<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIIC" id="CHAPTER_XIIC"></SPAN>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
<h3>MR. CORBOLD'S ADVENTURES.</h3>
<p>It was some time before Mr. Stephen Corbold recovered sufficiently from
the effects of Helen's libation to enable him to see where he was, or to
perceive that where he was, she was not. The ceremony had, indeed been a
painful one; but it at least did him the good service of dispelling the
effects of the wine he had taken; and after a few moments more of
winking and blinking, and wiping his smarting eyes, he descended the
stairs to seek his cousin, a soberer, if not a better man than when he
mounted them.</p>
<p>Every thing was at this time in full activity on the lawn. Above two
thousand people were assembled there, all more more than decently clad,
and presenting altogether a very striking spectacle. Those who before
dinner had been the company were now converted into spectators; many of
them accommodated with seats in the shade, from whence they watched the
chequered movements of the motley crowd. This cool and quiet position
was in every way beneficial to those who had been tempted to heat
themselves by drinking somewhat too freely of the vicar's wine. Among
these Mr. Corbold introduced himself: probably, more sober than any of
them,—except, perhaps, the vicar himself,—but bearing in his "altered
eye," and general discomfiture of aspect, more visible traces of
intemperance than any individual amongst them.</p>
<p>Mr. Cartwright rose to meet him with sensations of considerable alarm.
He fancied, from his appearance, that he was quite intoxicated, and
feared the utterance of some folly which might explain the cause of his
having absented himself more fully than was at all necessary.</p>
<p>This idea was by no means lessened when his cousin beckoned him from the
party amidst whom he sat, and gravely assured him that Miss Helen had
very nearly murdered him.</p>
<p>"Compose yourself, cousin Stephen—compose yourself. Where have you left
her?"</p>
<p>"Left her?—She left me, I tell you, blind, and almost suffocated. If
you don't wish to have the whole county set gossiping about Mrs.
Mowbray's will—your wife's will I mean,—you had better let me see that
vixen properly punished, cousin. As I live and breathe I will have
revenge somehow."</p>
<p>"You shall, you shall, Stephen," answered the vicar, endeavouring to
quiet him. "She shall be treated in any way that you like, only don't
make a noise now."</p>
<p>"Will you give orders that she shall be confined to her room and kept on
bread and water?"</p>
<p>"To be sure I will, if you desire it. She shall be locked up as soon as
the place is cleared: and you shall see it done, Stephen, if you will
only step in, and take a nap in my library to recover yourself a
little."</p>
<p>This proposal was, on the whole, a very tempting one; for Mr. Stephen
Corbold's head ached with considerable violence, not to mention that he
had hardly yet recovered his eyesight, and was otherwise very ill at
ease. So, without arguing the matter farther, he retreated to the
comfortable station recommended to him, and soon fell into a slumber
that lasted till the whole business of the day, prayers, blessing, and
all, were done and over, and the place as solitary and forsaken as if no
Serious Fancy Fair, no Israelitish missionary, and no Fababo had ever
been heard of.</p>
<p>It was then that the Vicar of Wrexhill remembered his cousin Stephen.
And it was then that Fanny Mowbray, looking round the room in which the
whole family was assembled, said, "Where is Helen?"</p>
<p>This question, which, as it seemed, no one could answer, and the
recollection of his library guest, coming at one and the same moment
across him, made Mr. Cartwright start. Poor man! He was most heartily
fatigued and worn out by the honours, glories, and hospitalities of the
day, and wished for nothing on earth so much as soda-water and a
bed-room bougie. But he felt that his labours were not over, though not
exactly aware how much remained to be done.</p>
<p>Having furnished himself with a light, and commanded that Miss Mowbray
should be desired to meet him in the library, he repaired immediately to
that room, where he found, as he expected, his serious and legal
relative as fast asleep in his favourite arm-chair, as he himself wished
to be in his bed.</p>
<p>The ceremony of awaking him was soon performed; and when he once more
stood on his feet, and had rubbed his still suffering eyes sufficiently
to perceive where he was, the vicar addressed him thus, in the most
gentle voice imaginable, hoping to soothe and get rid of him.</p>
<p>"Well, cousin Stephen, you have had a nice nap; and now you had better
go home. It is getting quite late. Good night, Stephen."</p>
<p>"What have you done with that murderous vixen, cousin Cartwright? I
won't stir till I know you have locked her up, as you promised to do."</p>
<p>"I have ordered her to come here, Stephen, that you may yourself hear
what I mean to say to her."</p>
<p>"I don't want to see her, cousin Cartwright," replied the attorney, in a
tone that betokened as much fear as dislike; "I only want to have her
punished."</p>
<p>"And punished she shall be, depend upon that; but if you really do not
wish to see her, cousin Stephen, you had better be off at once, for I
expect her here every moment. Come along—I will walk with you myself as
far as the lodge."</p>
<p>Whatever vengeance he wished executed on Helen, that he had no
inclination to be present at it himself, was proved by the alacrity with
which the attorney acceded to this proposal.</p>
<p>"Only let me get my hat,—it's quite a new hat,—and I'll come with you
this moment, cousin Cartwright."</p>
<p>The hat was found, and the two serious gentlemen set off together across
the lawn; from that point, to within a few yards of the lodge, the
lawyer entertained the minister with such an account of Helen's attack
upon him, as convinced the latter, that it would be quite necessary, in
his parental character, to exercise such a degree of authority as might
speedily bring the rebellious young lady to reason. It was already as
dark as a fine night in July ever is, and the fine large oaks which in
many places overhung the road, rendered some spots particularly sombre.
At one of these, and just before they arrived at the Park gates, they
heard the steps of a man whom they appeared to be overtaking.</p>
<p>"Who can this loiterer be?" said Mr. Cartwright, "My people had orders
to see that the grounds were cleared, and all the gates locked before
this time."</p>
<p>"We shall be able to see him when we get beyond these trees," replied
Corbold.</p>
<p>He was quite right: a few steps farther brought them to an open space,
and there, as if waiting for them, stood the intruder, as still and
silent as if he had been a statue.</p>
<p>"We are two to one, however," observed the attorney, "but he is a
monstrous tall fellow."</p>
<p>The next breath that issued from the lips of the vicar's cousin came not
in words, but in a most dismal, hideous, and prolonged yell; for the
"tall fellow" had seized him by the collar with one hand, while with the
other he brandished and applied a huge horsewhip to his shoulders with
such energy, activity, and perseverance, that his howling startled the
dull ear of night, as well as the frightened organs of his astonished
kinsman. Though Mr. Cartwright had not the slightest intention of doing
so unclerical a thing as interfering in the fray, he drew a little
nearer to it than was quite prudent, from a natural curiosity to know
who the bold mortal was who dared thus belabour his cousin.</p>
<p>The light was quite sufficient to enable him to discern Colonel
Harrington in the aggressor; but it should seem that it was not equally
effective to the eyes of that gentleman himself, or he would hardly have
ventured to permit a few apparently random, but very sharp cuts to visit
the reverend shoulders of the owner of the soil on which he stood. This
prodigious impiety, however, certainly took place, upon which the vicar,
very properly anxious to put the earliest possible stop to such indecent
proceedings, ran off as fast as his legs could carry him, and in about
half an hour returned again with eight stout servingmen, armed with
bludgeons, broom-sticks, and the great kitchen-poker.</p>
<p>That he had not, in his agitation, forgotten the spot on which he had
left his unfortunate cousin, was quickly made manifest to the ears of
all who accompanied him; for dismal groans made themselves heard exactly
from the place where the operation had been performed, and on
examination the bruised body of Mr. Stephen Corbold was found extended
on the grass, apparently too stiff and sore to have much power of
movement left.</p>
<p>Even during the hurried interval which Mr. Cartwright spent in his house
while waiting for the gathering together of his host, he had found time
to inquire of his wife if she had seen Helen, and being told in reply
that she was nowhere to be found, the extremely disagreeable truth
immediately suggested itself to him. In one short, sharp moment he
remembered Colonel Harrington's suppressed letter, Corbold's permitted
outrage, Helen's escape, and the degrading lash that had so vigorously
saluted his own shoulders.</p>
<p>How was it possible, that being, as he most undoubtedly was, the lord
and master of Cartwright Park, and all the wealth annexed thereto, and
holding his lady's comprehensive will, signed, sealed, and duly
executed, in his own possession,—how could it be that he should feel so
utterly beat down, overpowered, and degraded?</p>
<p>The bitter pang, however, lasted but a moment. What was the gossip of an
hour, or a day, when set against the solid happiness of wealth? This was
still his, to have and to hold; and after one little pinch at his heart,
as he thought of the longed-for mitre, he struggled manfully to despise
the paltry annoyance, and hastened, with all the speed he could make,
to the rescue of his cousin, and, if Heaven so willed, to inflict
vengeance, even unto death, upon his enemy.</p>
<p>Heaven, however, did not so will; Colonel Harrington having given the
attorney exactly the quantum of flogging he intended, stuck his card,
with his name and address both in town and country, into the groaning
man's pocket, laid him down very gently on the grass, and departed.</p>
<p>The disposal of the flogged gentleman's person was now taken into
consideration. Some cousins, perhaps, might have thought that a bed at
Cartwright Park would have been the best thing to propose for it; but it
appeared that such was not the opinion of Mr. Cartwright; for having
quickly ascertained the situation of affairs, and assured himself that
Colonel Harrington was no longer within his reach, he instantly ordered
the coachman and stable-boy, who were among his suite, to return with
all possible haste to the house, and prepare a carriage instantly to
take his ill-used cousin home.</p>
<p>"Take me to your house, cousin!" murmured the smarting man, "I shall die
if you send me to Wrexhill!" But Mr. Cartwright did not happen to hear
him; and indeed his time and attention were wholly engrossed till the
carriage arrived, and his kinsman lifted into it, by a strict
examination of his people at the lodge, as to when Colonel Harrington
had entered the Park, and whether they were at all aware that he was
still lurking there.</p>
<p>To all which inquiries he of course received for answer,—"Law! your
honour, upon such a day as this, how was any body to mark who went in,
or who went out of the Park?"</p>
<p>Mr. Stephen Corbold was therefore safely conveyed to his own dwelling in
Wrexhill; and the vicar returned to tell his lady, that from
circumstances which had transpired, there could be no doubt that her
daughter Helen had eloped with Colonel Harrington.</p>
<p>"On my word, my dearest Cartwright, I hardly know how to be sorry for
it. William Harrington would be an excellent match for any woman. They
were very fond of each other when they were children; and Helen has been
so miserable and moping ever since I married, that it has been quite a
misery to see her. I thought she was in love with your cousin? However,
I suppose she has changed her mind again, and that it was a fit of
jealousy on the part of Harrington that made him attack poor Mr.
Corbold. But we can't help it, you know. I am tired to death, my dear
Cartwright;—do not let us stay up any longer talking about it; I dare
say Helen will be very happy."</p>
<p>So ended the eventful day of the Fababo Fancy Fair.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>It is not necessary to inquire what were the reports, or what the
gossipings to which this day's events gave rise. The papers announced
that a very large sum had been collected for the interesting missionary;
and all the Hampshire world soon said that Colonel Harrington was going
to be married to Miss Mowbray. But the attention of the Park family
themselves was at this time greatly engrossed by Henrietta. She had long
been in a very delicate state of health, but, probably from some cold
caught at the late f�te, her symptoms had become rapidly more alarming;
she was soon confined to her bed, and the most skilful physician in the
county gave it as his opinion that she could not live many weeks.</p>
<p>Rosalind was indefatigable in her attentions to her; and when the awful
judgment of the physician was made known to her, she at once resolved
that Henrietta should be made acquainted with it, in the hope that the
prospect of approaching dissolution might soften her heart and lead her
to seek and receive the only consolation of which such a situation
admits.</p>
<p>Rosalind was too truly attached to Helen not to rejoice at the
unexpected step she had taken, though her surprise at it was unbounded.
She knew Helen's character well, she knew too how implicitly they had
trusted each other; and that this known, trusted and trusting friend
should have eloped without having even hinted to her that Colonel
Harrington had confessed the love which in happier moments she owned she
hoped he felt, was inconceivable! Still it was true. And though no line
of explanation had ever been permitted to reach her, still she rejoiced;
and with all the trusting confidence of her nature believed that
whatever appeared wrong or unkind, would some day or other be explained.</p>
<p>She now rejoiced yet more at Helen's absence. Henrietta had never
admitted her even to the uncertain and capricious degree of friendship
which she had bestowed on herself; and had she been still at the Park,
it would have been difficult for Rosalind to have devoted herself so
wholly to the poor sufferer as she now did. Mrs. Cartwright's situation
prevented her from being much in the room. Fanny was still less there.
She and Henrietta had never loved each other. At first Fanny disliked
her because it was easy to perceive that she was neither beloved nor
approved by Mr. Cartwright; and Henrietta despised her in return for the
easy weakness with which she had become her father's convert. So that,
in this awful hour, Rosalind was the only friend who drew near her with
affection; and most tender and constant was the care she bestowed upon
her.</p>
<p>To the communication which she so much dreaded to make, though she
considered it her duty to do it, Henrietta only replied by assuring her
that for more than a year she had been fully aware that death was
rapidly approaching her. "Alas! how lightly have I listened to you, dear
Henrietta, when you have said this!" replied the weeping Rosalind. "But
the reason, dear friend, why I did not, why I could not believe you were
in earnest, was——"</p>
<p>"Speak fearlessly, dear Rosalind——was—that you thought I was unfit to
die. But so are many, Rosalind, who yet must go when nature bids them."</p>
<p>"But now, now Henrietta! Oh! tell me that you do not still doubt all
things—doubt even the being of the eternal power that made you; tell
me, I beseech you, that you have read and thought on these things since
that dreadful day that I overheard you make the confession to Mr.
Hetherington which has rung in my ears ever since."</p>
<p>"Yes, Rosalind, I have read, and I have thought—but not now only, my
kind friend. My short life, Rosalind, has been but one series of
perturbed thinking—my brain has been racked by it. But I have gained
nothing."</p>
<p>"I have no power, Henrietta, no learning, no strength of reason to
remove the doubts that so fearfully darken these your last hours. Yet
what would I not give that you could taste the ineffable comfort of
perfect hope and perfect faith!"</p>
<p>"Perfect faith!" repeated Henrietta impatiently—"why do you have
recourse to the slang I hate? Teach me to hope—oh! that you could! but
let me not hear the hateful words, the false use of which has been my
destruction."</p>
<p>"Henrietta! dearest Henrietta! will you consent to see a clergyman who
can speak to you with the authority of age and wisdom?"</p>
<p>"A clergyman?" she replied, scoffingly. "Perhaps you will propose that I
should see the Reverend Mr. Cartwright?"</p>
<p>"No, no. You do not think that it is such as him I would wish to send to
you."</p>
<p>"Yet he is my father, Miss Torrington. And there it is, you see—there
lies the difficulty. Name a clergyman, and Mr. Cartwright seems to rise
before me. And shall I use my dying breath to say that I would hear with
reverence what such as he could say? Leave me in peace, Rosalind. Let me
sleep, I tell you. If there be a God, he will pity me!"</p>
<p>There was so much feverish excitement in her manner of speaking, that
Rosalind, terrified lest she might hasten the hour she so earnestly
wished to retard, in the hope that light might break upon that darkness
which it was so terrible to witness, forbore to answer her, and tenderly
arranging her pillows under her head, kissed her pale cheek and set
herself down behind the curtain, in the place that she now almost
constantly occupied.</p>
<p>After a moment, however, Henrietta spoke again, but it was gently and
calmly. "Leave me, my most kind Rosalind," said she! "leave me for an
hour or two: you must want the fresh air, and I want perfect solitude.
Rosalind, I will think. Let no one come to me till I ring my bell. Go,
my dear friend!"</p>
<p>Rosalind, greatly affected by the changed voice and manner, pressed to
her lips the emaciated hand held out to her, and retired.</p>
<p>Rosalind did indeed require the refreshment of air and exercise, from
which she had almost wholly debarred herself for above a week; and such
refreshment will certainly do more towards restoring the exhausted
strength, both to body and mind, than any other remedy which can be
devised. Yet, though it acts well, and almost infallibly, on the system,
the benefit does not at once reach the consciousness of the weary
watcher. Rosalind, as she slowly dragged her languid steps along, felt
none of the pleasurable effects of the sweet breeze that blew in her
face, for she was not aware of it. Her heart and soul were still in the
chamber of the dying Henrietta; and though greatly too well taught to
believe that a few feverish moments of changed opinions can put the
passing spirit into a state of fitness for heaven, still she clung to
the hope of hearing the unhappy girl avow better thoughts and feelings
than those which had so long brooded over her misguided spirit. Fully
occupied with these meditations, Rosalind walked for an hour, almost
mechanically, through the shrubberies, unmindful of the sweet voice of
nature that greeted her in the songs of birds and in the breath of
flowers, and thinking only of what she might say or do to make the light
of truth send one cheering ray upon the last hours of her unhappy
friend.</p>
<p>When she re-entered the house, her maid, who was watching for her, said
that Miss Cartwright had rung her bell, and requested to know when she
returned.</p>
<p>Blaming herself for her long absence, Rosalind hastened to the sick
room, and found Henrietta seated upright in her bed, with rather more
animation and brightness in her eyes than she wished to see, for she
thought it betokened fever; but her voice and manner were gentle and
composed.</p>
<p>"Your words have not fallen to the ground, my most kind Rosalind," said
she; "and if it be possible, during the short period that remains for me
to live, that I should attain a clearer knowledge of what I am than I
have hitherto possessed, I shall welcome it most gladly. But of all the
attributes with which the beautiful idea that you call God is invested,
the only one that I conceive it possible for mortals to share with Him,
is <span class="smcap">Truth</span>. Power, alas! we have none—of knowledge very little, of wisdom
less—and as to perfect goodness, perfect benevolence, we are not framed
to feel it. But <span class="smcap">Truth</span>, clear pure, beautiful, and bright, we can know
and we can feel! It can make a part of us, even as it makes a part of
Him; and by this only, as it seems to me, can we approach Him, touch
Him, and, as it were be part of Him. For truth in a mortal, Rosalind, if
it exist at all, is perfect as in a God. It is therefore, my dear
friend, that though I feel, ay, and have always felt, that there may be
an existing cause, endowed with will, productive of all the wonders of
creation—and though this wondrous existence, if it be! deserves all
worship—and though I (more sinned against than sinning) have offered
none, yet still I feel that I may be forgiven. If I have kept far off
from him my worship and my thoughts, at least I never have approached
him with falsehood on my tongue or in my heart; and, to my judgment,
this is the only crime relating to our intercourse with God at which we
need to tremble. If such a Being be, can our blundering theories so
touch his greatness that he should deign to frown upon us for them? No,
no, no! <span class="smcap">We cannot know Him;</span> and those who guess the nearest, can guess
but very darkly. But truth and falsehood are as much within the compass
of man's nature as of God's, and therefore are they, as concerning Him,
the only virtue and the only sin."</p>
<p>Henrietta spoke these words with her eyes closed, slowly and
deliberately, as if her mind, like a cloud that</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">——"Turns forth its silver lining to the night,"<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>sought in the midst of darkness to show the faint gleam within.</p>
<p>But every word she uttered made Rosalind more deeply feel the necessity
of letting her hear the truths of religion from some one who had made
its laws the study of a holy life. She longed that she should hear with
more authority than she could lend to it, the voice of God himself, as
revealed to man in records enduring as the world;—but where was she to
seek such a one? As poor Henrietta had said, the name of a minister
could to her suggest no other image than that of her father;—and from
him she ever seemed to turn with horror.</p>
<p>Yet still Rosalind could not endure to abandon the hope that such a one
might be found, and only waited till Henrietta would promise to see him
before she took measures for the purpose. In answer to this request, the
dying girl replied "But my permission is not all that is necessary,
dearest Rosalind. What would my father say if you were fortunate enough
to obtain for me a visit from such a one as you describe? He would not
bear it. He would not admit his approach. I know he would not."</p>
<p>"Let me ask him, Henrietta."</p>
<p>"No!" cried the invalid with sudden energy, as if she had at that moment
conceived and decided on her line of conduct. "I will ask him myself!
This doubt, this darkness, this fearful mist that seems to hang about
me, is terrible. Why should I not feel hopeful and assured as you do?
Send to him, Rosalind—send to my father; and send too for his besotted
wife, and for the poor, weak, wavering Fanny. Send for them all.—But
don't you leave me, Rosalind. I have a strange, anxious fluttering at
my heart. It will be better when I have spoken to him."</p>
<p>Rosalind delayed not a moment to do her bidding. There was an inequality
in her manner that frightened her. She feared her time was short; and so
worded the summons she sent to Mr. Cartwright and his wife, that they
came instantly. Fanny entered the room nearly at the same moment; and it
was evident from their manner that they all thought they were come to
receive her last farewell.</p>
<p>The feeble Henrietta asked Rosalind so to arrange her pillows that she
might sit upright. Rosalind did so, and then kneeled down beside the
bed.</p>
<p>Mr. Cartwright stood with his back leaning against the bed-post, and his
eyes fixed on the ground; his wife entered leaning on his arm, and had
not quitted it; but for some reason or other, Henrietta, who rarely took
notice of her in any way, now asked her to place herself in a chair
beside her bed.</p>
<p>"You had better sit," said she. "You are not very strong in any way."</p>
<p>Fanny stood apart, and alone; and having looked round upon each of them,
the dying girl fixed her eyes upon her father, and thus addressed him,
"I have heard you say—a thousand times perhaps—that religion was the
business of your life; and for that reason, sir, its very name hath
become abhorrent to me. Oh, father!—you have much to answer for! I
would have given my own right hand to believe in a good, a merciful, a
forgiving God!—and I turned my young eyes to you. You told me that few
could be saved, and that it was not what I deemed innocence could save
me. You told me too, that I was in danger, but that you were safe. You
told me that Heaven had set its seal upon you. And then I watched
you—oh, how earnestly!—I spied out all your ways!—I found fraud,
pride, impurity, and falsehood, mix with your deeds through every day
you lived! Yet still you said that Heaven had set its seal upon
you,—that your immortal soul was safe,—that happiness eternal was your
predestined doom. I listened to you as a child listens to a father; not
a word was lost; no, nor an action either. And then it was, father, that
I became an unbeliever! an hardened infidel! a daring atheist! If it
were true that God had chosen you, then was it true my soul rejected
him!—Yet Rosalind, dear Rosalind, do not hate me,—do not shudder at my
words. It was because I found no truth in him, that I could not, would
not believe his doctrine true. But you—good, kind, and innocent,—I
believe you."</p>
<p>The harsh and awful accents of her voice changed into a tone of the
deepest tenderness as she continued to address Rosalind. "When did you
ever lie? You tell me there is a God, and I may trust you. You do not
prate of grace, and then labour to corrupt the innocence that looks into
your face to ask the way to Heaven. You do not bid me wear a mask of
feigned assurance of salvation; nor will you bind my hands, nor keep me
from the light of day, when I refuse to kneel, and sigh, and play the
hypocrite. You will not bid me lie, and tell me that so only I can find
the way to Heaven. You will not——"</p>
<p>With slow and stealthy pace Mr. Cartwright at this moment began to creep
from his station and approach the door. But Henrietta, whose eyes were
half closed—for the lashes seemed heavy with tears—instantly opened
them, and cried aloud, "Stay! I have a right to bid you.—Father!—This
good girl is kind and innocent; but she is young and very
ignorant.—What can she know of Heaven? Is there—speak truly, these are
the last words you will ever utter to me—is there within our reach some
pious, holy, humble man of God,—such as I have read of,—but no saint,
no saint? Father! is there such a one?—and may he come and pray with
me?"</p>
<p>Every eye in the room was fixed on Mr. Cartwright, as his daughter made
the appeal. For some moments he did not answer; but upon Henrietta's
repeating loudly, and almost wildly, "May he come?" he answered in a
low, husky voice. "This is mere bravado! You have lived a scoffing
infidel,—and a scoffing infidel will you die. If, indeed, you wished
for prayer and pardon, you would turn to me for it.—My curate may pray
with her,—but none else."</p>
<p>And with these words he turned away without looking at her, and quitted
the room.</p>
<p>The silence of death seemed already to have settled on the chamber;
which was broken, at length, by the deep sobbings of the unfortunate
Mrs. Cartwright.</p>
<p>"Poor soul!" said Henrietta, turning towards her. "She is not wholly
bad, but more unfit to judge and act than a baby:—for they can do
nothing, and she, alas! can do much dreadful mischief. With my dying
breath, unhappy victim of a most finished hypocrite, I do conjure you
not to wrong your children, to enrich him. Poor soul!—He loves her not;
no not even so much as, silly as she is, she well deserves from him. He
will have a child born to him here, and another at Gloucester, much at
the same time. Do not ruin your poor helpless children for him!"</p>
<p>Mrs. Cartwright sat with her eyes immoveably fixed on those of
Henrietta, even after she had ceased to speak: she sighed deeply, but
uttered no syllable in reply.</p>
<p>"Take her away, Rosalind. I have no more to say to her. And poor Fanny
too. Heaven bless you, Fanny!—you may go now, my dear. All go, but
Rosalind."</p>
<p>Her commands were instantly obeyed, and once more the two strangely
matched friends were left alone together.</p>
<p>"It is too late now, my Rosalind! My strength is failing fast. I can
hardly see your sweet kind eyes, dear Rosalind!—but I can hear. Read to
me, dearest;—quick, open the Bible that you left for me:—open it where
the man says to Paul, 'Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian.'"</p>
<p>Rosalind opened the precious volume, and read to her, slowly and
distinctly, that exquisite passage of heaven-taught eloquence, which
produced in reply the words she had quoted.</p>
<p>Henrietta's eyes were closed; but now and then a gentle pressure of the
hand she held in hers persuaded Rosalind that she heard and understood
each powerful word of that majestic pleading.</p>
<p>When she had reached, and read the words Henrietta had quoted, she
paused, and in a moment afterwards the now expiring girl uttered in
broken accents, "Yes,—stop there. It has reached my soul—from your
lips only, Rosalind!"</p>
<p>Then suddenly her dying eyes opened, and fixed themselves on Rosalind;
she clasped her hands, as if in prayer, and then with a strong effort
pronounced these words, "Lord! I believe!—Help thou my unbelief!"</p>
<p>Her head sank on her breast. The breath that uttered these words was her
last.</p>
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