<h3>XXXIX</h3>
<p>Louis got up the next morning with an idea in his head.
He had dressed for a journey, and breakfasted hastily.</p>
<p>Before he had started Viviette came downstairs. Louis,
who was now greatly disturbed about her, went up to his sister
and took her hand.</p>
<p>‘<i>Aux grands maux les grands remedes</i>,’ he said,
gravely. ‘I have a plan.’</p>
<p>‘I have a dozen!’ said she.</p>
<p>‘You have?’</p>
<p>‘Yes. But what are they worth? And yet there
must—there <i>must</i> be a way!’</p>
<p>‘Viviette,’ said Louis, ‘promise that you
will wait till I come home to-night, before you do
anything.’</p>
<p>Her distracted eyes showed slight comprehension of his request
as she said ‘Yes.’</p>
<p>An hour after that time Louis entered the train at Warborne,
and was speedily crossing a country of ragged woodland, which,
though intruded on by the plough at places, remained largely
intact from prehistoric times, and still abounded with yews of
gigantic growth and oaks tufted with mistletoe. It was the
route to Melchester.</p>
<p>On setting foot in that city he took the cathedral spire as
his guide, the place being strange to him; and went on till he
reached the archway dividing Melchester sacred from Melchester
secular. Thence he threaded his course into the precincts
of the damp and venerable Close, level as a bowling-green, and
beloved of rooks, who from their elm perches on high threatened
any unwary gazer with the mishap of Tobit. At the corner of
this reposeful spot stood the episcopal palace.</p>
<p>Louis entered the gates, rang the bell, and looked
around. Here the trees and rooks seemed older, if possible,
than those in the Close behind him. Everything was
dignified, and he felt himself like Punchinello in the
king’s chambers. Verily in the present case Glanville
was not a man to stick at trifles any more than his illustrious
prototype; and on the servant bringing a message that his
lordship would see him at once, Louis marched boldly in.</p>
<p>Through an old dark corridor, roofed with old dark beams, the
servant led the way to the heavily-moulded door of the
Bishop’s room. Dr. Helmsdale was there, and welcomed
Louis with considerable stateliness. But his condescension
was tempered with a curious anxiety, and even with
nervousness.</p>
<p>He asked in pointed tones after the health of Lady
Constantine; if Louis had brought an answer to the letter he had
addressed to her a day or two earlier; and if the contents of the
letter, or of the previous one, were known to him.</p>
<p>‘I have brought no answer from her,’ said
Louis. ‘But the contents of your letter have been
made known to me.’</p>
<p>Since entering the building Louis had more than once felt some
hesitation, and it might now, with a favouring manner from his
entertainer, have operated to deter him from going further with
his intention. But the Bishop had personal weaknesses that
were fatal to sympathy for more than a moment.</p>
<p>‘Then I may speak in confidence to you as her nearest
relative,’ said the prelate, ‘and explain that I am
now in a position with regard to Lady Constantine which, in view
of the important office I hold, I should not have cared to place
myself in unless I had felt quite sure of not being refused by
her. And hence it is a great grief, and some mortification
to me, that I was refused—owing, of course, to the fact
that I unwittingly risked making my proposal at the very moment
when she was under the influence of those strange tidings, and
therefore not herself, and scarcely able to judge what was best
for her.’</p>
<p>The Bishop’s words disclosed a mind whose sensitive fear
of danger to its own dignity hindered it from criticism
elsewhere. Things might have been worse for Louis’s
Puck-like idea of mis-mating his Hermia with this Demetrius.</p>
<p>Throwing a strong colour of earnestness into his mien he
replied: ‘Bishop, Viviette is my only sister; I am her only
brother and friend. I am alarmed for her health and state
of mind. Hence I have come to consult you on this very
matter that you have broached. I come absolutely without
her knowledge, and I hope unconventionality may be excused in me
on the score of my anxiety for her.’</p>
<p>‘Certainly. I trust that the prospect opened up by
my proposal, combined with this other news, has not proved too
much for her?’</p>
<p>‘My sister is distracted and distressed, Bishop
Helmsdale. She wants comfort.’</p>
<p>‘Not distressed by my letter?’ said the Bishop,
turning red. ‘Has it lowered me in her
estimation?’</p>
<p>‘On the contrary; while your disinterested offer was
uppermost in her mind she was a different woman. It is this
other matter that oppresses her. The result upon her of the
recent discovery with regard to the late Sir Blount Constantine
is peculiar. To say that he ill-used her in his lifetime is
to understate a truth. He has been dead now a considerable
period; but this revival of his memory operates as a sort of
terror upon her. Images of the manner of Sir Blount’s
death are with her night and day, intensified by a hideous
picture of the supposed scene, which was cruelly sent her.
She dreads being alone. Nothing will restore my poor
Viviette to her former cheerfulness but a distraction—a
hope—a new prospect.’</p>
<p>‘That is precisely what acceptance of my offer would
afford.’</p>
<p>‘Precisely,’ said Louis, with great respect.
‘But how to get her to avail herself of it, after once
refusing you, is the difficulty, and my earnest
problem.’</p>
<p>‘Then we are quite at one.’</p>
<p>‘We are. And it is to promote our wishes that I am
come; since she will do nothing of herself.’</p>
<p>‘Then you can give me no hope of a reply to my second
communication?’</p>
<p>‘None whatever—by letter,’ said Louis.
‘Her impression plainly is that she cannot encourage your
lordship. Yet, in the face of all this reticence, the
secret is that she loves you warmly.’</p>
<p>‘Can you indeed assure me of that? Indeed,
indeed!’ said the good Bishop musingly. ‘Then I
must try to see her. I begin to feel—to feel
strongly—that a course which would seem premature and
unbecoming in other cases would be true and proper conduct in
this. Her unhappy dilemmas—her unwonted
position—yes, yes—I see it all! I can afford to
have some little misconstruction put upon my motives. I
will go and see her immediately. Her past has been a cruel
one; she wants sympathy; and with Heaven’s help I’ll
give it.’</p>
<p>‘I think the remedy lies that way,’ said Louis
gently. ‘Some words came from her one night which
seemed to show it. I was standing on the terrace: I heard
somebody sigh in the dark, and found that it was she. I
asked her what was the matter, and gently pressed her on this
subject of boldly and promptly contracting a new marriage as a
means of dispersing the horrors of the old. Her answer
implied that she would have no objection to do it, and to do it
at once, provided she could remain externally passive in the
matter, that she would tacitly yield, in fact, to pressure, but
would not meet solicitation half-way. Now, Bishop
Helmsdale, you see what has prompted me. On the one hand is
a dignitary of high position and integrity, to say no more, who
is anxious to save her from the gloom of her situation; on the
other is this sister, who will not make known to you her
willingness to be saved—partly from apathy, partly from a
fear that she may be thought forward in responding favourably at
so early a moment, partly also, perhaps, from a modest sense that
there would be some sacrifice on your part in allying yourself
with a woman of her secluded and sad experience.’</p>
<p>‘O, there is no sacrifice! Quite otherwise.
I care greatly for this alliance, Mr. Glanville. Your
sister is very dear to me. Moreover, the advantages her
mind would derive from the enlarged field of activity that the
position of a bishop’s wife would afford, are
palpable. I am induced to think that an early settlement of
the question—an immediate coming to the point—which
might be called too early in the majority of cases, would be a
right and considerate tenderness here. My only dread is
that she should think an immediate following up of the subject
premature. And the risk of a rebuff a second time is one
which, as you must perceive, it would be highly unbecoming in me
to run.’</p>
<p>‘I think the risk would be small, if your lordship would
approach her frankly. Write she will not, I am assured; and
knowing that, and having her interest at heart, I was induced to
come to you and make this candid statement in reply to your
communication. Her late husband having been virtually dead
these four or five years, believed dead two years, and actually
dead nearly one, no reproach could attach to her if she were to
contract another union to-morrow.’</p>
<p>‘I agree with you, Mr. Glanville,’ said the Bishop
warmly. ‘I will think this over. Her motive in
not replying I can quite understand: your motive in coming I can
also understand and appreciate in a brother. If I feel
convinced that it would be a seemly and expedient thing I will
come to Welland to-morrow.’</p>
<p>The point to which Louis had brought the Bishop being so
satisfactory, he feared to endanger it by another word. He
went away almost hurriedly, and at once left the precincts of the
cathedral, lest another encounter with Dr. Helmsdale should lead
the latter to take a new and slower view of his duties as
Viviette’s suitor.</p>
<p>He reached Welland by dinner-time, and came upon Viviette in
the same pensive mood in which he had left her. It seemed
she had hardly moved since.</p>
<p>‘Have you discovered Swithin St. Cleeve’s
address?’ she said, without looking up at him.</p>
<p>‘No,’ said Louis.</p>
<p>Then she broke out with indescribable anguish: ‘But you
asked me to wait till this evening; and I have waited through the
long day, in the belief that your words meant something, and that
you would bring good tidings! And now I find your words
meant nothing, and you have <i>not</i> brought good
tidings!’</p>
<p>Louis could not decide for a moment what to say to this.
Should he venture to give her thoughts a new course by a
revelation of his design? No: it would be better to prolong
her despair yet another night, and spring relief upon her
suddenly, that she might jump at it and commit herself without an
interval for reflection on certain aspects of the proceeding.</p>
<p>Nothing, accordingly, did he say; and conjecturing that she
would be hardly likely to take any desperate step that night, he
left her to herself.</p>
<p>His anxiety at this crisis continued to be great.
Everything depended on the result of the Bishop’s
self-communion. Would he or would he not come the next
day? Perhaps instead of his important presence there would
appear a letter postponing the visit indefinitely. If so,
all would be lost.</p>
<p>Louis’s suspense kept him awake, and he was not alone in
his sleeplessness. Through the night he heard his sister
walking up and down, in a state which betokened that for every
pang of grief she had disclosed, twice as many had remained
unspoken. He almost feared that she might seek to end her
existence by violence, so unreasonably sudden were her moods; and
he lay and longed for the day.</p>
<p>It was morning. She came down the same as usual, and
asked if there had arrived any telegram or letter; but there was
neither. Louis avoided her, knowing that nothing he could
say just then would do her any good.</p>
<p>No communication had reached him from the Bishop, and that
looked well. By one ruse and another, as the day went on,
he led her away from contemplating the remote possibility of
hearing from Swithin, and induced her to look at the worst
contingency as her probable fate. It seemed as if she
really made up her mind to this, for by the afternoon she was
apathetic, like a woman who neither hoped nor feared.</p>
<p>And then a fly drove up to the door.</p>
<p>Louis, who had been standing in the hall the greater part of
that day, glanced out through a private window, and went to
Viviette. ‘The Bishop has called,’ he
said. ‘Be ready to see him.’</p>
<p>‘The Bishop of Melchester?’ said Viviette,
bewildered.</p>
<p>‘Yes. I asked him to come. He comes for an
answer to his letters.’</p>
<p>‘An answer—to—his—letters?’ she
murmured.</p>
<p>‘An immediate reply of yes or no.’</p>
<p>Her face showed the workings of her mind. How entirely
an answer of assent, at once acted on for better or for worse,
would clear the spectre from her path, there needed no tongue to
tell. It would, moreover, accomplish that end without
involving the impoverishment of Swithin—the inevitable
result if she had adopted the legitimate road out of her
trouble. Hitherto there had seemed to her dismayed mind,
unenlightened as to any course save one of honesty, no possible
achievement of <i>both</i> her desires—the saving of
Swithin and the saving of herself. But behold, here was a
way! A tempter had shown it to her. It involved a
great wrong, which to her had quite obscured its
feasibility. But she perceived now that it was indeed a
way. Nature was forcing her hand at this game; and to what
will not nature compel her weaker victims, in extremes?</p>
<p>Louis left her to think it out. When he reached the
drawing-room Dr. Helmsdale was standing there with the air of a
man too good for his destiny—which, to be just to him, was
not far from the truth this time.</p>
<p>‘Have you broken my message to her?’ asked the
Bishop sonorously.</p>
<p>‘Not your message; your visit,’ said Louis.
‘I leave the rest in your Lordship’s hands. I
have done all I can for her.’</p>
<p>She was in her own small room to-day; and, feeling that it
must be a bold stroke or none, he led the Bishop across the hall
till he reached her apartment and opened the door; but instead of
following he shut it behind his visitor.</p>
<p>Then Glanville passed an anxious time. He walked from
the foot of the staircase to the star of old swords and pikes on
the wall; from these to the stags’ horns; thence down the
corridor as far as the door, where he could hear murmuring
inside, but not its import. The longer they remained
closeted the more excited did he become. That she had not
peremptorily negatived the proposal at the outset was a strong
sign of its success. It showed that she had admitted
argument; and the worthy Bishop had a pleader on his side whom he
knew little of. The very weather seemed to favour Dr.
Helmsdale in his suit. A blusterous wind had blown up from
the west, howling in the smokeless chimneys, and suggesting to
the feminine mind storms at sea, a tossing ocean, and the
hopeless inaccessibility of all astronomers and men on the other
side of the same.</p>
<p>The Bishop had entered Viviette’s room at ten minutes
past three. The long hand of the hall clock lay level at
forty-five minutes past when the knob of the door moved, and he
came out. Louis met him where the passage joined the
hall.</p>
<p>Dr. Helmsdale was decidedly in an emotional state, his face
being slightly flushed. Louis looked his anxious inquiry
without speaking it.</p>
<p>‘She accepts me,’ said the Bishop in a low
voice. ‘And the wedding is to be soon. Her long
solitude and sufferings justify haste. What you said was
true. Sheer weariness and distraction have driven her to
me. She was quite passive at last, and agreed to anything I
proposed—such is the persuasive force of trained logical
reasoning! A good and wise woman, she perceived what a true
shelter from sadness was offered in me, and was not the one to
despise Heaven’s gift.’</p>
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