<h3 id="id05313" style="margin-top: 3em">CHAPTER XLIX</h3>
<h5 id="id05314">LAETITIA AND SIR WILLOUGHBY</h5>
<p id="id05315">We cannot be abettors of the tribes of imps whose revelry is in the
frailties of our poor human constitution. They have their place and
their service, and so long as we continue to be what we are now, they
will hang on to us, restlessly plucking at the garments which cover our
nakedness, nor ever ceasing to twitch them and strain at them until
they have stripped us for one of their horrible Walpurgis nights: when
the laughter heard is of a character to render laughter frightful to
the ears of men throughout the remainder of their days. But if in these
festival hours under the beam of Hecate they are uncontrollable by the
Comic Muse, she will not flatter them with her presence during the
course of their insane and impious hilarities, whereof a description
would out-Brocken Brockens and make Graymalkin and Paddock too
intimately our familiars.</p>
<p id="id05316">It shall suffice to say that from hour to hour of the midnight to the
grey-eyed morn, assisted at intervals by the ladies Eleanor and Isabel,
and by Mr. Dale awakened and re-awakened—hearing the vehemence of his
petitioning outcry to soften her obduracy—Sir Willoughby pursued
Laetitia with solicitations to espouse him, until the inveteracy of his
wooing wore the aspect of the life-long love he raved of aroused to a
state of mania. He appeared, he departed, he returned; and all the
while his imps were about him and upon him, riding him, prompting,
driving, inspiring him with outrageous pathos, an eloquence to move any
one but the dead, which its object seemed to be in her torpid
attention. He heard them, he talked to them, caressed them; he flung
them off, and ran from them, and stood vanquished for them to mount him
again and swarm on him. There are men thus imp-haunted. Men who,
setting their minds upon an object, must have it, breed imps. They are
noted for their singularities, as their converse with the invisible and
amazing distractions are called. Willoughby became aware of them that
night. He said to himself, upon one of his dashes into solitude: I
believe I am possessed! And if he did not actually believe it, but only
suspected it, or framed speech to account for the transformation he had
undergone into a desperately beseeching creature, having lost
acquaintance with his habitual personality, the operations of an impish
host had undoubtedly smitten his consciousness.</p>
<p id="id05317">He had them in his brain: for while burning with an ardour for
Laetitia, that incited him to frantic excesses of language and
comportment, he was aware of shouts of the names of Lady Busshe and
Mrs. Mountstuart Jenkinson, the which, freezing him as they did, were
directly the cause of his hurrying to a wilder extravagance and more
headlong determination to subdue before break of day the woman he
almost dreaded to behold by daylight, though he had now passionately
persuaded himself of his love of her. He could not, he felt, stand in
the daylight without her. She was his morning. She was, he raved, his
predestinated wife. He cried, "Darling!" both to her and to solitude.
Every prescription of his ideal of demeanour as an example to his class
and country, was abandoned by the enamoured gentleman. He had lost
command of his countenance. He stooped so far as to kneel, and not
gracefully. Nay, it is in the chronicles of the invisible host around
him, that in a fit of supplication, upon a cry of "Laetitia!" twice
repeated, he whimpered.</p>
<p id="id05318">Let so much suffice. And indeed not without reason do the multitudes of
the servants of the Muse in this land of social policy avoid scenes of
an inordinate wantonness, which detract from the dignity of our leaders
and menace human nature with confusion. Sagacious are they who conduct
the individual on broad lines, over familiar tracks, under well-known
characteristics. What men will do, and amorously minded men will do,
is less the question than what it is politic they should be shown to
do.</p>
<p id="id05319">The night wore through. Laetitia was bent, but had not yielded. She
had been obliged to say—and how many times she could not bear to
recollect: "I do not love you; I have no love to give"; and issuing
from such a night to look again upon the face of day, she scarcely felt
that she was alive.</p>
<p id="id05320">The contest was renewed by her father with the singing of the birds.
Mr. Dale then produced the first serious impression she had received.
He spoke of their circumstances, of his being taken from her and
leaving her to poverty, in weak health; of the injury done to her
health by writing for bread; and of the oppressive weight he would be
relieved of by her consenting.</p>
<p id="id05321">He no longer implored her; he put the case on common ground.</p>
<p id="id05322">And he wound up: "Pray do not be ruthless, my girl."</p>
<p id="id05323">The practical statement, and this adjuration incongruously to conclude
it, harmonized with her disordered understanding, her loss of all
sentiment and her desire to be kind. She sighed to herself. "Happily,
it is over!"</p>
<p id="id05324">Her father was too weak to rise. He fell asleep. She was bound down to
the house for hours; and she walked through her suite, here at the
doors, there at the windows, thinking of Clara's remark "of a century
passing". She had not wished it, but a light had come on her to show
her what she would have supposed a century could not have effected: she
saw the impossible of overnight a possible thing: not desireable, yet
possible, wearing the features of the possible. Happily, she had
resisted too firmly to be again besought.</p>
<p id="id05325">Those features of the possible once beheld allured the mind to
reconsider them. Wealth gives us the power to do good on earth. Wealth
enables us to see the world, the beautiful scenes of the earth.
Laetitia had long thirsted both for a dowering money-bag at her girdle,
and the wings to fly abroad over lands which had begun to seem fabulous
in her starved imagination. Then, moreover, if her sentiment for this
gentleman was gone, it was only a delusion gone; accurate sight and
knowledge of him would not make a woman the less helpful mate. That was
the mate he required: and he could be led. A sentimental attachment
would have been serviceless to him. Not so the woman allied by a purely
rational bond: and he wanted guiding. Happily, she had told him too
much of her feeble health and her lovelessness to be reduced to submit
to another attack.</p>
<p id="id05326">She busied herself in her room, arranging for her departure, so that no
minutes might be lost after her father had breakfasted and dressed.</p>
<p id="id05327">Clara was her earliest visitor, and each asked the other whether she
had slept, and took the answer from the face presented to her. The
rings of Laetitia's eyes were very dark. Clara was her mirror, and she
said: "A singular object to be persecuted through a night for her hand!
I know these two damp dead leaves I wear on my cheeks to remind me of
midnight vigils. But you have slept well, Clara."</p>
<p id="id05328">"I have slept well, and yet I could say I have not slept at all,
Laetitia. I was with you, dear, part in dream and part in thought:
hoping to find you sensible before I go."</p>
<p id="id05329">"Sensible. That is the word for me."</p>
<p id="id05330">Laetitia briefly sketched the history of the night; and Clara said,
with a manifest sincerity that testified of her gratitude to Sir
Willoughby: "Could you resist him, so earnest as he is?" Laetitia saw
the human nature, without sourness: and replied, "I hope, Clara, you
will not begin with a large stock of sentiment, for there is nothing
like it for making you hard, matter-of-fact, worldly, calculating."</p>
<p id="id05331">The next visitor was Vernon, exceedingly anxious for news of Mr. Dale.
Laetitia went into her father's room to obtain it for him. Returning,
she found them both with sad visages, and she ventured, in alarm for
them, to ask the cause.</p>
<p id="id05332">"It's this," Vernon said: "Willoughby will everlastingly tease that boy
to be loved by him. Perhaps, poor fellow, he had an excuse last night.
Anyhow, he went into Crossjay's room this morning, woke him up and
talked to him, and set the lad crying, and what with one thing and
another Crossjay got a berry in his throat, as he calls it, and poured
out everything he knew and all he had done. I needn't tell you the
consequence. He has ruined himself here for good, so I must take him."</p>
<p id="id05333">Vernon glanced at Clara. "You must indeed," said she. "He is my boy as
well as yours. No chance of pardon?"</p>
<p id="id05334">"It's not likely."</p>
<p id="id05335">"Laetitia!"</p>
<p id="id05336">"What can I do?"</p>
<p id="id05337">"Oh! what can you not do?"</p>
<p id="id05338">"I do not know."</p>
<p id="id05339">"Teach him to forgive!"</p>
<p id="id05340">Laetitia's brows were heavy and Clara forbore to torment her.</p>
<p id="id05341">She would not descend to the family breakfast-table. Clara would fain
have stayed to drink tea with her in her own room, but a last act of
conformity was demanded of the liberated young lady. She promised to
run up the moment breakfast was over. Not unnaturally, therefore,
Laetitia supposed it to be she to whom she gave admission, half an hour
later, with a glad cry of, "Come in, dear."</p>
<p id="id05342">The knock had sounded like Clara's.</p>
<p id="id05343">Sir Willoughby entered.</p>
<p id="id05344">He stepped forward. He seized her hands. "Dear!" he said.</p>
<p id="id05345">"You cannot withdraw that. You call me dear. I am, I must be dear to
you. The word is out, by accident or not, but, by heaven, I have it and
I give it up to no one. And love me or not—marry me, and my love will
bring it back to you. You have taught me I am not so strong. I must
have you by my side. You have powers I did not credit you with."</p>
<p id="id05346">"You are mistaken in me, Sir Willoughby." Laetitia said feebly, outworn
as she was.</p>
<p id="id05347">"A woman who can resist me by declining to be my wife, through a whole
night of entreaty, has the quality I need for my house, and I will
batter at her ears for months, with as little rest as I had last night,
before I surrender my chance of her. But I told you last night I want
you within the twelve hours. I have staked my pride on it. By noon you
are mine: you are introduced to Mrs. Mountstuart as mine, as the lady
of my life and house. And to the world! I shall not let you go."</p>
<p id="id05348">"You will not detain me here, Sir Willoughby?"</p>
<p id="id05349">"I will detain you. I will use force and guile. I will spare nothing."</p>
<p id="id05350">He raved for a term, as he had done overnight.</p>
<p id="id05351">On his growing rather breathless, Laetitia said: "You do not ask me for
love?"</p>
<p id="id05352">"I do not. I pay you the higher compliment of asking for you, love or
no love. My love shall be enough. Reward me or not. I am not used to be
denied."</p>
<p id="id05353">"But do you know what you ask for? Do you remember what I told you of
myself? I am hard, materialistic; I have lost faith in romance, the
skeleton is present with me all over life. And my health is not good.
I crave for money. I should marry to be rich. I should not worship you.
I should be a burden, barely a living one, irresponsive and cold.
Conceive such a wife, Sir Willoughby!"</p>
<p id="id05354">"It will be you!"</p>
<p id="id05355">She tried to recall how this would have sung in her cars long back. Her
bosom rose and fell in absolute dejection. Her ammunition of arguments
against him had been expended overnight.</p>
<p id="id05356">"You are so unforgiving," she said.</p>
<p id="id05357">"Is it I who am?"</p>
<p id="id05358">"You do not know me."</p>
<p id="id05359">"But you are the woman of all the world who knows me, Laetitia."</p>
<p id="id05360">"Can you think it better for you to be known?"</p>
<p id="id05361">He was about to say other words: he checked them. "I believe I do not
know myself. Anything you will, only give me your hand; give it; trust
to me; you shall direct me. If I have faults, help me to obliterate
them."</p>
<p id="id05362">"Will you not expect me to regard them as the virtues of meaner men?"</p>
<p id="id05363">"You will be my wife!"</p>
<p id="id05364">Laetitia broke from him, crying: "Your wife, your critic! Oh, I cannot
think it possible. Send for the ladies. Let them hear me."</p>
<p id="id05365">"They are at hand," said Willoughby, opening the door.</p>
<p id="id05366">They were in one of the upper rooms anxiously on the watch.</p>
<p id="id05367">"Dear ladies," Laetitia said to them, as they entered. "I am going to
wound you, and I grieve to do it: but rather now than later, if I am to
be your housemate. He asks me for a hand that cannot carry a heart,
because mine is dead. I repeat it. I used to think the heart a woman's
marriage portion for her husband. I see now that she may consent, and
he accept her, without one. But it is right that you should know what I
am when I consent. I was once a foolish, romantic girl; now I am a
sickly woman, all illusions vanished. Privation has made me what an
abounding fortune usually makes of others—I am an Egoist. I am not
deceiving you. That is my real character. My girl's view of him has
entirely changed; and I am almost indifferent to the change. I can
endeavour to respect him, I cannot venerate."</p>
<p id="id05368">"Dear child!" the ladies gently remonstrated.</p>
<p id="id05369">Willoughby motioned to them.</p>
<p id="id05370">"If we are to live together, and I could very happily live with you,"
Laetitia continued to address them, "you must not be ignorant of me.
And if you, as I imagine, worship him blindly, I do not know how we are
to live together. And never shall you quit this house to make way for
me. I have a hard detective eye. I see many faults."</p>
<p id="id05371">"Have we not all of us faults, dear child?"</p>
<p id="id05372">"Not such as he has; though the excuses of a gentleman nurtured in
idolatry may be pleaded. But he should know that they are seen, and
seen by her he asks to be his wife, that no misunderstanding may exist,
and while it is yet time he may consult his feelings. He worships
himself."</p>
<p id="id05373">"Willoughby?"</p>
<p id="id05374">"He is vindictive!"</p>
<p id="id05375">"Our Willoughby?"</p>
<p id="id05376">"That is not your opinion, ladies. It is firmly mine. Time has taught
it me. So, if you and I are at such variance, how can we live together?
It is an impossibility."</p>
<p id="id05377">They looked at Willoughby. He nodded imperiously.</p>
<p id="id05378">"We have never affirmed that our dear nephew is devoid of faults, if
he is offended . . . And supposing he claims to be foremost, is it not
his rightful claim, made good by much generosity? Reflect, dear
Laetitia. We are your friends too."</p>
<p id="id05379">She could not chastise the kind ladies any further.</p>
<p id="id05380">"You have always been my good friends."</p>
<p id="id05381">"And you have no other charge against him?"</p>
<p id="id05382">Laetitia was milder in saying, "He is unpardoning."</p>
<p id="id05383">"Name one instance, Laetitia."</p>
<p id="id05384">"He has turned Crossjay out of his house, interdicting the poor boy
ever to enter it again."</p>
<p id="id05385">"Crossjay," said Willoughby, "was guilty of a piece of infamous
treachery."</p>
<p id="id05386">"Which is the cause of your persecuting me to become your wife!"</p>
<p id="id05387">There was a cry of "Persecuting!"</p>
<p id="id05388">"No young fellow behaving so basely can come to good," said Willoughby,
stained about the face with flecks of redness at the lashings he
received.</p>
<p id="id05389">"Honestly," she retorted. "He told of himself: and he must have
anticipated the punishment he would meet. He should have been studying
with a master for his profession. He has been kept here in comparative
idleness to be alternately petted and discarded: no one but Vernon
Whitford, a poor gentleman doomed to struggle for a livelihood by
literature—I know something of that struggle—too much for me!—no one
but Mr. Whitford for his friend."</p>
<p id="id05390">"Crossjay is forgiven," said Willoughby.</p>
<p id="id05391">"You promise me that?"</p>
<p id="id05392">"He shall be packed off to a crammer at once."</p>
<p id="id05393">"But my home must be Crossjay's home."</p>
<p id="id05394">"You are mistress of my house, Laetitia."</p>
<p id="id05395">She hesitated. Her eyelashes grew moist. "You can be generous."</p>
<p id="id05396">"He is, dear child!" the ladies cried. "He is. Forget his errors, in
his generosity, as we do."</p>
<p id="id05397">"There is that wretched man Flitch."</p>
<p id="id05398">"That sot has gone about the county for years to get me a bad
character," said Willoughby.</p>
<p id="id05399">"It would have been generous in you to have offered him another chance.<br/>
He has children."<br/></p>
<p id="id05400">"Nine. And I am responsible for them?"</p>
<p id="id05401">"I speak of being generous."</p>
<p id="id05402">"Dictate." Willoughby spread out his arms.</p>
<p id="id05403">"Surely now you should be satisfied, Laetitia?" said the ladies.</p>
<p id="id05404">"Is he?"</p>
<p id="id05405">Willoughby perceived Mrs. Mountstuart's carriage coming down the
avenue.</p>
<p id="id05406">"To the full." He presented his hand.</p>
<p id="id05407">She raised hers with the fingers catching back before she ceased to
speak and dropped it:—</p>
<p id="id05408">"Ladies. You are witnesses that there is no concealment, there has been
no reserve, on my part. May Heaven grant me kinder eyes than I have
now. I would not have you change your opinion of him; only that you
should see how I read him. For the rest, I vow to do my duty by him.
Whatever is of worth in me is at his service. I am very tired. I feel I
must yield or break. This is his wish, and I submit."</p>
<p id="id05409">"And I salute my wife," said Willoughby, making her hand his own, and
warming to his possession as he performed the act.</p>
<p id="id05410">Mrs. Mountstuart's indecent hurry to be at the Hall before the
departure of Dr. Middleton and his daughter, afflicted him with visions
of the physical contrast which would be sharply perceptible to her this
morning of his Laetitia beside Clara.</p>
<p id="id05411">But he had the lady with brains! He had: and he was to learn the nature
of that possession in the woman who is our wife.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />