did come.</p>
<p>On receiving it, she could instantly decide on its containing little writing,
and was persuaded of its having the air of a letter of haste and business. Its
object was unquestionable; and two moments were enough to start the probability
of its being merely to give her notice that they should be in Portsmouth that
very day, and to throw her into all the agitation of doubting what she ought to
do in such a case. If two moments, however, can surround with difficulties, a
third can disperse them; and before she had opened the letter, the possibility
of Mr. and Miss Crawford’s having applied to her uncle and obtained his
permission was giving her ease. This was the letter—</p>
<p>“A most scandalous, ill-natured rumour has just reached me, and I write,
dear Fanny, to warn you against giving the least credit to it, should it spread
into the country. Depend upon it, there is some mistake, and that a day or two
will clear it up; at any rate, that Henry is blameless, and in spite of a
moment’s <i>etourderie</i>, thinks of nobody but you. Say not a word of
it; hear nothing, surmise nothing, whisper nothing till I write again. I am
sure it will be all hushed up, and nothing proved but Rushworth’s folly.
If they are gone, I would lay my life they are only gone to Mansfield Park, and
Julia with them. But why would not you let us come for you? I wish you may not
repent it.—Yours, etc.”</p>
<p>Fanny stood aghast. As no scandalous, ill-natured rumour had reached her, it
was impossible for her to understand much of this strange letter. She could
only perceive that it must relate to Wimpole Street and Mr. Crawford, and only
conjecture that something very imprudent had just occurred in that quarter to
draw the notice of the world, and to excite her jealousy, in Miss
Crawford’s apprehension, if she heard it. Miss Crawford need not be
alarmed for her. She was only sorry for the parties concerned and for
Mansfield, if the report should spread so far; but she hoped it might not. If
the Rushworths were gone themselves to Mansfield, as was to be inferred from
what Miss Crawford said, it was not likely that anything unpleasant should have
preceded them, or at least should make any impression.</p>
<p>As to Mr. Crawford, she hoped it might give him a knowledge of his own
disposition, convince him that he was not capable of being steadily attached to
any one woman in the world, and shame him from persisting any longer in
addressing herself.</p>
<p>It was very strange! She had begun to think he really loved her, and to fancy
his affection for her something more than common; and his sister still said
that he cared for nobody else. Yet there must have been some marked display of
attentions to her cousin, there must have been some strong indiscretion, since
her correspondent was not of a sort to regard a slight one.</p>
<p>Very uncomfortable she was, and must continue, till she heard from Miss
Crawford again. It was impossible to banish the letter from her thoughts, and
she could not relieve herself by speaking of it to any human being. Miss
Crawford need not have urged secrecy with so much warmth; she might have
trusted to her sense of what was due to her cousin.</p>
<p>The next day came and brought no second letter. Fanny was disappointed. She
could still think of little else all the morning; but, when her father came
back in the afternoon with the daily newspaper as usual, she was so far from
expecting any elucidation through such a channel that the subject was for a
moment out of her head.</p>
<p>She was deep in other musing. The remembrance of her first evening in that
room, of her father and his newspaper, came across her. No candle was now
wanted. The sun was yet an hour and half above the horizon. She felt that she
had, indeed, been three months there; and the sun’s rays falling strongly
into the parlour, instead of cheering, made her still more melancholy, for
sunshine appeared to her a totally different thing in a town and in the
country. Here, its power was only a glare: a stifling, sickly glare, serving
but to bring forward stains and dirt that might otherwise have slept. There was
neither health nor gaiety in sunshine in a town. She sat in a blaze of
oppressive heat, in a cloud of moving dust, and her eyes could only wander from
the walls, marked by her father’s head, to the table cut and notched by
her brothers, where stood the tea-board never thoroughly cleaned, the cups and
saucers wiped in streaks, the milk a mixture of motes floating in thin blue,
and the bread and butter growing every minute more greasy than even
Rebecca’s hands had first produced it. Her father read his newspaper, and
her mother lamented over the ragged carpet as usual, while the tea was in
preparation, and wished Rebecca would mend it; and Fanny was first roused by
his calling out to her, after humphing and considering over a particular
paragraph: “What’s the name of your great cousins in town,
Fan?”</p>
<p>A moment’s recollection enabled her to say, “Rushworth, sir.”</p>
<p>“And don’t they live in Wimpole Street?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
<p>“Then, there’s the devil to pay among them, that’s all!
There” (holding out the paper to her); “much good may such fine
relations do you. I don’t know what Sir Thomas may think of such matters;
he may be too much of the courtier and fine gentleman to like his daughter the
less. But, by G—! if she belonged to <i>me</i>, I’d give her the
rope’s end as long as I could stand over her. A little flogging for man
and woman too would be the best way of preventing such things.”</p>
<p>Fanny read to herself that “it was with infinite concern the newspaper
had to announce to the world a matrimonial <i>fracas</i> in the family of Mr.
R. of Wimpole Street; the beautiful Mrs. R., whose name had not long been
enrolled in the lists of Hymen, and who had promised to become so brilliant a
leader in the fashionable world, having quitted her husband’s roof in
company with the well-known and captivating Mr. C., the intimate friend and
associate of Mr. R., and it was not known even to the editor of the newspaper
whither they were gone.”</p>
<p>“It is a mistake, sir,” said Fanny instantly; “it must be a
mistake, it cannot be true; it must mean some other people.”</p>
<p>She spoke from the instinctive wish of delaying shame; she spoke with a
resolution which sprung from despair, for she spoke what she did not, could not
believe herself. It had been the shock of conviction as she read. The truth
rushed on her; and how she could have spoken at all, how she could even have
breathed, was afterwards matter of wonder to herself.</p>
<p>Mr. Price cared too little about the report to make her much answer. “It
might be all a lie,” he acknowledged; “but so many fine ladies were
going to the devil nowadays that way, that there was no answering for
anybody.”</p>
<p>“Indeed, I hope it is not true,” said Mrs. Price plaintively;
“it would be so very shocking! If I have spoken once to Rebecca about
that carpet, I am sure I have spoke at least a dozen times; have not I, Betsey?
And it would not be ten minutes’ work.”</p>
<p>The horror of a mind like Fanny’s, as it received the conviction of such
guilt, and began to take in some part of the misery that must ensue, can hardly
be described. At first, it was a sort of stupefaction; but every moment was
quickening her perception of the horrible evil. She could not doubt, she dared
not indulge a hope, of the paragraph being false. Miss Crawford’s letter,
which she had read so often as to make every line her own, was in frightful
conformity with it. Her eager defence of her brother, her hope of its being
<i>hushed</i> <i>up</i>, her evident agitation, were all of a piece with
something very bad; and if there was a woman of character in existence, who
could treat as a trifle this sin of the first magnitude, who would try to gloss
it over, and desire to have it unpunished, she could believe Miss Crawford to
be the woman! Now she could see her own mistake as to <i>who</i> were gone, or
<i>said</i> to be gone. It was not Mr. and Mrs. Rushworth; it was Mrs.
Rushworth and Mr. Crawford.</p>
<p>Fanny seemed to herself never to have been shocked before. There was no
possibility of rest. The evening passed without a pause of misery, the night
was totally sleepless. She passed only from feelings of sickness to shudderings
of horror; and from hot fits of fever to cold. The event was so shocking, that
there were moments even when her heart revolted from it as impossible: when she
thought it could not be. A woman married only six months ago; a man professing
himself devoted, even <i>engaged</i> to another; that other her near relation;
the whole family, both families connected as they were by tie upon tie; all
friends, all intimate together! It was too horrible a confusion of guilt, too
gross a complication of evil, for human nature, not in a state of utter
barbarism, to be capable of! yet her judgment told her it was so. <i>His</i>
unsettled affections, wavering with his vanity, <i>Maria’s</i> decided
attachment, and no sufficient principle on either side, gave it possibility:
Miss Crawford’s letter stampt it a fact.</p>
<p>What would be the consequence? Whom would it not injure? Whose views might it
not affect? Whose peace would it not cut up for ever? Miss Crawford, herself,
Edmund; but it was dangerous, perhaps, to tread such ground. She confined
herself, or tried to confine herself, to the simple, indubitable family misery
which must envelop all, if it were indeed a matter of certified guilt and
public exposure. The mother’s sufferings, the father’s; there she
paused. Julia’s, Tom’s, Edmund’s; there a yet longer pause.
They were the two on whom it would fall most horribly. Sir Thomas’s
parental solicitude and high sense of honour and decorum, Edmund’s
upright principles, unsuspicious temper, and genuine strength of feeling, made
her think it scarcely possible for them to support life and reason under such
disgrace; and it appeared to her that, as far as this world alone was
concerned, the greatest blessing to every one of kindred with Mrs. Rushworth
would be instant annihilation.</p>
<p>Nothing happened the next day, or the next, to weaken her terrors. Two posts
came in, and brought no refutation, public or private. There was no second
letter to explain away the first from Miss Crawford; there was no intelligence
from Mansfield, though it was now full time for her to hear again from her
aunt. This was an evil omen. She had, indeed, scarcely the shadow of a hope to
soothe her mind, and was reduced to so low and wan and trembling a condition,
as no mother, not unkind, except Mrs. Price could have overlooked, when the
third day did bring the sickening knock, and a letter was again put into her
hands. It bore the London postmark, and came from Edmund.</p>
<p>“Dear Fanny,—You know our present wretchedness. May God support you
under your share! We have been here two days, but there is nothing to be done.
They cannot be traced. You may not have heard of the last
blow—Julia’s elopement; she is gone to Scotland with Yates. She
left London a few hours before we entered it. At any other time this would have
been felt dreadfully. Now it seems nothing; yet it is an heavy aggravation. My
father is not overpowered. More cannot be hoped. He is still able to think and
act; and I write, by his desire, to propose your returning home. He is anxious
to get you there for my mother’s sake. I shall be at Portsmouth the
morning after you receive this, and hope to find you ready to set off for
Mansfield. My father wishes you to invite Susan to go with you for a few
months. Settle it as you like; say what is proper; I am sure you will feel such
an instance of his kindness at such a moment! Do justice to his meaning,
however I may confuse it. You may imagine something of my present state. There
is no end of the evil let loose upon us. You will see me early by the
mail.—Yours, etc.”</p>
<p>Never had Fanny more wanted a cordial. Never had she felt such a one as this
letter contained. To-morrow! to leave Portsmouth to-morrow! She was, she felt
she was, in the greatest danger of being exquisitely happy, while so many were
miserable. The evil which brought such good to her! She dreaded lest she should
learn to be insensible of it. To be going so soon, sent for so kindly, sent for
as a comfort, and with leave to take Susan, was altogether such a combination
of blessings as set her heart in a glow, and for a time seemed to distance
every pain, and make her incapable of suitably sharing the distress even of
those whose distress she thought of most. Julia’s elopement could affect
her comparatively but little; she was amazed and shocked; but it could not
occupy her, could not dwell on her mind. She was obliged to call herself to
think of it, and acknowledge it to be terrible and grievous, or it was escaping
her, in the midst of all the agitating pressing joyful cares attending this
summons to herself.</p>
<p>There is nothing like employment, active indispensable employment, for
relieving sorrow. Employment, even melancholy, may dispel melancholy, and her
occupations were hopeful. She had so much to do, that not even the horrible
story of Mrs. Rushworth (now fixed to the last point of certainty), could
affect her as it had done before. She had not time to be miserable. Within
twenty-four hours she was hoping to be gone; her father and mother must be
spoken to, Susan prepared, everything got ready. Business followed business;
the day was hardly long enough. The happiness she was imparting, too, happiness
very little alloyed by the black communication which must briefly precede
it—the joyful consent of her father and mother to Susan’s going
with her—the general satisfaction with which the going of both seemed
regarded, and the ecstasy of Susan herself, was all serving to support her
spirits.</p>
<p>The affliction of the Bertrams was little felt in the family. Mrs. Price talked
of her poor sister for a few minutes, but how to find anything to hold
Susan’s clothes, because Rebecca took away all the boxes and spoilt them,
was much more in her thoughts: and as for Susan, now unexpectedly gratified in
the first wish of her heart, and knowing nothing personally of those who had
sinned, or of those who were sorrowing—if she could help rejoicing from
beginning to end, it was as much as ought to be expected from human virtue at
fourteen.</p>
<p>As nothing was really left for the decision of Mrs. Price, or the good offices
of Rebecca, everything was rationally and duly accomplished, and the girls were
ready for the morrow. The advantage of much sleep to prepare them for their
journey was impossible. The cousin who was travelling towards them could hardly
have less than visited their agitated spirits—one all happiness, the
other all varying and indescribable perturbation.</p>
<p>By eight in the morning Edmund was in the house. The girls heard his entrance
from above, and Fanny went down. The idea of immediately seeing him, with the
knowledge of what he must be suffering, brought back all her own first
feelings. He so near her, and in misery. She was ready to sink as she entered
the parlour. He was alone, and met her instantly; and she found herself pressed
to his heart with only these words, just articulate, “My Fanny, my only
sister; my only comfort now!” She could say nothing; nor for some minutes
could he say more.</p>
<p>He turned away to recover himself, and when he spoke again, though his voice
still faltered, his manner shewed the wish of self-command, and the resolution
of avoiding any farther allusion. “Have you breakfasted? When shall you
be ready? Does Susan go?” were questions following each other rapidly.
His great object was to be off as soon as possible. When Mansfield was
considered, time was precious; and the state of his own mind made him find
relief only in motion. It was settled that he should order the carriage to the
door in half an hour. Fanny answered for their having breakfasted and being
quite ready in half an hour. He had already ate, and declined staying for their
meal. He would walk round the ramparts, and join them with the carriage. He was
gone again; glad to get away even from Fanny.</p>
<p>He looked very ill; evidently suffering under violent emotions, which he was
determined to suppress. She knew it must be so, but it was terrible to her.</p>
<p>The carriage came; and he entered the house again at the same moment, just in
time to spend a few minutes with the family, and be a witness—but that he
saw nothing—of the tranquil manner in which the daughters were parted
with, and just in time to prevent their sitting down to the breakfast-table,
which, by dint of much unusual activity, was quite and completely ready as the
carriage drove from the door. Fanny’s last meal in her father’s
house was in character with her first: she was dismissed from it as hospitably
as she had been welcomed.</p>
<p>How her heart swelled with joy and gratitude as she passed the barriers of
Portsmouth, and how Susan’s face wore its broadest smiles, may be easily
conceived. Sitting forwards, however, and screened by her bonnet, those smiles
were unseen.</p>
<p>The journey was likely to be a silent one. Edmund’s deep sighs often
reached Fanny. Had he been alone with her, his heart must have opened in spite
of every resolution; but Susan’s presence drove him quite into himself,
and his attempts to talk on indifferent subjects could never be long supported.</p>
<p>Fanny watched him with never-failing solicitude, and sometimes catching his
eye, revived an affectionate smile, which comforted her; but the first
day’s journey passed without her hearing a word from him on the subjects
that were weighing him down. The next morning produced a little more. Just
before their setting out from Oxford, while Susan was stationed at a window, in
eager observation of the departure of a large family from the inn, the other
two were standing by the fire; and Edmund, particularly struck by the
alteration in Fanny’s looks, and from his ignorance of the daily evils of
her father’s house, attributing an undue share of the change, attributing
<i>all</i> to the recent event, took her hand, and said in a low, but very
expressive tone, “No wonder—you must feel it—you must suffer.
How a man who had once loved, could desert you! But <i>yours</i>—your
regard was new compared with——Fanny, think of <i>me</i>!”</p>
<p>The first division of their journey occupied a long day, and brought them,
almost knocked up, to Oxford; but the second was over at a much earlier hour.
They were in the environs of Mansfield long before the usual dinner-time, and
as they approached the beloved place, the hearts of both sisters sank a little.
Fanny began to dread the meeting with her aunts and Tom, under so dreadful a
humiliation; and Susan to feel with some anxiety, that all her best manners,
all her lately acquired knowledge of what was practised here, was on the point
of being called into action. Visions of good and ill breeding, of old
vulgarisms and new gentilities, were before her; and she was meditating much
upon silver forks, napkins, and finger-glasses. Fanny had been everywhere awake
to the difference of the country since February; but when they entered the Park
her perceptions and her pleasures were of the keenest sort. It was three
months, full three months, since her quitting it, and the change was from
winter to summer. Her eye fell everywhere on lawns and plantations of the
freshest green; and the trees, though not fully clothed, were in that
delightful state when farther beauty is known to be at hand, and when, while
much is actually given to the sight, more yet remains for the imagination. Her
enjoyment, however, was for herself alone. Edmund could not share it. She
looked at him, but he was leaning back, sunk in a deeper gloom than ever, and
with eyes closed, as if the view of cheerfulness oppressed him, and the lovely
scenes of home must be shut out.</p>
<p>It made her melancholy again; and the knowledge of what must be enduring there,
invested even the house, modern, airy, and well situated as it was, with a
melancholy aspect.</p>
<p>By one of the suffering party within they were expected with such impatience as
she had never known before. Fanny had scarcely passed the solemn-looking
servants, when Lady Bertram came from the drawing-room to meet her; came with
no indolent step; and falling on her neck, said, “Dear Fanny! now I shall
be comfortable.”</p>
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