<h2><SPAN name="2HCH0016"></SPAN> CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
<p class="letter">
Men, like planets, have both a visible and an invisible history. The astronomer
threads the darkness with strict deduction, accounting so for every visible arc
in the wanderer’s orbit; and the narrator of human actions, if he did his
work with the same completeness, would have to thread the hidden pathways of
feeling and thought which lead up to every moment of action, and to those
moments of intense suffering which take the quality of action—like the
cry of Prometheus, whose chained anguish seems a greater energy than the sea
and sky he invokes and the deity he defies.</p>
<p>Deronda’s circumstances, indeed, had been exceptional. One moment had
been burned into his life as its chief epoch—a moment full of July
sunshine and large pink roses shedding their last petals on a grassy court
enclosed on three sides by a gothic cloister. Imagine him in such a scene: a
boy of thirteen, stretched prone on the grass where it was in shadow, his curly
head propped on his arms over a book, while his tutor, also reading, sat on a
camp-stool under shelter. Deronda’s book was Sismondi’s <i>History
of the Italian Republics</i>; the lad had a passion for history, eager to know
how time had been filled up since the flood, and how things were carried on in
the dull periods. Suddenly he let down his left arm and looked at his tutor,
saying in purest boyish tones,</p>
<p>“Mr. Fraser, how was it that the popes and cardinals always had so many
nephews?”</p>
<p>The tutor, an able young Scotchman, who acted as Sir Hugo Mallinger’s
secretary, roused rather unwillingly from his political economy, answered with
the clear-cut emphatic chant which makes a truth doubly telling in Scotch
utterance,</p>
<p>“Their own children were called nephews.”</p>
<p>“Why?” said Deronda.</p>
<p>“It was just for the propriety of the thing; because, as you know very
well, priests don’t marry, and the children were illegitimate.”</p>
<p>Mr. Fraser, thrusting out his lower lip and making his chant of the last word
the more emphatic for a little impatience at being interrupted, had already
turned his eyes on his book again, while Deronda, as if something had stung
him, started up in a sitting attitude with his back to the tutor.</p>
<p>He had always called Sir Hugo Mallinger his uncle, and when it once occurred to
him to ask about his father and mother, the baronet had answered, “You
lost your father and mother when you were quite a little one; that is why I
take care of you.” Daniel then straining to discern something in that
early twilight, had a dim sense of having been kissed very much, and surrounded
by thin, cloudy, scented drapery, till his fingers caught in something hard,
which hurt him, and he began to cry. Every other memory he had was of the
little world in which he still lived. And at that time he did not mind about
learning more, for he was too fond of Sir Hugo to be sorry for the loss of
unknown parents. Life was very delightful to the lad, with an uncle who was
always indulgent and cheerful—a fine man in the bright noon of life, whom
Daniel thought absolutely perfect, and whose place was one of the finest in
England, at once historical, romantic, and home-like: a picturesque
architectural outgrowth from an abbey, which had still remnants of the old
monastic trunk. Diplow lay in another county, and was a comparatively landless
place which had come into the family from a rich lawyer on the female side who
wore the perruque of the restoration; whereas the Mallingers had the grant of
Monk’s Topping under Henry the Eighth, and ages before had held the
neighboring lands of King’s Topping, tracing indeed their origin to a
certain Hugues le Malingre, who came in with the Conqueror—and also
apparently with a sickly complexion which had been happily corrected in his
descendants. Two rows of these descendants, direct and collateral, females of
the male line, and males of the female, looked down in the gallery over the
cloisters on the nephew Daniel as he walked there: men in armor with pointed
beards and arched eyebrows, pinched ladies in hoops and ruffs with no face to
speak of; grave-looking men in black velvet and stuffed hips, and fair,
frightened women holding little boys by the hand; smiling politicians in
magnificent perruques, and ladies of the prize-animal kind, with rosebud mouths
and full eyelids, according to Lely; then a generation whose faces were revised
and embellished in the taste of Kneller; and so on through refined editions of
the family types in the time of Reynolds and Romney, till the line ended with
Sir Hugo and his younger brother Henleigh. This last had married Miss
Grandcourt, and taken her name along with her estates, thus making a junction
between two equally old families, impaling the three Saracens’ heads
proper and three bezants of the one with the tower and falcons <i>argent</i> of
the other, and, as it happened, uniting their highest advantages in the
prospects of that Henleigh Mallinger Grandcourt who is at present more of an
acquaintance to us than either Sir Hugo or his nephew Daniel Deronda.</p>
<p>In Sir Hugo’s youthful portrait with rolled collar and high cravat, Sir
Thomas Lawrence had done justice to the agreeable alacrity of expression and
sanguine temperament still to be seen in the original, but had done something
more than justice in slightly lengthening the nose, which was in reality
shorter than might have been expected in a Mallinger. Happily the appropriate
nose of the family reappeared in his younger brother, and was to be seen in all
its refined regularity in his nephew Mallinger Grandcourt. But in the nephew
Daniel Deronda the family faces of various types, seen on the walls of the
gallery, found no reflex. Still he was handsomer than any of them, and when he
was thirteen might have served as model for any painter who wanted to image the
most memorable of boys: you could hardly have seen his face thoroughly meeting
yours without believing that human creatures had done nobly in times past, and
might do more nobly in time to come. The finest childlike faces have this
consecrating power, and make us shudder anew at all the grossness and
basely-wrought griefs of the world, lest they should enter here and defile.</p>
<p>But at this moment on the grass among the rose-petals, Daniel Deronda was
making a first acquaintance with those griefs. A new idea had entered his mind,
and was beginning to change the aspect of his habitual feelings as happy
careless voyagers are changed with the sky suddenly threatened and the thought
of danger arises. He sat perfectly still with his back to the tutor, while his
face expressed rapid inward transition. The deep blush, which had come when he
first started up, gradually subsided; but his features kept that indescribable
look of subdued activity which often accompanies a new mental survey of
familiar facts. He had not lived with other boys, and his mind showed the same
blending of child’s ignorance with surprising knowledge which is oftener
seen in bright girls. Having read Shakespeare as well as a great deal of
history, he could have talked with the wisdom of a bookish child about men who
were born out of wedlock and were held unfortunate in consequence, being under
disadvantages which required them to be a sort of heroes if they were to work
themselves up to an equal standing with their legally born brothers. But he had
never brought such knowledge into any association with his own lot, which had
been too easy for him ever to think about it—until this moment when there
had darted into his mind with the magic of quick comparison, the possibility
that here was the secret of his own birth, and that the man whom he called
uncle was really his father. Some children, even younger than Daniel, have
known the first arrival of care, like an ominous irremovable guest in their
tender lives, on the discovery that their parents, whom they had imagined able
to buy everything, were poor and in hard money troubles. Daniel felt the
presence of a new guest who seemed to come with an enigmatic veiled face, and
to carry dimly-conjectured, dreaded revelations. The ardor which he had given
to the imaginary world in his books suddenly rushed toward his own history and
spent its pictorial energy there, explaining what he knew, representing the
unknown. The uncle whom he loved very dearly took the aspect of a father who
held secrets about him—who had done him a wrong—yes, a wrong: and
what had become of his mother, for whom he must have been taken
away?—Secrets about which he, Daniel, could never inquire; for to speak
or to be spoken to about these new thoughts seemed like falling flakes of fire
to his imagination. Those who have known an impassioned childhood will
understand this dread of utterance about any shame connected with their
parents. The impetuous advent of new images took possession of him with the
force of fact for the first time told, and left him no immediate power for the
reflection that he might be trembling at a fiction of his own. The terrible
sense of collision between a strong rush of feeling and the dread of its
betrayal, found relief at length in big slow tears, which fell without
restraint until the voice of Mr. Fraser was heard saying:</p>
<p>“Daniel, do you see that you are sitting on the bent pages of your
book?”</p>
<p>Daniel immediately moved the book without turning round, and after holding it
before him for an instant, rose with it and walked away into the open grounds,
where he could dry his tears unobserved. The first shock of suggestion past, he
could remember that he had no certainty how things really had been, and that he
had been making conjectures about his own history, as he had often made stories
about Pericles or Columbus, just to fill up the blanks before they became
famous. Only there came back certain facts which had an obstinate reality,
almost like the fragments of a bridge, telling you unmistakably how the arches
lay. And again there came a mood in which his conjectures seemed like a doubt
of religion, to be banished as an offense, and a mean prying after what he was
not meant to know; for there was hardly a delicacy of feeling this lad was not
capable of. But the summing-up of all his fluctuating experience at this epoch
was, that a secret impression had come to him which had given him something
like a new sense in relation to all the elements of his life. And the idea that
others probably knew things concerning which they did not choose to mention,
set up in him a premature reserve which helped to intensify his inward
experience. His ears open now to words which before that July day would have
passed by him unnoted; and round every trivial incident which imagination could
connect with his suspicions, a newly-roused set of feelings were ready to
cluster themselves.</p>
<p>One such incident a month later wrought itself deeply into his life. Daniel had
not only one of those thrilling boy voices which seem to bring an idyllic
heaven and earth before our eyes, but a fine musical instinct, and had early
made out accompaniments for himself on the piano, while he sang from memory.
Since then he had had some teaching, and Sir Hugo, who delighted in the boy,
used to ask for his music in the presence of guests. One morning after he had
been singing “Sweet Echo” before a small party of gentlemen whom
the rain had kept in the house, the baronet, passing from a smiling remark to
his next neighbor said:</p>
<p>“Come here, Dan!”</p>
<p>The boy came forward with unusual reluctance. He wore an embroidered holland
blouse which set off the rich coloring of his head and throat, and the
resistant gravity about his mouth and eyes as he was being smiled upon, made
their beauty the more impressive. Every one was admiring him.</p>
<p>“What do you say to being a great singer? Should you like to be adored by
the world and take the house by storm, like Mario and Tamberlik?”</p>
<p>Daniel reddened instantaneously, but there was a just perceptible interval
before he answered with angry decision,</p>
<p>“No; I should hate it!”</p>
<p>“Well, well, well!” said Sir Hugo, with surprised kindliness
intended to be soothing. But Daniel turned away quickly, left the room, and
going to his own chamber threw himself on the broad window-sill, which was a
favorite retreat of his when he had nothing particular to do. Here he could see
the rain gradually subsiding with gleams through the parting clouds which lit
up a great reach of the park, where the old oaks stood apart from each other,
and the bordering wood was pierced with a green glade which met the eastern
sky. This was a scene which had always been part of his home—part of the
dignified ease which had been a matter of course in his life. And his ardent
clinging nature had appropriated it all with affection. He knew a great deal of
what it was to be a gentleman by inheritance, and without thinking much about
himself—for he was a boy of active perceptions and easily forgot his own
existence in that of Robert Bruce—he had never supposed that he could be
shut out from such a lot, or have a very different part in the world from that
of the uncle who petted him. It is possible (though not greatly believed in at
present) to be fond of poverty and take it for a bride, to prefer scoured deal,
red quarries and whitewash for one’s private surroundings, to delight in
no splendor but what has open doors for the whole nation, and to glory in
having no privileges except such as nature insists on; and noblemen have been
known to run away from elaborate ease and the option of idleness, that they
might bind themselves for small pay to hard-handed labor. But Daniel’s
tastes were altogether in keeping with his nurture: his disposition was one in
which everyday scenes and habits beget not <i>ennui</i> or rebellion, but
delight, affection, aptitudes; and now the lad had been stung to the quick by
the idea that his uncle—perhaps his father—thought of a career for
him which was totally unlike his own, and which he knew very well was not
thought of among possible destinations for the sons of English gentlemen. He
had often stayed in London with Sir Hugo, who to indulge the boy’s ear
had carried him to the opera to hear the great tenors, so that the image of a
singer taking the house by storm was very vivid to him; but now, spite of his
musical gift, he set himself bitterly against the notion of being dressed up to
sing before all those fine people, who would not care about him except as a
wonderful toy. That Sir Hugo should have thought of him in that position for a
moment, seemed to Daniel an unmistakable proof that there was something about
his birth which threw him out from the class of gentlemen to which the baronet
belonged. Would it ever be mentioned to him? Would the time come when his uncle
would tell him everything? He shrank from the prospect: in his imagination he
preferred ignorance. If his father had been wicked—Daniel inwardly used
strong words, for he was feeling the injury done him as a maimed boy feels the
crushed limb which for others is merely reckoned in an average of
accidents—if his father had done any wrong, he wished it might never be
spoken of to him: it was already a cutting thought that such knowledge might be
in other minds. Was it in Mr. Fraser’s? probably not, else he would not
have spoken in that way about the pope’s nephews. Daniel fancied, as
older people do, that every one else’s consciousness was as active as his
own on a matter which was vital to him. Did Turvey the valet know?—and
old Mrs. French the housekeeper?—and Banks the bailiff, with whom he had
ridden about the farms on his pony?—And now there came back the
recollection of a day some years before when he was drinking Mrs. Banks’s
whey, and Banks said to his wife with a wink and a cunning laugh, “He
features the mother, eh?” At that time little Daniel had merely thought
that Banks made a silly face, as the common farming men often did, laughing at
what was not laughable; and he rather resented being winked at and talked of as
if he did not understand everything. But now that small incident became
information: it was to be reasoned on. How could he be like his mother and not
like his father? His mother must have been a Mallinger, if Sir Hugo were his
uncle. But no! His father might have been Sir Hugo’s brother and have
changed his name, as Mr. Henleigh Mallinger did when he married Miss
Grandcourt. But then, why had he never heard Sir Hugo speak of his brother
Deronda, as he spoke of his brother Grandcourt? Daniel had never before cared
about the family tree—only about that ancestor who had killed three
Saracens in one encounter. But now his mind turned to a cabinet of estate-maps
in the library, where he had once seen an illuminated parchment hanging out,
that Sir Hugo said was the family tree. The phrase was new and odd to
him—he was a little fellow then—hardly more than half his present
age—and he gave it no precise meaning. He knew more now and wished that
he could examine that parchment. He imagined that the cabinet was always
locked, and longed to try it. But here he checked himself. He might be seen:
and he would never bring himself near even a silent admission of the sore that
had opened in him.</p>
<p>It is in such experiences of a boy or girlhood, while elders are debating
whether most education lies in science or literature, that the main lines of
character are often laid down. If Daniel had been of a less ardently
affectionate nature, the reserve about himself and the supposition that others
had something to his disadvantage in their minds, might have turned into a
hard, proud antagonism. But inborn lovingness was strong enough to keep itself
level with resentment. There was hardly any creature in his habitual world that
he was not fond of; teasing them occasionally, of course—all except his
uncle, or “Nunc,” as Sir Hugo had taught him to say; for the
baronet was the reverse of a strait-laced man, and left his dignity to take
care of itself. Him Daniel loved in that deep-rooted filial way which makes
children always the happier for being in the same room with father or mother,
though their occupations may be quite apart. Sir Hugo’s watch-chain and
seals, his handwriting, his mode of smoking and of talking to his dogs and
horses, had all a rightness and charm about them to the boy which went along
with the happiness of morning and breakfast time. That Sir Hugo had always been
a Whig, made Tories and Radicals equally opponents of the truest and best; and
the books he had written were all seen under the same consecration of loving
belief which differenced what was his from what was not his, in spite of
general resemblance. Those writings were various, from volumes of travel in the
brilliant style, to articles on things in general, and pamphlets on political
crises; but to Daniel they were alike in having an unquestionable rightness by
which other people’s information could be tested.</p>
<p>Who cannot imagine the bitterness of a first suspicion that something in this
object of complete love was <i>not</i> quite right? Children demand that their
heroes should be fleckless, and easily believe them so: perhaps a first
discovery to the contrary is hardly a less revolutionary shock to a passionate
child than the threatened downfall of habitual beliefs which makes the world
seem to totter for us in maturer life.</p>
<p>But some time after this renewal of Daniel’s agitation it appeared that
Sir Hugo must have been making a merely playful experiment in his question
about the singing. He sent for Daniel into the library, and looking up from his
writing as the boy entered threw himself sideways in his arm-chair. “Ah,
Dan!” he said kindly, drawing one of the old embroidered stools close to
him. “Come and sit down here.”</p>
<p>Daniel obeyed, and Sir Hugo put a gentle hand on his shoulder, looking at him
affectionately.</p>
<p>“What is it, my boy? Have you heard anything that has put you out of
spirits lately?”</p>
<p>Daniel was determined not to let the tears come, but he could not speak.</p>
<p>“All changes are painful when people have been happy, you know,”
said Sir Hugo, lifting his hand from the boy’s shoulder to his dark curls
and rubbing them gently. “You can’t be educated exactly as I wish
you to be without our parting. And I think you will find a great deal to like
at school.”</p>
<p>This was not what Daniel expected, and was so far a relief, which gave him
spirit to answer,</p>
<p>“Am I to go to school?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I mean you to go to Eton. I wish you to have the education of an
English gentleman; and for that it is necessary that you should go to a public
school in preparation for the university: Cambridge I mean you to go to; it was
my own university.”</p>
<p>Daniel’s color came and went.</p>
<p>“What do you say, Sirrah?” said Sir Hugo, smiling.</p>
<p>“I should like to be a gentleman,” said Daniel, with firm
distinctness, “and go to school, if that is what a gentleman’s son
must do.”</p>
<p>Sir Hugo watched him silently for a few moments, thinking he understood now why
the lad had seemed angry at the notion of becoming a singer. Then he said
tenderly,</p>
<p>“And so you won’t mind about leaving your old Nunc?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I shall,” said Daniel, clasping Sir Hugo’s caressing
arm with both his hands. “But sha’n’t I come home and be with
you in the holidays?”</p>
<p>“Oh yes, generally,” said Sir Hugo. “But now I mean you to go
at once to a new tutor, to break the change for you before you go to
Eton.”</p>
<p>After this interview Daniel’s spirit rose again. He was meant to be a
gentleman, and in some unaccountable way it might be that his conjectures were
all wrong. The very keenness of the lad taught him to find comfort in his
ignorance. While he was busying his mind in the construction of possibilities,
it became plain to him that there must be possibilities of which he knew
nothing. He left off brooding, young joy and the spirit of adventure not being
easily quenched within him, and in the interval before his going away he sang
about the house, danced among the old servants, making them parting gifts, and
insisted many times to the groom on the care that was to be taken of the black
pony.</p>
<p>“Do you think I shall know much less than the other boys, Mr.
Fraser?” said Daniel. It was his bent to think that every stranger would
be surprised at his ignorance.</p>
<p>“There are dunces to be found everywhere,” said the judicious
Fraser. “You’ll not be the biggest; but you’ve not the
makings of a Porson in you, or a Leibnitz either.”</p>
<p>“I don’t want to be a Porson or a Leibnitz,” said Daniel.
“I would rather be a greater leader, like Pericles or Washington.”</p>
<p>“Ay, ay; you’ve a notion they did with little parsing, and less
algebra,” said Fraser. But in reality he thought his pupil a remarkable
lad, to whom one thing was as easy as another, if he had only a mind to it.</p>
<p>Things went on very well with Daniel in his new world, except that a boy with
whom he was at once inclined to strike up a close friendship talked to him a
great deal about his home and parents, and seemed to expect a like
expansiveness in return. Daniel immediately shrank into reserve, and this
experience remained a check on his naturally strong bent toward the formation
of intimate friendship. Every one, his tutor included, set him down as a
reserved boy, though he was so good-humored and unassuming, as well as quick,
both at study and sport, that nobody called his reserve disagreeable. Certainly
his face had a great deal to do with that favorable interpretation; but in this
instance the beauty of the closed lips told no falsehood.</p>
<p>A surprise that came to him before his first vacation strengthened the silent
consciousness of a grief within, which might be compared in some ways with
Byron’s susceptibility about his deformed foot. Sir Hugo wrote word that
he was married to Miss Raymond, a sweet lady, whom Daniel must remember having
seen. The event would make no difference about his spending the vacation at the
Abbey; he would find Lady Mallinger a new friend whom he would be sure to
love—and much more to the usual effect when a man, having done something
agreeable to himself, is disposed to congratulate others on his own good
fortune, and the deducible satisfactoriness of events in general.</p>
<p>Let Sir Hugo be partly excused until the grounds of his action can be more
fully known. The mistakes in his behavior to Deronda were due to that dullness
toward what may be going on in other minds, especially the minds of children,
which is among the commonest deficiencies, even in good-natured men like him,
when life has been generally easy to themselves, and their energies have been
quietly spent in feeling gratified. No one was better aware than he that Daniel
was generally suspected to be his own son. But he was pleased with that
suspicion; and his imagination had never once been troubled with the way in
which the boy himself might be affected, either then or in the future, by the
enigmatic aspect of his circumstances. He was as fond of him as could be, and
meant the best by him. And, considering the lightness with which the
preparation of young lives seem to lie on respectable consciences, Sir Hugo
Mallinger can hardly be held open to exceptional reproach. He had been a
bachelor till he was five-and-forty, had always been regarded as a fascinating
man of elegant tastes; what could be more natural, even according to the index
of language, than that he should have a beautiful boy like the little Deronda
to take care of? The mother might even, perhaps, be in the great
world—met with in Sir Hugo’s residence abroad. The only person to
feel any objection was the boy himself, who could not have been consulted. And
the boy’s objections had never been dreamed of by anybody but himself.</p>
<p>By the time Deronda was ready to go to Cambridge, Lady Mallinger had already
three daughters—charming babies, all three, but whose sex was announced
as a melancholy alternative, the offspring desired being a son; if Sir Hugo had
no son the succession must go to his nephew, Mallinger Grandcourt. Daniel no
longer held a wavering opinion about his own birth. His fuller knowledge had
tended to convince him that Sir Hugo was his father, and he conceived that the
baronet, since he never approached a communication on the subject, wished him
to have a tacit understanding of the fact, and to accept in silence what would
be generally considered more than the due love and nurture. Sir Hugo’s
marriage might certainly have been felt as a new ground of resentment by some
youths in Deronda’s position, and the timid Lady Mallinger with her
fast-coming little ones might have been images to scowl at, as likely to divert
much that was disposable in the feelings and possessions of the baronet from
one who felt his own claim to be prior. But hatred of innocent human obstacles
was a form of moral stupidity not in Deronda’s grain; even the
indignation which had long mingled itself with his affection for Sir Hugo took
the quality of pain rather than of temper; and as his mind ripened to the idea
of tolerance toward error, he habitually liked the idea with his own silent
grievances.</p>
<p>The sense of an entailed disadvantage—the deformed foot doubtfully hidden
by the shoe, makes a restlessly active spiritual yeast, and easily turns a
self-centered, unloving nature into an Ishmaelite. But in the rarer sort, who
presently see their own frustrated claim as one among a myriad, the inexorable
sorrow takes the form of fellowship and makes the imagination tender.
Deronda’s early-weakened susceptibility, charged at first with ready
indignation and resistant pride, had raised in him a premature reflection on
certain questions of life; it had given a bias to his conscience, a sympathy
with certain ills, and a tension of resolve in certain directions, who marked
him off from other youths much more than any talents he possessed.</p>
<p>One day near the end of the long vacation, when he had been making a tour in
the Rhineland with his Eton tutor, and was come for a farewell stay at the
Abbey before going to Cambridge, he said to Sir Hugo,</p>
<p>“What do you intend me to be, sir?” They were in the library, and
it was the fresh morning. Sir Hugo had called him in to read a letter from a
Cambridge Don who was to be interested in him; and since the baronet wore an
air at once business-like and leisurely, the moment seemed propitious for
entering on a grave subject which had never yet been thoroughly discussed.</p>
<p>“Whatever your inclination leads you to, my boy. I thought it right to
give you the option of the army, but you shut the door on that, and I was glad.
I don’t expect you to choose just yet—by-and-by, when you have
looked about you a little more and tried your mettle among older men. The
university has a good wide opening into the forum. There are prizes to be won,
and a bit of good fortune often gives the turn to a man’s taste. From
what I see and hear, I should think you can take up anything you like. You are
in the deeper water with your classics than I ever got into, and if you are
rather sick of that swimming, Cambridge is the place where you can go into
mathematics with a will, and disport yourself on the dry sand as much as you
like. I floundered along like a carp.”</p>
<p>“I suppose money will make some difference, sir,” said Daniel
blushing. “I shall have to keep myself by-and-by.”</p>
<p>“Not exactly. I recommend you not to be extravagant—yes, yes, I
know—you are not inclined to that—but you need not take up anything
against the grain. You will have a bachelor’s income—enough for you
to look about with. Perhaps I had better tell you that you may consider
yourself secure of seven hundred a year. You might make yourself a
barrister—be a writer—take up politics. I confess that is what
would please me best. I should like to have you at my elbow and pulling with
me.”</p>
<p>Deronda looked embarrassed. He felt that he ought to make some sign of
gratitude, but other feelings clogged his tongue. A moment was passing by in
which a question about his birth was throbbing within him, and yet it seemed
more impossible than ever that the question should find vent—more
impossible than ever that he could hear certain things from Sir Hugo’s
lips. The liberal way in which he was dealt with was the more striking because
the baronet had of late cared particularly for money, and for making the utmost
of his life-interest in the estate by way of providing for his daughters; and
as all this flashed through Daniel’s mind it was momentarily within his
imagination that the provision for him might come in some way from his mother.
But such vaporous conjecture passed away as quickly as it came.</p>
<p>Sir Hugo appeared not to notice anything peculiar in Daniel’s manner, and
presently went on with his usual chatty liveliness.</p>
<p>“I am glad you have done some good reading outside your classics, and
have got a grip of French and German. The truth is, unless a man can get the
prestige and income of a Don and write donnish books, it’s hardly worth
while for him to make a Greek and Latin machine of himself and be able to spin
you out pages of the Greek dramatists at any verse you’ll give him as a
cue. That’s all very fine, but in practical life nobody does give you the
cue for pages of Greek. In fact, it’s a nicety of conversation which I
would have you attend to—much quotation of any sort, even in English is
bad. It tends to choke ordinary remark. One couldn’t carry on life
comfortably without a little blindness to the fact that everything had been
said better than we can put it ourselves. But talking of Dons, I have seen Dons
make a capital figure in society; and occasionally he can shoot you down a
cart-load of learning in the right place, which will tell in politics. Such men
are wanted; and if you have any turn for being a Don, I say nothing against
it.”</p>
<p>“I think there’s not much chance of that. Quicksett and Puller are
both stronger than I am. I hope you will not be much disappointed if I
don’t come out with high honors.”</p>
<p>“No, no. I should like you to do yourself credit, but for God’s
sake don’t come out as a superior expensive kind of idiot, like young
Brecon, who got a Double First, and has been learning to knit braces ever
since. What I wish you to get is a passport in life. I don’t go against
our university system: we want a little disinterested culture to make head
against cotton and capital, especially in the House. My Greek has all
evaporated; if I had to construe a verse on a sudden, I should get an
apoplectic fit. But it formed my taste. I dare say my English is the better for
it.”</p>
<p>On this point Daniel kept a respectful silence. The enthusiastic belief in Sir
Hugo’s writings as a standard, and in the Whigs as the chosen race among
politicians, had gradually vanished along with the seraphic boy’s face.
He had not been the hardest of workers at Eton. Though some kinds of study and
reading came as easily as boating to him, he was not of the material that
usually makes the first-rate Eton scholar. There had sprung up in him a
meditative yearning after wide knowledge which is likely always to abate ardor
in the fight for prize acquirement in narrow tracks. Happily he was modest, and
took any second-rateness in himself simply as a fact, not as a marvel
necessarily to be accounted for by a superiority. Still, Mr. Fraser’s
high opinion of the lad had not been altogether belied by the youth: Daniel had
the stamp of rarity in a subdued fervor of sympathy, an activity of imagination
on behalf of others which did not show itself effusively, but was continually
seen in acts of considerateness that struck his companions as moral
eccentricity. “Deronda would have been first-rate if he had had more
ambition,” was a frequent remark about him. But how could a fellow push
his way properly when he objected to swop for his own advantage, knocked under
by choice when he was within an inch of victory, and, unlike the great Clive,
would rather be the calf than the butcher? It was a mistake, however, to
suppose that Deronda had not his share of ambition. We know he had suffered
keenly from the belief that there was a tinge of dishonor in his lot; but there
are some cases, and his was one of them, in which the sense of injury
breeds—not the will to inflict injuries and climb over them as a ladder,
but, a hatred of all injury. He had his flashes of fierceness and could hit out
upon occasion, but the occasions were not always what might have been expected.
For in what related to himself his resentful impulses had been early checked by
a mastering affectionateness. Love has a habit of saying “Never
mind” to angry self, who, sitting down for the nonce in the lower place,
by-and-by gets used to it. So it was that as Deronda approached manhood his
feeling for Sir Hugo, while it was getting more and more mixed with criticism,
was gaining in that sort of allowance which reconciles criticism with
tenderness. The dear old beautiful home and everything within it, Lady
Mallinger and her little ones included, were consecrated for the youth as they
had been for the boy—only with a certain difference of light on the
objects. The altarpiece was no longer miraculously perfect, painted under
infallible guidance, but the human hand discerned in the work was appealing to
a reverent tenderness safer from the gusts of discovery. Certainly
Deronda’s ambition, even in his spring-time, lay exceptionally aloof from
conspicuous, vulgar triumph, and from other ugly forms of boyish energy;
perhaps because he was early impassioned by ideas, and burned his fire on those
heights. One may spend a good deal of energy in disliking and resisting what
others pursue, and a boy who is fond of somebody else’s pencil-case may
not be more energetic than another who is fond of giving his own pencil-case
away. Still it was not Deronda’s disposition to escape from ugly scenes;
he was more inclined to sit through them and take care of the fellow least able
to take care of himself. It had helped to make him popular that he was
sometimes a little compromised by this apparent comradeship. For a meditative
interest in learning how human miseries are wrought—as precocious in him
as another sort of genius in the poet who writes a Queen Mab at
nineteen—was so infused with kindliness that it easily passed for
comradeship. Enough. In many of our neighbors’ lives there is much not
only of error and lapse, but of a certain exquisite goodness which can never be
written or even spoken—only divined by each of us, according to the
inward instruction of our own privacy.</p>
<p>The impression he made at Cambridge corresponded to his position at Eton. Every
one interested in him agreed that he might have taken a high place if his
motives had been of a more pushing sort, and if he had not, instead of
regarding studies as instruments of success, hampered himself with the notion
that they were to feed motive and opinion—a notion which set him
criticising methods and arguing against his freight and harness when he should
have been using all his might to pull. In the beginning his work at the
university had a new zest for him: indifferent to the continuation of Eton
classical drill, he applied himself vigorously to mathematics, for which he had
shown an early aptitude under Mr. Fraser, and he had the delight of feeling his
strength in a comparatively fresh exercise of thought. That delight, and the
favorable opinion of his tutor, determined him to try for a mathematical
scholarship in the Easter of his second year: he wished to gratify Sir Hugo by
some achievement, and the study of the higher mathematics, having the growing
fascination inherent in all thinking which demands intensity, was making him a
more exclusive worker than he had been before.</p>
<p>But here came the old check which had been growing with his growth. He found
the inward bent toward comprehension and thoroughness diverging more and more
from the track marked out by the standards of examination: he felt a
heightening discontent with the wearing futility and enfeebling strain of a
demand for excessive retention and dexterity without any insight into the
principles which form the vital connections of knowledge. (Deronda’s
undergraduateship occurred fifteen years ago, when the perfection of our
university methods was not yet indisputable.) In hours when his dissatisfaction
was strong upon him he reproached himself for having been attracted by the
conventional advantage of belonging to an English university, and was tempted
toward the project of asking Sir Hugo to let him quit Cambridge and pursue a
more independent line of study abroad. The germs of this inclination had been
already stirring in his boyish love of universal history, which made him want
to be at home in foreign countries, and follow in imagination the traveling
students of the middle ages. He longed now to have the sort of apprenticeship
to life which would not shape him too definitely, and rob him of the choice
that might come from a free growth. One sees that Deronda’s demerits were
likely to be on the side of reflective hesitation, and this tendency was
encouraged by his position; there was no need for him to get an immediate
income, or to fit himself in haste for a profession; and his sensibility to the
half-known facts of his parentage made him an excuse for lingering longer than
others in a state of social neutrality. Other men, he inwardly said, had a more
definite place and duties. But the project which flattered his inclination
might not have gone beyond the stage of ineffective brooding, if certain
circumstances had not quickened it into action.</p>
<p>The circumstances arose out of an enthusiastic friendship which extended into
his after-life. Of the same year with himself, and occupying small rooms close
to his, was a youth who had come as an exhibitioner from Christ’s
Hospital, and had eccentricities enough for a Charles Lamb. Only to look at his
pinched features and blonde hair hanging over his collar reminded one of pale
quaint heads by early German painters; and when this faint coloring was lit up
by a joke, there came sudden creases about the mouth and eyes which might have
been moulded by the soul of an aged humorist. His father, an engraver of some
distinction, had been dead eleven years, and his mother had three girls to
educate and maintain on a meagre annuity. Hans Meyrick—he had been
daringly christened after Holbein—felt himself the pillar, or rather the
knotted and twisted trunk, round which these feeble climbing plants must cling.
There was no want of ability or of honest well-meaning affection to make the
prop trustworthy: the ease and quickness with which he studied might serve him
to win prizes at Cambridge, as he had done among the Blue Coats, in spite of
irregularities. The only danger was, that the incalculable tendencies in him
might be fatally timed, and that his good intentions might be frustrated by
some act which was not due to habit but to capricious, scattered impulses. He
could not be said to have any one bad habit; yet at longer or shorter intervals
he had fits of impish recklessness, and did things that would have made the
worst habits.</p>
<p>Hans in his right mind, however, was a lovable creature, and in Deronda he had
happened to find a friend who was likely to stand by him with the more
constancy, from compassion for these brief aberrations that might bring a long
repentance. Hans, indeed, shared Deronda’s rooms nearly as much as he
used his own: to Deronda he poured himself out on his studies, his affairs, his
hopes; the poverty of his home, and his love for the creatures there; the
itching of his fingers to draw, and his determination to fight it away for the
sake of getting some sort of a plum that he might divide with his mother and
the girls. He wanted no confidence in return, but seemed to take Deronda as an
Olympian who needed nothing—an egotism in friendship which is common
enough with mercurial, expansive natures. Deronda was content, and gave Meyrick
all the interest he claimed, getting at last a brotherly anxiety about him,
looking after him in his erratic moments, and contriving by adroitly delicate
devices not only to make up for his friend’s lack of pence, but to save
him from threatening chances. Such friendship easily becomes tender: the one
spreads strong sheltering wings that delight in spreading, the other gets the
warm protection which is also a delight. Meyrick was going in for a classical
scholarship, and his success, in various ways momentous, was the more probable
from the steadying influence of Deronda’s friendship.</p>
<p>But an imprudence of Meyrick’s, committed at the beginning of the autumn
term, threatened to disappoint his hopes. With his usual alternation between
unnecessary expense and self-privation, he had given too much money for an old
engraving which fascinated him, and to make up for it, had come from London in
a third-class carriage with his eyes exposed to a bitter wind and any
irritating particles the wind might drive before it. The consequence was a
severe inflammation of the eyes, which for some time hung over him the threat
of a lasting injury. This crushing trouble called out all Deronda’s
readiness to devote himself, and he made every other occupation secondary to
that of being companion and eyes to Hans, working with him and for him at his
classics, that if possible his chance of the classical scholarship might be
saved. Hans, to keep the knowledge of his suffering from his mother and
sisters, alleged his work as a reason for passing the Christmas at Cambridge,
and his friend stayed up with him.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Deronda relaxed his hold on his mathematics, and Hans, reflecting on
this, at length said: “Old fellow, while you are hoisting me you are
risking yourself. With your mathematical cram one may be like Moses or Mohammed
or somebody of that sort who had to cram, and forgot in one day what it had
taken him forty to learn.”</p>
<p>Deronda would not admit that he cared about the risk, and he had really been
beguiled into a little indifference by double sympathy: he was very anxious
that Hans should not miss the much-needed scholarship, and he felt a revival of
interest in the old studies. Still, when Hans, rather late in the day, got able
to use his own eyes, Deronda had tenacity enough to try hard and recover his
lost ground. He failed, however; but he had the satisfaction of seeing Meyrick
win.</p>
<p>Success, as a sort of beginning that urged completion, might have reconciled
Deronda to his university course; but the emptiness of all things, from
politics to pastimes, is never so striking to us as when we fail in them. The
loss of the personal triumph had no severity for him, but the sense of having
spent his time ineffectively in a mode of working which had been against the
grain, gave him a distaste for any renewal of the process, which turned his
imagined project of quitting Cambridge into a serious intention. In speaking of
his intention to Meyrick he made it appear that he was glad of the turn events
had taken—glad to have the balance dip decidedly, and feel freed from his
hesitations; but he observed that he must of course submit to any strong
objection on the part of Sir Hugo.</p>
<p>Meyrick’s joy and gratitude were disturbed by much uneasiness. He
believed in Deronda’s alleged preference, but he felt keenly that in
serving him Daniel had placed himself at a disadvantage in Sir Hugo’s
opinion, and he said mournfully, “If you had got the scholarship, Sir
Hugo would have thought that you asked to leave us with a better grace. You
have spoiled your luck for my sake, and I can do nothing to amend it.”</p>
<p>“Yes, you can; you are to be a first-rate fellow. I call that a
first-rate investment of my luck.”</p>
<p>“Oh, confound it! You save an ugly mongrel from drowning, and expect him
to cut a fine figure. The poets have made tragedies enough about signing
one’s self over to wickedness for the sake of getting something plummy; I
shall write a tragedy of a fellow who signed himself over to be good, and was
uncomfortable ever after.”</p>
<p>But Hans lost no time in secretly writing the history of the affair to Sir
Hugo, making it plain that but for Deronda’s generous devotion he could
hardly have failed to win the prize he had been working for.</p>
<p>The two friends went up to town together: Meyrick to rejoice with his mother
and the girls in their little home at Chelsea; Deronda to carry out the less
easy task of opening his mind to Sir Hugo. He relied a little on the
baronet’s general tolerance of eccentricities, but he expected more
opposition than he met with. He was received with even warmer kindness than
usual, the failure was passed over lightly, and when he detailed his reasons
for wishing to quit the university and go to study abroad, Sir Hugo sat for
some time in a silence which was rather meditative than surprised. At last he
said, looking at Daniel with examination, “So you don’t want to be
an Englishman to the backbone after all?”</p>
<p>“I want to be an Englishman, but I want to understand other points of
view. And I want to get rid of a merely English attitude in studies.”</p>
<p>“I see; you don’t want to be turned out in the same mould as every
other youngster. And I have nothing to say against your doffing some of our
national prejudices. I feel the better myself for having spent a good deal of
my time abroad. But, for God’s sake, keep an English cut, and don’t
become indifferent to bad tobacco! And, my dear boy, it is good to be unselfish
and generous; but don’t carry that too far. It will not do to give
yourself to be melted down for the benefit of the tallow-trade; you must know
where to find yourself. However, I shall put no veto on your going. Wait until
I can get off Committee, and I’ll run over with you.”</p>
<p>So Deronda went according to his will. But not before he had spent some hours
with Hans Meyrick, and been introduced to the mother and sisters in the Chelsea
home. The shy girls watched and registered every look of their brother’s
friend, declared by Hans to have been the salvation of him, a fellow like
nobody else, and, in fine, a brick. They so thoroughly accepted Deronda as an
ideal, that when he was gone the youngest set to work, under the criticism of
the two elder girls, to paint him as Prince Camaralzaman.</p>
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