<h2>CHAPTER XX</h2>
<p>September 24th.—In the morning I rose, light and
cheerful—nay, intensely happy. The hovering cloud
cast over me by my aunt’s views, and by the fear of not
obtaining her consent, was lost in the bright effulgence of my
own hopes, and the too delightful consciousness of requited
love. It was a splendid morning; and I went out to enjoy
it, in a quiet ramble, in company with my own blissful
thoughts. The dew was on the grass, and ten thousand
gossamers were waving in the breeze; the happy red-breast was
pouring out its little soul in song, and my heart overflowed with
silent hymns of gratitude and praise to heaven.</p>
<p>But I had not wandered far before my solitude was interrupted
by the only person that could have disturbed my musings, at that
moment, without being looked upon as an unwelcome intruder: Mr.
Huntingdon came suddenly upon me. So unexpected was the
apparition, that I might have thought it the creation of an
over-excited imagination, had the sense of sight alone borne
witness to his presence; but immediately I felt his strong arm
round my waist and his warm kiss on my cheek, while his keen and
gleeful salutation, ‘My own Helen!’ was ringing in my
ear.</p>
<p>‘Not yours yet!’ said I, hastily swerving aside
from this too presumptuous greeting. ‘Remember my
guardians. You will not easily obtain my aunt’s
consent. Don’t you see she is prejudiced against
you?’</p>
<p>‘I do, dearest; and you must tell me why, that I may
best know how to combat her objections. I suppose she
thinks I am a prodigal,’ pursued he, observing that I was
unwilling to reply, ‘and concludes that I shall have but
little worldly goods wherewith to endow my better half? If
so, you must tell her that my property is mostly entailed, and I
cannot get rid of it. There may be a few mortgages on the
rest—a few trifling debts and incumbrances here and there,
but nothing to speak of; and though I acknowledge I am not so
rich as I might be—or have been—still, I think, we
could manage pretty comfortably on what’s left. My
father, you know, was something of a miser, and in his latter
days especially saw no pleasure in life but to amass riches; and
so it is no wonder that his son should make it his chief delight
to spend them, which was accordingly the case, until my
acquaintance with you, dear Helen, taught me other views and
nobler aims. And the very idea of having you to care for
under my roof would force me to moderate my expenses and live
like a Christian—not to speak of all the prudence and
virtue you would instil into my mind by your wise counsels and
sweet, attractive goodness.’</p>
<p>‘But it is not that,’ said I; ‘it is not
money my aunt thinks about. She knows better than to value
worldly wealth above its price.’</p>
<p>‘What is it, then?’</p>
<p>‘She wishes me to—to marry none but a really good
man.’</p>
<p>‘What, a man of “decided
piety”?—ahem!—Well, come, I’ll manage
that too! It’s Sunday to-day, isn’t it?
I’ll go to church morning, afternoon, and evening, and
comport myself in such a godly sort that she shall regard me with
admiration and sisterly love, as a brand plucked from the
burning. I’ll come home sighing like a furnace, and
full of the savour and unction of dear Mr. Blatant’s
discourse—’</p>
<p>‘Mr. Leighton,’ said I, dryly.</p>
<p>‘Is Mr. Leighton a “sweet preacher,”
Helen—a “dear, delightful, heavenly-minded
man”?’</p>
<p>‘He is a good man, Mr. Huntingdon. I wish I could
say half as much for you.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, I forgot, you are a saint, too. I crave your
pardon, dearest—but don’t call me Mr. Huntingdon; my
name is Arthur.’</p>
<p>‘I’ll call you nothing—for I’ll have
nothing at all to do with you if you talk in that way any
more. If you really mean to deceive my aunt as you say, you
are very wicked; and if not, you are very wrong to jest on such a
subject.’</p>
<p>‘I stand corrected,’ said he, concluding his laugh
with a sorrowful sigh. ‘Now,’ resumed he, after
a momentary pause, ‘let us talk about something else.
And come nearer to me, Helen, and take my arm; and then
I’ll let you alone. I can’t be quiet while I
see you walking there.’</p>
<p>I complied; but said we must soon return to the house.</p>
<p>‘No one will be down to breakfast yet, for long
enough,’ he answered. ‘You spoke of your
guardians just now, Helen, but is not your father still
living?’</p>
<p>‘Yes, but I always look upon my uncle and aunt as my
guardians, for they are so in deed, though not in name. My
father has entirely given me up to their care. I have never
seen him since dear mamma died, when I was a very little girl,
and my aunt, at her request, offered to take charge of me, and
took me away to Staningley, where I have remained ever since; and
I don’t think he would object to anything for me that she
thought proper to sanction.’</p>
<p>‘But would he sanction anything to which she thought
proper to object?’</p>
<p>‘No, I don’t think he cares enough about
me.’</p>
<p>‘He is very much to blame—but he doesn’t
know what an angel he has for his daughter—which is all the
better for me, as, if he did, he would not be willing to part
with such a treasure.’</p>
<p>‘And Mr. Huntingdon,’ said I, ‘I suppose you
know I am not an heiress?’</p>
<p>He protested he had never given it a thought, and begged I
would not disturb his present enjoyment by the mention of such
uninteresting subjects. I was glad of this proof of
disinterested affection; for Annabella Wilmot is the probable
heiress to all her uncle’s wealth, in addition to her late
father’s property, which she has already in possession.</p>
<p>I now insisted upon retracing our steps to the house; but we
walked slowly, and went on talking as we proceeded. I need
not repeat all we said: let me rather refer to what passed
between my aunt and me, after breakfast, when Mr. Huntingdon
called my uncle aside, no doubt to make his proposals, and she
beckoned me into another room, where she once more commenced a
solemn remonstrance, which, however, entirely failed to convince
me that her view of the case was preferable to my own.</p>
<p>‘You judge him uncharitably, aunt, I know,’ said
I. ‘His very friends are not half so bad as you
represent them. There is Walter Hargrave, Milicent’s
brother, for one: he is but a little lower than the angels, if
half she says of him is true. She is continually talking to
me about him, and lauding his many virtues to the
skies.’</p>
<p>‘You will form a very inadequate estimate of a
man’s character,’ replied she, ‘if you judge by
what a fond sister says of him. The worst of them generally
know how to hide their misdeeds from their sisters’ eyes,
and their mother’s, too.’</p>
<p>‘And there is Lord Lowborough,’ continued I,
‘quite a decent man.’</p>
<p>‘Who told you so? Lord Lowborough is a desperate
man. He has dissipated his fortune in gambling and other
things, and is now seeking an heiress to retrieve it. I
told Miss Wilmot so; but you’re all alike: she haughtily
answered she was very much obliged to me, but she believed she
knew when a man was seeking her for her fortune, and when for
herself; she flattered herself she had had experience enough in
those matters to be justified in trusting to her own
judgment—and as for his lordship’s lack of fortune,
she cared nothing about that, as she hoped her own would suffice
for both; and as for his wildness, she supposed he was no worse
than others—besides, he was reformed now. Yes, they
can all play the hypocrite when they want to take in a fond,
misguided woman!’</p>
<p>‘Well, I think he’s about as good as she
is,’ said I. ‘But when Mr. Huntingdon is
married, he won’t have many opportunities of consorting
with his bachelor friends;—and the worse they are, the more
I long to deliver him from them.’</p>
<p>‘To be sure, my dear; and the worse he is, I suppose,
the more you long to deliver him from himself.’</p>
<p>‘Yes, provided he is not incorrigible—that is, the
more I long to deliver him from his faults—to give him an
opportunity of shaking off the adventitious evil got from contact
with others worse than himself, and shining out in the unclouded
light of his own genuine goodness—to do my utmost to help
his better self against his worse, and make him what he would
have been if he had not, from the beginning, had a bad, selfish,
miserly father, who, to gratify his own sordid passions,
restricted him in the most innocent enjoyments of childhood and
youth, and so disgusted him with every kind of
restraint;—and a foolish mother who indulged him to the top
of his bent, deceiving her husband for him, and doing her utmost
to encourage those germs of folly and vice it was her duty to
suppress,—and then, such a set of companions as you
represent his friends to be—’</p>
<p>‘Poor man!’ said she, sarcastically, ‘his
kind have greatly wronged him!’</p>
<p>‘They have!’ cried I—‘and they shall
wrong him no more—his wife shall undo what his mother
did!’</p>
<p>‘Well,’ said she, after a short pause, ‘I
must say, Helen, I thought better of your judgment than
this—and your taste too. How you can love such a man
I cannot tell, or what pleasure you can find in his company; for
“what fellowship hath light with darkness; or he that
believeth with an infidel?”’</p>
<p>‘He is not an infidel;—and I am not light, and he
is not darkness; his worst and only vice is
thoughtlessness.’</p>
<p>‘And thoughtlessness,’ pursued my aunt, ‘may
lead to every crime, and will but poorly excuse our errors in the
sight of God. Mr. Huntingdon, I suppose, is not without the
common faculties of men: he is not so light-headed as to be
irresponsible: his Maker has endowed him with reason and
conscience as well as the rest of us; the Scriptures are open to
him as well as to others;—and “if he hear not them,
neither will he hear though one rose from the dead.” And
remember, Helen,’ continued she, solemnly,
‘“the wicked shall be turned into hell, and they that
forget God!”’ And suppose, even, that he should
continue to love you, and you him, and that you should pass
through life together with tolerable comfort—how will it be
in the end, when you see yourselves parted for ever; you,
perhaps, taken into eternal bliss, and he cast into the lake that
burneth with unquenchable fire—there for ever
to—’</p>
<p>‘Not for ever,’ I exclaimed, ‘“only
till he has paid the uttermost farthing;” for “if any
man’s work abide not the fire, he shall suffer loss, yet
himself shall be saved, but so as by fire;” and He that
“is able to subdue all things to Himself will have all men
to be saved,” and “will, in the fulness of time,
gather together in one all things in Christ Jesus, who tasted
death for every man, and in whom God will reconcile all things to
Himself, whether they be things in earth or things in
heaven.”’</p>
<p>‘Oh, Helen! where did you learn all this?’</p>
<p>‘In the Bible, aunt. I have searched it through,
and found nearly thirty passages, all tending to support the same
theory.’</p>
<p>‘And is that the use you make of your Bible? And
did you find no passages tending to prove the danger and the
falsity of such a belief?’</p>
<p>‘No: I found, indeed, some passages that, taken by
themselves, might seem to contradict that opinion; but they will
all bear a different construction to that which is commonly
given, and in most the only difficulty is in the word which we
translate “everlasting” or
“eternal.” I don’t know the Greek, but I
believe it strictly means for ages, and might signify either
endless or long-enduring. And as for the danger of the
belief, I would not publish it abroad if I thought any poor
wretch would be likely to presume upon it to his own destruction,
but it is a glorious thought to cherish in one’s own heart,
and I would not part with it for all the world can
give!’</p>
<p>Here our conference ended, for it was now high time to prepare
for church. Every one attended the morning service, except
my uncle, who hardly ever goes, and Mr. Wilmot, who stayed at
home with him to enjoy a quiet game of cribbage. In the
afternoon Miss Wilmot and Lord Lowborough likewise excused
themselves from attending; but Mr. Huntingdon vouchsafed to
accompany us again. Whether it was to ingratiate himself
with my aunt I cannot tell, but, if so, he certainly should have
behaved better. I must confess, I did not like his conduct
during service at all. Holding his prayer-book upside down,
or open at any place but the right, he did nothing but stare
about him, unless he happened to catch my aunt’s eye or
mine, and then he would drop his own on his book, with a
puritanical air of mock solemnity that would have been ludicrous,
if it had not been too provoking. Once, during the sermon,
after attentively regarding Mr. Leighton for a few minutes, he
suddenly produced his gold pencil-case and snatched up a
Bible. Perceiving that I observed the movement, he
whispered that he was going to make a note of the sermon; but
instead of that, as I sat next him, I could not help seeing that
he was making a caricature of the preacher, giving to the
respectable, pious, elderly gentleman, the air and aspect of a
most absurd old hypocrite. And yet, upon his return, he
talked to my aunt about the sermon with a degree of modest,
serious discrimination that tempted me to believe he had really
attended to and profited by the discourse.</p>
<p>Just before dinner my uncle called me into the library for the
discussion of a very important matter, which was dismissed in few
words.</p>
<p>‘Now, Nell,’ said he, ‘this young Huntingdon
has been asking for you: what must I say about it? Your
aunt would answer “no”—but what say
you?’</p>
<p>‘I say yes, uncle,’ replied I, without a
moment’s hesitation; for I had thoroughly made up my mind
on the subject.</p>
<p>‘Very good!’ cried he. ‘Now
that’s a good honest answer—wonderful for a
girl!—Well, I’ll write to your father
to-morrow. He’s sure to give his consent; so you may
look on the matter as settled. You’d have done a deal
better if you’d taken Wilmot, I can tell you; but that you
won’t believe. At your time of life, it’s love
that rules the roast: at mine, it’s solid, serviceable
gold. I suppose now, you’d never dream of looking
into the state of your husband’s finances, or troubling
your head about settlements, or anything of that sort?’</p>
<p>‘I don’t think I should.’</p>
<p>‘Well, be thankful, then, that you’ve wiser heads
to think for you. I haven’t had time, yet, to examine
thoroughly into this young rascal’s affairs, but I see that
a great part of his father’s fine property has been
squandered away;—but still, I think, there’s a pretty
fair share of it left, and a little careful nursing may make a
handsome thing of it yet; and then we must persuade your father
to give you a decent fortune, as he has only one besides yourself
to care for;—and, if you behave well, who knows but what I
may be induced to remember you in my will!’ continued he,
putting his fingers to his nose, with a knowing wink.</p>
<p>‘Thanks, uncle, for that and all your kindness,’
replied I.</p>
<p>‘Well, and I questioned this young spark on the matter
of settlements,’ continued he; ‘and he seemed
disposed to be generous enough on that point—’</p>
<p>‘I knew he would!’ said I. ‘But pray
don’t trouble your head—or his, or mine about that;
for all I have will be his, and all he has will be mine; and what
more could either of us require?’ And I was about to
make my exit, but he called me back.</p>
<p>‘Stop, stop!’ cried he; ‘we haven’t
mentioned the time yet. When must it be? Your aunt
would put it off till the Lord knows when, but he is anxious to
be bound as soon as may be: he won’t hear of waiting beyond
next month; and you, I guess, will be of the same mind,
so—’</p>
<p>‘Not at all, uncle; on the contrary, I should like to
wait till after Christmas, at least.’</p>
<p>‘Oh! pooh, pooh! never tell me that tale—I know
better,’ cried he; and he persisted in his
incredulity. Nevertheless, it is quite true. I am in
no hurry at all. How can I be, when I think of the
momentous change that awaits me, and of all I have to
leave? It is happiness enough to know that we are to be
united; and that he really loves me, and I may love him as
devotedly, and think of him as often as I please. However,
I insisted upon consulting my aunt about the time of the wedding,
for I determined her counsels should not be utterly disregarded;
and no conclusions on that particular are come to yet.</p>
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