<h2><SPAN name="VOLUME_THE_SECOND" id="VOLUME_THE_SECOND"></SPAN>VOLUME THE SECOND.</h2>
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<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IB" id="CHAPTER_IB"></SPAN>CHAPTER I.</h2>
<h3>CHARLES MOWBRAY'S ARRIVAL AT THE PARK.</h3>
<p>Never had Rosalind Torrington so strongly felt the want of some one to
advise her what to do, as the morning after this disagreeable scene. Had
she consulted her inclination only, she would have remained in her own
apartments till the return of Mrs. Mowbray and Helen. But more than one
reason prevented her doing so. In the first place, she was not without
hope that her letter would immediately bring young Mowbray home; and it
would be equally disagreeable to miss seeing him, by remaining in her
dressing-room, or to leave it expressly for the purpose of doing so: and
secondly, however far her feelings might be from perfect confidence and
esteem towards Miss Cartwright, she felt that she owed her something,
and that it would be ungrateful and almost cruel to leave her
t�te-�-t�te with the bewildered Fanny, or en tiers with her and the
vicar.</p>
<p>She therefore determined to run the risk of encountering Mr. Cartwright
as usual, but felt greatly at a loss how to treat him. Their last d�m�l�
had been too serious to be forgotten by either; and her opinion of him
was such, that far from wishing to conciliate him, or in any way to
efface the impression of what she had said on leaving him, her
inclination and her principles both led her to wish that it should be
indelible, and that nothing should ever lessen the distance that was now
placed between them. But Rosalind felt all the difficulty of maintaining
this tone towards a person not only on terms of intimate friendship with
the family, but considered by part of it as a man whose word ought to be
law. She began to fear, as she meditated on the position in which she
was placed, that Mowbray Park could not long continue to be her home.
The idea of Helen, and what she would feel at losing her, drew tears
from her eyes; and then the remembrance of her Irish home, of her lost
parents, and the terrible contrast between what she had heard last
night, and the lessons and opinions of her dear father, made them flow
abundantly.</p>
<p>The day passed heavily. Miss Cartwright appeared to think she had done
enough, and devoted herself almost wholly to the perusal of a French
metaphysical work which she had found in the library, Fanny was silent
and sad, and seemed carefully to avoid being left for a moment alone
with Rosalind. Mr. Cartwright made no visit to the house during the
morning: but Judy informed her mistress, when she came to arrange her
dress for dinner, that the reverend gentleman had been walking in the
shrubberies with Miss Fanny; and in the evening he made his entrance, as
usual, through the drawing-room window.</p>
<p>It was the result of a strong effort produced by very excellent feeling,
that kept Rosalind in the room when she saw him approach; but she had
little doubt that if she went, Miss Cartwright would follow her, and she
resolved that his pernicious t�te-�-t�tes with Fanny should not be
rendered more frequent by any selfishness of hers.</p>
<p>It was evident to her from Mr. Cartwright's manner through the whole
evening, that it was his intention to overload her with gentle kindness,
in order to set off in strong relief her harsh and persecuting spirit
towards him. But not even her wish to defeat this plan could enable her
to do more than answer by civil monosyllables when he spoke to her.</p>
<p>Miss Cartwright laid aside her book and resumed her netting as soon as
she saw him approach; but as usual, she sat silent and abstracted, and
the conversation was wholly carried on by the vicar and his pretty
proselyte. No man, perhaps, had a greater facility in making
conversation than the Vicar of Wrexhill: his habit of extempore
preaching, in which he was thought by many to excel, probably
contributed to give him this power. But not only had he an endless flow
of words wherewith to clothe whatever thoughts suggested themselves, but
moreover a most happy faculty of turning every thing around him to
account. Every object, animate or inanimate, furnished him a theme; and
let him begin from what point he would, (unless in the presence of noble
or influential personages to whom he believed it would be distasteful,)
he never failed to bring the conversation round to the subject of
regeneration and grace, the blessed hopes of himself and his sect, and
the assured damnation of all the rest of the world.</p>
<p>Fanny Mowbray listened to him with an earnestness that amounted to
nervous anxiety, lest she should lose a word. His awful dogmas had taken
fearful hold of her ardent and ill-regulated imagination; while his
bland and affectionate manner, his fine features and graceful person,
rendered him altogether an object of the most unbounded admiration and
interest to her.</p>
<p>As an additional proof, probably, that he did not shrink from
persecution, Mr. Cartwright again opened the piano-forte as soon as the
tea equipage was removed, and asked Fanny if she would sing with him.</p>
<p>"With you, Mr. Cartwright!" she exclaimed in an accent of glad surprise:
"I did not know that you sang. Oh! how I wish that I were a greater
proficient, that I might sing with you as I would wish to do!"</p>
<p>"Sing with me, my dear child, with that sweet and pious feeling which I
rejoice to see hourly increasing in your heart. Sing thus, my dearest
child, and you will need no greater skill than Heaven is sure to give to
all who raise their voice to it. This little book, my dear Miss Fanny,"
he continued, drawing once more the manuscript volume from his pocket,
"contains much that your pure and innocent heart will approve. Do you
know this air?" and he pointed to the notes of "L� ci darem' la mano."</p>
<p>"Oh yes!" said Fanny; "I know it very well."</p>
<p>"Then play it, my good child. This too we have taken as spoil from the
enemy, and instead of profane Italian words, you will here find in your
own language thoughts that may be spoken without fear."</p>
<p>Fanny instantly complied; and though her power of singing was greatly
inferior to that of Rosalind, the performance, aided by the fine bass
voice of Mr. Cartwright, and an accompaniment very correctly played, was
very agreeable. Fanny herself thought she had never sung so well before,
and required only to be told by the vicar what she was to do next, to
prolong the performance till considerably past Mr. Cartwright's usual
hour of retiring.</p>
<p>About an hour after the singing began, Henrietta approached Miss
Torrington, and said in a whisper too low to be heard at the instrument,
"My head aches dreadfully. Can you spare me?"</p>
<p>As she had not spoken a single syllable since the trio entered the
drawing-room after dinner, Rosalind could not wholly refrain from a
smile as she replied "Why, yes; I think I can."</p>
<p>"I am not jesting; I am suffering, Rosalind. You will not leave that
girl alone with him?"</p>
<p>"Dear Henrietta!" cried Rosalind, taking her hand with ready sympathy,
"I will not, should they sing together till morning. But is there
nothing I can do for you—nothing I can give you that may relieve your
head?"</p>
<p>"Nothing, nothing! Good night!" and she glided out of the room unseen by
Fanny and unregarded by her father.</p>
<p>It more than once occurred to Miss Torrington during the two tedious
hours that followed her departure, that Mr. Cartwright, who from time to
time stole a glance at her, prolonged his canticles for the purpose of
making her sit to hear them; a species of penance for her last night's
offence by no means ill imagined.</p>
<p>At length, however, he departed; and after exchanging a formal "Good
night," the young ladies retired to their separate apartments.</p>
<p>Rosalind rose with a heavy heart the following morning, hardly knowing
whether to wish for a letter from Charles Mowbray, which it was just
possible the post might bring her, or not. If a letter arrived, there
would certainly be no hope of seeing him; but if it did not, she should
fancy every sound she heard foretold his approach, and she almost
dreaded the having to answer all the questions he would come prepared to
ask.</p>
<p>This state of suspense, however, did not last long; for, at least one
hour before it was possible that a letter could arrive, Charles Mowbray
in a chaise with four foaming post-horses rattled up to the door.</p>
<p>Rosalind descried him from her window before he reached the house; and
her first feeling was certainly one of embarrassment, as she remembered
that it was her summons which had brought him there. But a moment's
reflection not only recalled her motives, but the additional reasons she
now had for believing she had acted wisely; so, arming herself with the
consciousness of being right, she hastened down stairs to meet him, in
preference to receiving a message through a servant, requesting to see
her.</p>
<p>She found him, as she expected, in a state of considerable agitation and
alarm; and feeling most truly anxious to remove whatever portion of this
was unnecessary, she greeted him with the most cheerful aspect she could
assume, saying, "I fear my letter has terrified you, Mr. Mowbray, more
than I wished it to do. But be quite sure that now you are here every
thing will go on as it ought to do; and of course, when your mother
returns, we can neither of us have any farther cause of anxiety about
Fanny."</p>
<p>"And what is your cause of anxiety about her at present, Miss
Torrington? For Heaven's sake explain yourself fully; you know not how I
have been tormenting myself by fearing I know not what."</p>
<p>"I am bound to explain myself fully," said Rosalind gravely; "but it is
not easy, I assure you."</p>
<p>"Only tell me at once what it is you fear. Do you imagine Mr. Cartwright
hopes to persuade Fanny to marry him?"</p>
<p>"I certainly did think so," said Rosalind; "but I believe now that I was
mistaken."</p>
<p>"Thank Heaven!" cried the young man fervently. "This is a great relief,
Rosalind, I assure you. I believe now I can pretty well guess what it is
you do fear; and though it is provoking enough, it cannot greatly
signify. We shall soon cure her of any fit of evangelicalism with which
the vicar is likely to infect her."</p>
<p>"Heaven grant it!" exclaimed Rosalind, uttering a fervent ejaculation in
her turn.</p>
<p>"Never doubt it, Miss Torrington. I have heard a great deal about this
Cartwright at Oxford. He is a Cambridge man, by the way, and there are
lots of men there who think him quite an apostle. But the thing does not
take at Oxford, and I assure you he is famously quizzed. But the best of
the joke is, that his son was within an ace of being expelled for
performing more outrageous feats in the larking line than any man in the
university; and in fact he must have been rusticated, had not his pious
father taken him home before the business got wind, <i>to prepare him
privately for his degree</i>. They say he is the greatest Pickle in Oxford;
and that, spite of the new light, his father is such an ass as to
believe that all this is ordained only to make his election more
glorious."</p>
<p>"For his election, Mr. Mowbray, I certainly do not care much; but for
your sister—though I am aware that at her age there may be very
reasonable hope that the pernicious opinions she is now imbibing may be
hereafter removed, yet I am very strongly persuaded that if you were
quite aware of the sort of influence used to convert her to Mr.
Cartwright's Calvinistic tenets, you would not only disapprove it, but
use very effectual measures to put her quite out of his way."</p>
<p>"Indeed!—I confess this appears to me very unnecessary. Surely the best
mode of working upon so pure a mind as Fanny's is to reason with her,
and to show her that by listening to those pernicious rhapsodies she is
in fact withdrawing herself from the church of her fathers; but I think
this may be done without sending her out of Mr. Cartwright's way."</p>
<p>"Well," replied Rosalind very meekly, "now you are here, I am quite sure
that you will do every thing that is right and proper. Mrs. Mowbray
cannot be much longer absent; and when she returns, you will perhaps
have some conversation with her upon the subject."</p>
<p>"Certainly.—And so Sir Gilbert has absolutely refused to act as
executor?"</p>
<p>"He has indeed, and spite of the most earnest entreaties from Helen.
Whatever mischief happens, I shall always think he is answerable for it;
for his refusal to act threw your mother at once upon seeking counsel
from Mr. Cartwright, as to what it was necessary for her to do; and from
that hour the house has never been free from him for a single day."</p>
<p>"Provoking obstinacy!" replied Mowbray: "yet after all, Rosalind, the
worst mischief, as you call it, that can happen, is our not being on
such pleasant terms with them as we used to be. And the colonel is at
home too; I must and will see him, let the old man be as cross as he
will.—But where is your little saint? you don't keep her locked up, I
hope, Rosalind? And where is this Miss of the new birth that you told me
of?"</p>
<p>Young Mowbray threw a melancholy glance round the empty room as he
spoke, and the kind-hearted Rosalind understood his feelings and truly
pitied him. How different was this return home from any other he had
ever made!</p>
<p>"The room looks desolate—does it not, Mr. Mowbray?—Even I feel it so.
I will go and let Fanny know you are here; but what reason shall I
assign for your return?"</p>
<p>"None at all, Miss Torrington. The whim took me, and I am here. Things
are so much better than I expected, that I shall probably be back again
in a day or two; but I must contrive to see young Harrington."</p>
<p>Rosalind left the room, heartily glad that Fanny's brother was near her,
but not without some feeling of mortification at the little importance
he appeared to attach to the information she had given him.</p>
<p>A few short weeks before, Rosalind would have entered Fanny's room with
as much freedom as her own; but the schism which has unhappily entered
so many English houses under the semblance of superior piety was rapidly
doing its work at Mowbray Park; and the true friend, the familiar
companion, the faithful counsellor, stood upon the threshold, and
ventured not to enter till she had announced her approach by a knock at
the dressing-room door.</p>
<p>"Come in," was uttered in a gentle and almost plaintive voice by Fanny.</p>
<p>Miss Torrington entered, and, to her great astonishment, saw Mr.
Cartwright seated beside Fanny, a large Bible lying open on the table
before them.</p>
<p>She looked at them for one moment without speaking. The vicar spread his
open hand upon the volume, as if to point out the cause of his being
there; and as his other hand covered the lower part of his face the
expression of his countenance was concealed.</p>
<p>Fanny coloured violently,—and the more so, perhaps, because she was
conscious that her appearance was considerably changed since she met
Miss Torrington at breakfast. All her beautiful curls had been carefully
straightened by the application of a wet sponge; and her hair was now
entirely removed from her forehead, and plastered down behind her poor
little distorted ears as closely as possible.</p>
<p>Never was metamorphosis more complete. Beautiful as her features were,
the lovely picture which Fanny's face used to present to the eye
required her bright waving locks to complete its charm; and without them
she looked more like a Chinese beauty on a japan skreen, than like
herself.</p>
<p>Something approaching to a smile passed over Rosalind's features, which
the more readily found place there, perhaps, from the belief that
Charles's arrival would soon set her ringlets curling again.</p>
<p>"Fanny, your brother is come," said she, "and he is waiting for you in
the drawing-room."</p>
<p>"Charles?" cried Fanny, forgetting for a moment her new character; and
hastily rising she had almost quitted the room, when she recollected
herself, and turning back, said,</p>
<p>"You will come too, to see Charles, Mr. Cartwright?"</p>
<p>"I will come, as usual, this evening, my dear child," said he, with the
appearance of great composure; "but I will not break in upon him now.
Was his return expected?" he added carelessly, as he took up his hat;
and as he spoke Rosalind thought that his eye glanced towards her.</p>
<p>"No indeed!" replied Fanny: "I never was more surprised. Did he say,
Rosalind, what it was brought him home?"</p>
<p>"I asked him to state his reason for it," replied Miss Torrington, "and
he told me he could assign nothing but whim."</p>
<p>Rosalind looked in the face of the vicar as she said this, and she
perceived a slight, but to her perfectly perceptible, change in its
expression. He was evidently relieved from some uneasy feeling or
suspicion by what she had said.</p>
<p>"Go to your brother, my dear child; let me not detain you from so happy
a meeting for a moment."</p>
<p>Fanny again prepared to leave the room; but as she did so, her eye
chanced to rest upon her own figure reflected from a mirror above the
chimney-piece. She raised her hand almost involuntarily to her hair.</p>
<p>"Will not Charles think me looking very strangely?" said she, turning
towards Mr. Cartwright with a blushing cheek and very bashful eye.</p>
<p>He whispered something in her ear in reply, which heightened her blush,
and induced her to answer with great earnestness, "Oh no!" and, without
farther doubt or delay, she ran down stairs. Miss Torrington followed
her, not thinking it necessary to take any leave of the vicar, who
gently found his way down stairs, and out of the house, as he had found
his way into it, without troubling any servant whatever.</p>
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