<p><SPAN name="c22" id="c22"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3><span class="smallcaps">Conclusion</span>.</h3>
<h3>CHAPTER X.</h3>
<h4>THE DOCTOR'S ANSWER.<br/> </h4>
<p><span class="smallcaps">When</span>
the Monday came there was much to be done and to be thought
of at Bowick. Mrs. Peacocke on that day received a letter from
San Francisco, giving her all the details of the evidence that her
husband had obtained, and enclosing a copy of the photograph.
There was now no reason why she should not become the true and
honest wife of the man whom she had all along regarded as her
husband in the sight of God. The writer declared that he would so
quickly follow his letter that he might be expected home within a
week, or, at the longest, ten days, from the date at which she
would receive it. Immediately on his arrival at Liverpool, he
would, of course, give her notice by telegraph.</p>
<p>When this letter reached her, she at once sent a message across to
Mrs. Wortle. Would Mrs. Wortle kindly come and see her? Mrs.
Wortle was, of course, bound to do as she was asked, and started
at once. But she was, in truth, but little able to give counsel
on any subject outside the one which was at the moment nearest to
her heart. At one o'clock, when the boys went to their dinner,
Mary was to instruct her father as to the purport of the letter
which was to be sent to Lord Bracy,—and Mary had not as yet come
to any decision. She could not go to her father for aid;—she
could not, at any rate, go to him until the appointed hour should
come; and she was, therefore, entirely thrown upon her mother.
Had she been old enough to understand the effect and the power of
character, she would have known that, at the last moment, her
father would certainly decide for her,—and had her experience of
the world been greater, she might have been quite sure that her
father would decide in her favour. But as it was, she was
quivering and shaking in the dark, leaning on her mother's very
inefficient aid, nearly overcome with the feeling that by one
o'clock she must be ready to say something quite decided.</p>
<p>And in the midst of this her mother was taken away from her, just
at ten o'clock. There was not, in truth, much that the two ladies
could say to each other. Mrs. Peacocke felt it to be necessary to
let the Doctor know that Mr. Peacocke would be back almost at
once, and took this means of doing so. "In a week!" said Mrs.
Wortle, as though painfully surprised by the suddenness of the
coming arrival.</p>
<p>"In a week or ten days. He was to follow his letter as quickly as
possible from San Francisco."</p>
<p>"And he has found it all out?"</p>
<p>"Yes; he has learned everything, I think. Look at this!" And Mrs.
Peacocke handed to her friend the photograph of the tombstone.</p>
<p>"Dear me!" said Mrs. Wortle. "Ferdinand Lefroy! And this was his
grave?"</p>
<p>"That is his grave," said Mrs. Peacocke, turning her face away.</p>
<p>"It is very sad; very sad indeed;—but you had to learn it, you
know."</p>
<p>"It will not be sad for him, I hope," said Mrs. Peacocke. "In all
this, I endeavour to think of him rather than of myself. When I
am forced to think of myself, it seems to me that my life has been
so blighted and destroyed that it must be indifferent what happens
to me now. What has happened to me has been so bad that I can
hardly be injured further. But if there can be a good time coming
for him,—something at least of relief, something perhaps of
comfort,—then I shall be satisfied."</p>
<p>"Why should there not be comfort for you both?"</p>
<p>"I am almost as dead to hope as I am to shame. Some year or two
ago I should have thought it impossible to bear the eyes of people
looking at me, as though my life had been sinful and impure. I
seem now to care nothing for all that. I can look them back again
with bold eyes and a brazen face, and tell them that their
hardness is at any rate as bad as my impurity."</p>
<p>"We have not looked at you like that," said Mrs. Wortle.</p>
<p>"No; and therefore I send to you in my trouble, and tell you all
this. The strangest thing of all to me is that I should have come
across one man so generous as your husband, and one woman so
soft-hearted as yourself." There was nothing further to be said
then. Mrs. Wortle was instructed to tell her husband that Mr.
Peacocke was to be expected in a week or ten days, and then
hurried back to give what assistance she could in the much more
important difficulties of her own daughter.</p>
<p>Of course they were much more important to her. Was her girl to
become the wife of a young lord,—to be a future countess? Was
she destined to be the mother-in-law of an earl? Of course this
was much more important to her. And then through it all,—being
as she was a dear, good, Christian, motherly woman,—she was well
aware that there was something, in truth, much more important even
than that. Though she thought much of the earl-ship, and the
countess-ship, and the great revenue, and the big house at
Carstairs, and the fine park with its magnificent avenues, and the
carriage in which her daughter would be rolled about to London
parties, and the diamonds which she would wear when she should be
presented to the Queen as the bride of the young Lord Carstairs,
yet she knew very well that she ought not in such an emergency as
the present to think of these things as being of primary
importance. What would tend most to her girl's happiness,—and
welfare in this world and the next? It was of that she ought to
think,—of that only. If some answer were now returned to Lord
Bracy, giving his lordship to understand that they, the Wortles,
were anxious to encourage the idea, then in fact her girl would be
tied to an engagement whether the young lord should hold himself
to be so tied or no! And how would it be with her girl if the
engagement should be allowed to run on in a doubtful way for
years, and then be dropped by reason of the young man's
indifference? How would it be with her if, after perhaps three or
four years, a letter should come saying that the young lord had
changed his mind, and had engaged himself to some nobler bride?
Was it not her duty, as a mother, to save her child from the too
probable occurrence of some crushing grief such as this? All of
it was clear to her mind;—but then it was clear also that, if
this opportunity of greatness were thrown away, no such chance in
all probability would ever come again. Thus she was so tossed to
and fro between a prospect of glorious prosperity for her child on
one side, and the fear of terrible misfortune for her child on the
other, that she was altogether unable to give any salutary advice.
She, at any rate, ought to have known that her advice would at
last be of no importance. Her experience ought to have told her
that the Doctor would certainly settle the matter himself. Had it
been her own happiness that was in question, her own conduct, her
own greatness, she would not have dreamed of having an opinion of
her own. She would have consulted the Doctor, and simply have done
as he directed. But all this was for her child, and in a vague,
vacillating way she felt that for her child she ought to be ready
with counsel of her own.</p>
<p>"Mamma," said Mary, when her mother came back from Mrs. Peacocke,
"what am I to say when he sends for me?"</p>
<p>"If you think that you can love him, my dear—"</p>
<p>"Oh, mamma, you shouldn't ask me!"</p>
<p>"My dear!"</p>
<p>"I do like him,—very much."</p>
<p>"If so—"</p>
<p>"But I never thought of it before;—and then, if he,—if he—"</p>
<p>"If he what, my dear?"</p>
<p>"If he were to change his mind?"</p>
<p>"Ah, yes;—there it is. It isn't as though you could be married
in three months' time."</p>
<p>"Oh, mamma! I shouldn't like that at all."</p>
<p>"Or even in six."</p>
<p>"Oh, no."</p>
<p>"Of course he is very young."</p>
<p>"Yes, mamma."</p>
<p>"And when a young man is so very young, I suppose he doesn't quite
know his own mind."</p>
<p>"No, mamma. But—"</p>
<p>"Well, my dear."</p>
<p>"His father says that he has got—such a strong will of his own,"
said poor Mary, who was anxious, unconsciously anxious, to put in
a good word on her own side of the question, without making her
own desire too visible.</p>
<p>"He always had that. When there was any game to be played, he
always liked to have his own way. But then men like that are just
as likely to change as others."</p>
<p>"Are they, mamma?"</p>
<p>"But I do think that he is a lad of very high principle."</p>
<p>"Papa has always said that of him."</p>
<p>"And of fine generous feeling. He would not change like a
<ins class="corr" title="Example of inconsistent hyphenation.
The word is used one other time, and
there is spelled ‘weathercock’ without
hyphenation">weather-cock</ins>."</p>
<p>"If you think he would change at all, I would
rather,—rather,—rather—. Oh, mamma, why did you tell me?"</p>
<p>"My darling, my child, my angel! What am I to tell you? I do
think of all the young men I ever knew he is the nicest, and the
sweetest, and the most thoroughly good and affectionate."</p>
<p>"Oh, mamma, do you?" said Mary, rushing at her mother and kissing
her and embracing her.</p>
<p>"But if there were to be no regular engagement, and you were to
let him have your heart,—and then things were to go wrong!"</p>
<p>Mary left the embracings, gave up the kissings, and seated herself
on the sofa alone. In this way the morning was passed;—and when
Mary was summoned to her father's study, the mother and daughter
had not arrived between them at any decision.</p>
<p>"Well, my dear," said the Doctor, smiling, "what am I to say to
the Earl?"</p>
<p>"Must you write to-day, papa?"</p>
<p>"I think so. His letter is one that should not be left longer
unanswered. Were we to do so, he would only think that we didn't
know what to say for ourselves."</p>
<p>"Would he, papa?"</p>
<p>"He would fancy that we are half-ashamed to accept what has been
offered to us, and yet anxious to take it."</p>
<p>"I am not ashamed of anything."</p>
<p>"No, my dear; you have no reason."</p>
<p>"Nor have you, papa."</p>
<p>"Nor have I. That is quite true. I have never been wont to be
ashamed of myself;—nor do I think that you ever will have cause
to be ashamed of yourself. Therefore, why should we hesitate?
Shall I help you, my darling, in coming to a decision on the
matter?"</p>
<p>"Yes, papa."</p>
<p>"If I can understand your heart on this matter, it has never as
yet been given to this young man."</p>
<p>"No, papa." This Mary said not altogether with that complete power
of asseveration which the negative is sometimes made to bear.</p>
<p>"But there must be a beginning to such things. A man throws
himself into it headlong,—as my Lord Carstairs seems to have
done. At least all the best young men do." Mary at this point
felt a great longing to get up and kiss her father; but she
restrained herself. "A young woman, on the other hand, if she is
such as I think you are, waits till she is asked. Then it has to
begin." The Doctor, as he said this, smiled his sweetest smile.</p>
<p>"Yes, papa."</p>
<p>"And when it has begun, she does not like to blurt it out at once,
even to her loving old father."</p>
<p>"Papa!"</p>
<p>"That's about it, isn't it? Haven't I hit it off?" He paused, as
though for a reply, but she was not as yet able to make him any.
"Come here, my dear." She came and stood by him, so that he could
put his arm round her waist. "If it be as I suppose, you are
better disposed to this young man than you are likely to be to any
other, just at present."</p>
<p>"Oh yes, papa."</p>
<p>"To all others you are quite indifferent?"</p>
<p>"Yes,—indeed, papa."</p>
<p>"I am sure you are. But not quite indifferent to this one? Give
me a kiss, my darling, and I will take that for your speech." Then
she kissed him,—giving him her very best kiss. "And now, my
child, what shall I say to the Earl?"</p>
<p>"I don't know, papa."</p>
<p>"Nor do I, quite. I never do know what to say till I've got the
pen in my hand. But you'll commission me to write as I may think
best?"</p>
<p>"Oh yes, papa."</p>
<p>"And I may presume that I know your mind?"</p>
<p>"Yes, papa."</p>
<p>"Very well. Then you had better leave me, so that I can go to
work with the paper straight before me, and my pen fixed in my
fingers. I can never begin to think till I find myself in that
position." Then she left him, and went back to her mother.</p>
<p>"Well, my dear," said Mrs. Wortle.</p>
<p>"He is going to write to Lord Bracy."</p>
<p>"But what does he mean to say?"</p>
<p>"I don't know at all, mamma."</p>
<p>"Not know!"</p>
<p>"I think he means to tell Lord Bracy that he has got no
objection."</p>
<p>Then Mrs. Wortle was sure that the Doctor meant to face all the
dangers, and that therefore it would behove her to face them also.</p>
<p>The Doctor, when he was left alone, sat a while thinking of the
matter before he put himself into the position fitted for
composition which he had described to his daughter. He
acknowledged to himself that there was a difficulty in making a
fit reply to the letter which he had to answer. When his mind was
set on sending an indignant epistle to the Bishop, the words flew
from him like lightning out of the thunder-clouds. But now he had
to think much of it before he could make any light to come which
should not bear a different colour from that which he intended.
"Of course such a marriage would suit my child, and would suit
me," he wished to say;—"not only, or not chiefly, because your
son is a nobleman, and will be an earl and a man of great
property. That goes a long way with us. We are too true to deny
it. We hate humbug, and want you to know simply the truth about
us. The title and the money go far,—but not half so far as the
opinion which we entertain of the young man's own good gifts. I
would not give my girl to the greatest and richest nobleman under
the British Crown, if I did not think that he would love her and
be good to her, and treat her as a husband should treat his wife.
But believing this young man to have good gifts such as these, and
a fine disposition, I am willing, on my girl's behalf,—and she
also is willing,—to encounter the acknowledged danger of a long
engagement in the hope of realising all the good things which
would, if things went fortunately, thus come within her reach."
This was what he wanted to say to the Earl, but he found it very
difficult to say it in language that should be natural.<br/> </p>
<p>"<span class="smallcaps">My dear Lord Bracy</span>,—When
I learned, through Mary's mother, that
Carstairs had been here in our absence and made a declaration of
love to our girl, I was, I must confess, annoyed. I felt, in the
first place, that he was too young to have taken in hand such a
business as that; and, in the next, that you might not unnaturally
have been angry that your son, who had come here simply for
tuition, should have fallen into a matter of love. I imagine that
you will understand exactly what were my feelings. There was,
however, nothing to be said about it. The evil, so far as it was
an evil, had been done, and Carstairs was going away to Oxford,
where, possibly, he might forget the whole affair. I did not, at
any rate, think it necessary to make a complaint to you of his
coming.</p>
<p>"To all this your letter has given altogether a different aspect.
I think that I am as little likely as another to spend my time or
thoughts in looking for external advantages, but I am as much
alive as another to the great honour to myself and advantage to my
child of the marriage which is suggested to her. I do not know
how any more secure prospect of happiness could be opened to her
than that which such a marriage offers. I have thought myself
bound to give her your letter to read because her heart and her
imagination have naturally been affected by what your son said to
her. I think I may say of my girl that none sweeter, none more
innocent, none less likely to be over-anxious for such a prospect
could exist. But her heart has been touched; and though she had
not dreamt of him but as an acquaintance till he came here and
told his own tale, and though she then altogether declined to
entertain his proposal when it was made, now that she has learnt
so much more through you, she is no longer indifferent. This, I
think, you will find to be natural.</p>
<p>"I and her mother also are of course alive to the dangers of a
long engagement, and the more so because your son has still before
him a considerable portion of his education. Had he asked advice
either of you or of me he would of course have been counselled not
to think of marriage as yet. But the very passion which has
prompted him to take this action upon himself shows,—as you
yourself say of him,—that he has a stronger will than is usual to
be found at his years. As it is so, it is probable that he may
remain constant to this as to a fixed idea.</p>
<p>"I think you will now understand my mind and Mary's and her
mother's." Lord Bracy as he read this declared to himself that
though the Doctor's mind was very clear, Mrs. Wortle, as far as he
knew, had no mind in the matter at all. "I would suggest that the
affair should remain as it is, and that each of the young people
should be made to understand that any future engagement must
depend, not simply on the persistency of one of them, but on the
joint persistency of the two.</p>
<p>"If, after this, Lady Bracy should be pleased to receive Mary at
Carstairs, I need not say that Mary will be delighted to make the
visit.—Believe me, my dear Lord Bracy, yours most faithfully.</p>
<p class="ind15">"<span class="smallcaps">Jeffrey
Wortle</span>."<br/> </p>
<p>The Earl, when he read this, though there was not a word in it to
which he could take exception, was not altogether pleased. "Of
course it will be an engagement," he said to his wife.</p>
<p>"Of course it will," said the Countess. "But then Carstairs is so
very much in earnest. He would have done it for himself if you
hadn't done it for him."</p>
<p>"At any rate the Doctor is a gentleman," the Earl said, comforting
himself.</p>
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