<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
<p>‘My dear Gilbert, I wish you would try to be a little
more amiable,’ said my mother one morning after some
display of unjustifiable ill-humour on my part. ‘You
say there is nothing the matter with you, and nothing has
happened to grieve you, and yet I never saw anyone so altered as
you within these last few days. You haven’t a good
word for anybody—friends and strangers, equals and
inferiors—it’s all the same. I do wish
you’d try to check it.’</p>
<p>‘Check what?’</p>
<p>‘Why, your strange temper. You don’t know
how it spoils you. I’m sure a finer disposition than
yours by nature could not be, if you’d let it have fair
play: so you’ve no excuse that way.’</p>
<p>While she thus remonstrated, I took up a book, and laying it
open on the table before me, pretended to be deeply absorbed in
its perusal, for I was equally unable to justify myself and
unwilling to acknowledge my errors; and I wished to have nothing
to say on the matter. But my excellent parent went on
lecturing, and then came to coaxing, and began to stroke my hair;
and I was getting to feel quite a good boy, but my mischievous
brother, who was idling about the room, revived my corruption by
suddenly calling out,—‘Don’t touch him, mother!
he’ll bite! He’s a very tiger in human
form. I’ve given him up for my part—fairly
disowned him—cast him off, root and branch.
It’s as much as my life is worth to come within six yards
of him. The other day he nearly fractured my skull for
singing a pretty, inoffensive love-song, on purpose to amuse
him.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, Gilbert! how could you?’ exclaimed my
mother.</p>
<p>‘I told you to hold your noise first, you know,
Fergus,’ said I.</p>
<p>‘Yes, but when I assured you it was no trouble and went
on with the next verse, thinking you might like it better, you
clutched me by the shoulder and dashed me away, right against the
wall there, with such force that I thought I had bitten my tongue
in two, and expected to see the place plastered with my brains;
and when I put my hand to my head, and found my skull not broken,
I thought it was a miracle, and no mistake. But, poor
fellow!’ added he, with a sentimental sigh—‘his
heart’s broken—that’s the truth of it—and
his head’s—’</p>
<p>‘Will you be silent <span class="smcap">now</span>?’ cried I, starting up, and eyeing
the fellow so fiercely that my mother, thinking I meant to
inflict some grievous bodily injury, laid her hand on my arm, and
besought me to let him alone, and he walked leisurely out, with
his hands in his pockets, singing provokingly—‘Shall
I, because a woman’s fair,’ &c.</p>
<p>‘I’m not going to defile my fingers with
him,’ said I, in answer to the maternal intercession.
‘I wouldn’t touch him with the tongs.’</p>
<p>I now recollected that I had business with Robert Wilson,
concerning the purchase of a certain field adjoining my
farm—a business I had been putting off from day to day; for
I had no interest in anything now; and besides, I was
misanthropically inclined, and, moreover, had a particular
objection to meeting Jane Wilson or her mother; for though I had
too good reason, now, to credit their reports concerning Mrs.
Graham, I did not like them a bit the better for it—or
Eliza Millward either—and the thought of meeting them was
the more repugnant to me that I could not, now, defy their
seeming calumnies and triumph in my own convictions as
before. But to-day I determined to make an effort to return
to my duty. Though I found no pleasure in it, it would be
less irksome than idleness—at all events it would be more
profitable. If life promised no enjoyment within my
vocation, at least it offered no allurements out of it; and
henceforth I would put my shoulder to the wheel and toil away,
like any poor drudge of a cart-horse that was fairly broken in to
its labour, and plod through life, not wholly useless if not
agreeable, and uncomplaining if not contented with my lot.</p>
<p>Thus resolving, with a kind of sullen resignation, if such a
term may be allowed, I wended my way to Ryecote Farm, scarcely
expecting to find its owner within at this time of day, but
hoping to learn in what part of the premises he was most likely
to be found.</p>
<p>Absent he was, but expected home in a few minutes; and I was
desired to step into the parlour and wait. Mrs. Wilson was
busy in the kitchen, but the room was not empty; and I scarcely
checked an involuntary recoil as I entered it; for there sat Miss
Wilson chattering with Eliza Millward. However, I
determined to be cool and civil. Eliza seemed to have made
the same resolution on her part. We had not met since the
evening of the tea-party; but there was no visible emotion either
of pleasure or pain, no attempt at pathos, no display of injured
pride: she was cool in temper, civil in demeanour. There
was even an ease and cheerfulness about her air and manner that I
made no pretension to; but there was a depth of malice in her too
expressive eye that plainly told me I was not forgiven; for,
though she no longer hoped to win me to herself, she still hated
her rival, and evidently delighted to wreak her spite on
me. On the other hand, Miss Wilson was as affable and
courteous as heart could wish, and though I was in no very
conversable humour myself, the two ladies between them managed to
keep up a pretty continuous fire of small talk. But Eliza
took advantage of the first convenient pause to ask if I had
lately seen Mrs. Graham, in a tone of merely casual inquiry, but
with a sidelong glance—intended to be playfully
mischievous—really, brimful and running over with
malice.</p>
<p>‘Not lately,’ I replied, in a careless tone, but
sternly repelling her odious glances with my eyes; for I was
vexed to feel the colour mounting to my forehead, despite my
strenuous efforts to appear unmoved.</p>
<p>‘What! are you beginning to tire already? I
thought so noble a creature would have power to attach you for a
year at least!’</p>
<p>‘I would rather not speak of her now.’</p>
<p>‘Ah! then you are convinced, at last, of your
mistake—you have at length discovered that your divinity is
not quite the immaculate—’</p>
<p>‘I desired you not to speak of her, Miss
Eliza.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, I beg your pardon! I perceive Cupid’s
arrows have been too sharp for you: the wounds, being more than
skin-deep, are not yet healed, and bleed afresh at every mention
of the loved one’s name.’</p>
<p>‘Say, rather,’ interposed Miss Wilson, ‘that
Mr. Markham feels that name is unworthy to be mentioned in the
presence of right-minded females. I wonder, Eliza, you
should think of referring to that unfortunate person—you
might know the mention of her would be anything but agreeable to
any one here present.’</p>
<p>How could this be borne? I rose and was about to clap my
hat upon my head and burst away, in wrathful indignation from the
house; but recollecting—just in time to save my
dignity—the folly of such a proceeding, and how it would
only give my fair tormentors a merry laugh at my expense, for the
sake of one I acknowledged in my own heart to be unworthy of the
slightest sacrifice—though the ghost of my former reverence
and love so hung about me still, that I could not bear to hear
her name aspersed by others—I merely walked to the window,
and having spent a few seconds in vengibly biting my lips and
sternly repressing the passionate heavings of my chest, I
observed to Miss Wilson, that I could see nothing of her brother,
and added that, as my time was precious, it would perhaps be
better to call again to-morrow, at some time when I should be
sure to find him at home.</p>
<p>‘Oh, no!’ said she; ‘if you wait a minute,
he will be sure to come; for he has business at L—’
(that was our market-town), ‘and will require a little
refreshment before he goes.’</p>
<p>I submitted accordingly, with the best grace I could; and,
happily, I had not long to wait. Mr. Wilson soon arrived,
and, indisposed for business as I was at that moment, and little
as I cared for the field or its owner, I forced my attention to
the matter in hand, with very creditable determination, and
quickly concluded the bargain—perhaps more to the thrifty
farmer’s satisfaction than he cared to acknowledge.
Then, leaving him to the discussion of his substantial
‘refreshment,’ I gladly quitted the house, and went
to look after my reapers.</p>
<p>Leaving them busy at work on the side of the valley, I
ascended the hill, intending to visit a corn-field in the more
elevated regions, and see when it would be ripe for the
sickle. But I did not visit it that day; for, as I
approached, I beheld, at no great distance, Mrs. Graham and her
son coming down in the opposite direction. They saw me; and
Arthur already was running to meet me; but I immediately turned
back and walked steadily homeward; for I had fully determined
never to encounter his mother again; and regardless of the shrill
voice in my ear, calling upon me to ‘wait a moment,’
I pursued the even tenor of my way; and he soon relinquished the
pursuit as hopeless, or was called away by his mother. At
all events, when I looked back, five minutes after, not a trace
of either was to be seen.</p>
<p>This incident agitated and disturbed me most
unaccountably—unless you would account for it by saying
that Cupid’s arrows not only had been too sharp for me, but
they were barbed and deeply rooted, and I had not yet been able
to wrench them from my heart. However that be, I was
rendered doubly miserable for the remainder of the day.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />