<h2>CHAPTER XXXVII</h2>
<p>December 20th, 1825.—Another year is past; and I am
weary of this life. And yet I cannot wish to leave it:
whatever afflictions assail me here, I cannot wish to go and
leave my darling in this dark and wicked world alone, without a
friend to guide him through its weary mazes, to warn him of its
thousand snares, and guard him from the perils that beset him on
every hand. I am not well fitted to be his only companion,
I know; but there is no other to supply my place. I am too
grave to minister to his amusements and enter into his infantile
sports as a nurse or a mother ought to do, and often his bursts
of gleeful merriment trouble and alarm me; I see in them his
father’s spirit and temperament, and I tremble for the
consequences; and too often damp the innocent mirth I ought to
share. That father, on the contrary, has no weight of
sadness on his mind; is troubled with no fears, no scruples
concerning his son’s future welfare; and at evenings
especially, the times when the child sees him the most and the
oftenest, he is always particularly jocund and open-hearted:
ready to laugh and to jest with anything or anybody but me, and I
am particularly silent and sad: therefore, of course, the child
dotes upon his seemingly joyous amusing, ever-indulgent papa, and
will at any time gladly exchange my company for his. This
disturbs me greatly; not so much for the sake of my son’s
affection (though I do prize that highly, and though I feel it is
my right, and know I have done much to earn it) as for that
influence over him which, for his own advantage, I would strive
to purchase and retain, and which for very spite his father
delights to rob me of, and, from motives of mere idle egotism, is
pleased to win to himself; making no use of it but to torment me
and ruin the child. My only consolation is, that he spends
comparatively little of his time at home, and, during the months
he passes in London or elsewhere, I have a chance of recovering
the ground I had lost, and overcoming with good the evil he has
wrought by his wilful mismanagement. But then it is a
bitter trial to behold him, on his return, doing his utmost to
subvert my labours and transform my innocent, affectionate,
tractable darling into a selfish, disobedient, and mischievous
boy; thereby preparing the soil for those vices he has so
successfully cultivated in his own perverted nature.</p>
<p>Happily, there were none of Arthur’s
‘friends’ invited to Grassdale last autumn: he took
himself off to visit some of them instead. I wish he would
always do so, and I wish his friends were numerous and loving
enough to keep him amongst them all the year round. Mr.
Hargrave, considerably to my annoyance, did not go with him; but
I think I have done with that gentleman at last.</p>
<p>For seven or eight months he behaved so remarkably well, and
managed so skilfully too, that I was almost completely off my
guard, and was really beginning to look upon him as a friend, and
even to treat him as such, with certain prudent restrictions
(which I deemed scarcely necessary); when, presuming upon my
unsuspecting kindness, he thought he might venture to overstep
the bounds of decent moderation and propriety that had so long
restrained him. It was on a pleasant evening at the close
of May: I was wandering in the park, and he, on seeing me there
as he rode past, made bold to enter and approach me, dismounting
and leaving his horse at the gate. This was the first time
he had ventured to come within its inclosure since I had been
left alone, without the sanction of his mother’s or
sister’s company, or at least the excuse of a message from
them. But he managed to appear so calm and easy, so
respectful and self-possessed in his friendliness, that, though a
little surprised, I was neither alarmed nor offended at the
unusual liberty, and he walked with me under the ash-trees and by
the water-side, and talked, with considerable animation, good
taste, and intelligence, on many subjects, before I began to
think about getting rid of him. Then, after a pause, during
which we both stood gazing on the calm, blue water—I
revolving in my mind the best means of politely dismissing my
companion, he, no doubt, pondering other matters equally alien to
the sweet sights and sounds that alone were present to his
senses,—he suddenly electrified me by beginning, in a
peculiar tone, low, soft, but perfectly distinct, to pour forth
the most unequivocal expressions of earnest and passionate love;
pleading his cause with all the bold yet artful eloquence he
could summon to his aid. But I cut short his appeal, and
repulsed him so determinately, so decidedly, and with such a
mixture of scornful indignation, tempered with cool,
dispassionate sorrow and pity for his benighted mind, that he
withdrew, astonished, mortified, and discomforted; and, a few
days after, I heard that he had departed for London. He
returned, however, in eight or nine weeks, and did not entirely
keep aloof from me, but comported himself in so remarkable a
manner that his quick-sighted sister could not fail to notice the
change.</p>
<p>‘What have you done to Walter, Mrs. Huntingdon?’
said she one morning, when I had called at the Grove, and he had
just left the room after exchanging a few words of the coldest
civility. ‘He has been so extremely ceremonious and
stately of late, I can’t imagine what it is all about,
unless you have desperately offended him. Tell me what it
is, that I may be your mediator, and make you friends
again.’</p>
<p>‘I have done nothing willingly to offend him,’
said I. ‘If he is offended, he can best tell you
himself what it is about.’</p>
<p>‘I’ll ask him,’ cried the giddy girl,
springing up and putting her head out of the window:
‘he’s only in the garden—Walter!’</p>
<p>‘No, no, Esther! you will seriously displease me if you
do; and I shall leave you immediately, and not come again for
months—perhaps years.’</p>
<p>‘Did you call, Esther?’ said her brother,
approaching the window from without.</p>
<p>‘Yes; I wanted to ask you—’</p>
<p>‘Good-morning, Esther,’ said I, taking her hand
and giving it a severe squeeze.</p>
<p>‘To ask you,’ continued she, ‘to get me a
rose for Mrs. Huntingdon.’ He departed.
‘Mrs. Huntingdon,’ she exclaimed, turning to me and
still holding me fast by the hand, ‘I’m quite shocked
at you—you’re just as angry, and distant, and cold as
he is: and I’m determined you shall be as good friends as
ever before you go.’</p>
<p>‘Esther, how can you be so rude!’ cried Mrs.
Hargrave, who was seated gravely knitting in her
easy-chair. ‘Surely, you never will learn to conduct
yourself like a lady!’</p>
<p>‘Well, mamma, you said yourself—‘ But
the young lady was silenced by the uplifted finger of her mamma,
accompanied with a very stern shake of the head.</p>
<p>‘Isn’t she cross?’ whispered she to me; but,
before I could add my share of reproof, Mr. Hargrave reappeared
at the window with a beautiful moss-rose in his hand.</p>
<p>‘Here, Esther, I’ve brought you the rose,’
said he, extending it towards her.</p>
<p>‘Give it her yourself, you blockhead!’ cried she,
recoiling with a spring from between us.</p>
<p>‘Mrs. Huntingdon would rather receive it from
you,’ replied he, in a very serious tone, but lowering his
voice that his mother might not hear. His sister took the
rose and gave it to me.</p>
<p>‘My brother’s compliments, Mrs. Huntingdon, and he
hopes you and he will come to a better understanding
by-and-by. Will that do, Walter?’ added the saucy
girl, turning to him and putting her arm round his neck, as he
stood leaning upon the sill of the window—‘or should
I have said that you are sorry you were so touchy? or that you
hope she will pardon your offence?’</p>
<p>‘You silly girl! you don’t know what you are
talking about,’ replied he gravely.</p>
<p>‘Indeed I don’t: for I’m quite in the
dark!’</p>
<p>‘Now, Esther,’ interposed Mrs. Hargrave, who, if
equally benighted on the subject of our estrangement, saw at
least that her daughter was behaving very improperly, ‘I
must insist upon your leaving the room!’</p>
<p>‘Pray don’t, Mrs. Hargrave, for I’m going to
leave it myself,’ said I, and immediately made my
adieux.</p>
<p>About a week after Mr. Hargrave brought his sister to see
me. He conducted himself, at first, with his usual cold,
distant, half-stately, half-melancholy, altogether injured air;
but Esther made no remark upon it this time: she had evidently
been schooled into better manners. She talked to me, and
laughed and romped with little Arthur, her loved and loving
playmate. He, somewhat to my discomfort, enticed her from
the room to have a run in the hall, and thence into the
garden. I got up to stir the fire. Mr. Hargrave asked
if I felt cold, and shut the door—a very unseasonable piece
of officiousness, for I had meditated following the noisy
playfellows if they did not speedily return. He then took
the liberty of walking up to the fire himself, and asking me if I
were aware that Mr. Huntingdon was now at the seat of Lord
Lowborough, and likely to continue there some time.</p>
<p>‘No; but it’s no matter,’ I answered
carelessly; and if my cheek glowed like fire, it was rather at
the question than the information it conveyed.</p>
<p>‘You don’t object to it?’ he said.</p>
<p>‘Not at all, if Lord Lowborough likes his
company.’</p>
<p>‘You have no love left for him, then?’</p>
<p>‘Not the least.’</p>
<p>‘I knew that—I knew you were too high-minded and
pure in your own nature to continue to regard one so utterly
false and polluted with any feelings but those of indignation and
scornful abhorrence!’</p>
<p>‘Is he not your friend?’ said I, turning my eyes
from the fire to his face, with perhaps a slight touch of those
feelings he assigned to another.</p>
<p>‘He was,’ replied he, with the same calm gravity
as before; ‘but do not wrong me by supposing that I could
continue my friendship and esteem to a man who could so
infamously, so impiously forsake and injure one so
transcendently—well, I won’t speak of it. But
tell me, do you never think of revenge?’</p>
<p>‘Revenge! No—what good would that
do?—it would make him no better, and me no
happier.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t know how to talk to you, Mrs.
Huntingdon,’ said he, smiling; ‘you are only half a
woman—your nature must be half human, half angelic.
Such goodness overawes me; I don’t know what to make of
it.’</p>
<p>‘Then, sir, I fear you must be very much worse than you
should be, if I, a mere ordinary mortal, am, by your own
confession, so vastly your superior; and since there exists so
little sympathy between us, I think we had better each look out
for some more congenial companion.’ And forthwith
moving to the window, I began to look out for my little son and
his gay young friend.</p>
<p>‘No, I am the ordinary mortal, I maintain,’
replied Mr. Hargrave. ‘I will not allow myself to be
worse than my fellows; but you, Madam—I equally maintain
there is nobody like you. But are you happy?’ he
asked in a serious tone.</p>
<p>‘As happy as some others, I suppose.’</p>
<p>‘Are you as happy as you desire to be?’</p>
<p>‘No one is so blest as that comes to on this side
eternity.’</p>
<p>‘One thing I know,’ returned he, with a deep sad
sigh; ‘you are immeasurably happier than I am.’</p>
<p>‘I am very sorry for you, then,’ I could not help
replying.</p>
<p>‘Are you, indeed? No, for if you were you would be
glad to relieve me.’</p>
<p>‘And so I should if I could do so without injuring
myself or any other.’</p>
<p>‘And can you suppose that I should wish you to injure
yourself? No: on the contrary, it is your own happiness I
long for more than mine. You are miserable now, Mrs.
Huntingdon,’ continued he, looking me boldly in the
face. ‘You do not complain, but I see—and
feel—and know that you are miserable—and must remain
so as long as you keep those walls of impenetrable ice about your
still warm and palpitating heart; and I am miserable, too.
Deign to smile on me and I am happy: trust me, and you shall be
happy also, for if you are a woman I can make you so—and I
will do it in spite of yourself!’ he muttered between his
teeth; ‘and as for others, the question is between
ourselves alone: you cannot injure your husband, you know, and no
one else has any concern in the matter.’</p>
<p>‘I have a son, Mr. Hargrave, and you have a
mother,’ said I, retiring from the window, whither he had
followed me.</p>
<p>‘They need not know,’ he began; but before
anything more could be said on either side, Esther and Arthur
re-entered the room. The former glanced at Walter’s
flushed, excited countenance, and then at mine—a little
flushed and excited too, I daresay, though from far different
causes. She must have thought we had been quarrelling
desperately, and was evidently perplexed and disturbed at the
circumstance; but she was too polite or too much afraid of her
brother’s anger to refer to it. She seated herself on
the sofa, and putting back her bright, golden ringlets, that were
scattered in wild profusion over her face, she immediately began
to talk about the garden and her little playfellow, and continued
to chatter away in her usual strain till her brother summoned her
to depart.</p>
<p>‘If I have spoken too warmly, forgive me,’ he
murmured on taking his leave, ‘or I shall never forgive
myself.’ Esther smiled and glanced at me: I merely
bowed, and her countenance fell. She thought it a poor
return for Walter’s generous concession, and was
disappointed in her friend. Poor child, she little knows
the world she lives in!</p>
<p>Mr. Hargrave had not an opportunity of meeting me again in
private for several weeks after this; but when he did meet me
there was less of pride and more of touching melancholy in his
manner than before. Oh, how he annoyed me! I was
obliged at last almost entirely to remit my visits to the Grove,
at the expense of deeply offending Mrs. Hargrave and seriously
afflicting poor Esther, who really values my society for want of
better, and who ought not to suffer for the fault of her
brother. But that indefatigable foe was not yet vanquished:
he seemed to be always on the watch. I frequently saw him
riding lingeringly past the premises, looking searchingly round
him as he went—or, if I did not, Rachel did. That
sharp-sighted woman soon guessed how matters stood between us,
and descrying the enemy’s movements from her elevation at
the nursery-window, she would give me a quiet intimation if she
saw me preparing for a walk when she had reason to believe he was
about, or to think it likely that he would meet or overtake me in
the way I meant to traverse. I would then defer my ramble,
or confine myself for that day to the park and gardens, or, if
the proposed excursion was a matter of importance, such as a
visit to the sick or afflicted, I would take Rachel with me, and
then I was never molested.</p>
<p>But one mild, sunshiny day, early in November, I had ventured
forth alone to visit the village school and a few of the poor
tenants, and on my return I was alarmed at the clatter of a
horse’s feet behind me, approaching at a rapid, steady
trot. There was no stile or gap at hand by which I could
escape into the fields, so I walked quietly on, saying to myself,
‘It may not be he after all; and if it is, and if he do
annoy me, it shall be for the last time, I am determined, if
there be power in words and looks against cool impudence and
mawkish sentimentality so inexhaustible as his.’</p>
<p>The horse soon overtook me, and was reined up close beside
me. It was Mr. Hargrave. He greeted me with a smile
intended to be soft and melancholy, but his triumphant
satisfaction at having caught me at last so shone through that it
was quite a failure. After briefly answering his salutation
and inquiring after the ladies at the Grove, I turned away and
walked on; but he followed and kept his horse at my side: it was
evident he intended to be my companion all the way.</p>
<p>‘Well! I don’t much care. If you want
another rebuff, take it—and welcome,’ was my inward
remark. ‘Now, sir, what next?’</p>
<p>This question, though unspoken, was not long unanswered; after
a few passing observations upon indifferent subjects, he began in
solemn tones the following appeal to my humanity:—</p>
<p>‘It will be four years next April since I first saw you,
Mrs. Huntingdon—you may have forgotten the circumstance,
but I never can. I admired you then most deeply, but I
dared not love you. In the following autumn I saw so much
of your perfections that I could not fail to love you, though I
dared not show it. For upwards of three years I have
endured a perfect martyrdom. From the anguish of suppressed
emotions, intense and fruitless longings, silent sorrow, crushed
hopes, and trampled affections, I have suffered more than I can
tell, or you imagine—and you were the cause of it, and not
altogether the innocent cause. My youth is wasting away; my
prospects are darkened; my life is a desolate blank; I have no
rest day or night: I am become a burden to myself and others, and
you might save me by a word—a glance, and will not do
it—is this right?’</p>
<p>‘In the first place, I don’t believe you,’
answered I; ‘in the second, if you will be such a fool, I
can’t hinder it.’</p>
<p>‘If you affect,’ replied he, earnestly, ‘to
regard as folly the best, the strongest, the most godlike
impulses of our nature, I don’t believe you. I know
you are not the heartless, icy being you pretend to be—you
had a heart once, and gave it to your husband. When you
found him utterly unworthy of the treasure, you reclaimed it; and
you will not pretend that you loved that sensual, earthly-minded
profligate so deeply, so devotedly, that you can never love
another? I know that there are feelings in your nature that
have never yet been called forth; I know, too, that in your
present neglected lonely state you are and must be
miserable. You have it in your power to raise two human
beings from a state of actual suffering to such unspeakable
beatitude as only generous, noble, self-forgetting love can give
(for you can love me if you will); you may tell me that you scorn
and detest me, but, since you have set me the example of plain
speaking, I will answer that I do not believe you. But you
will not do it! you choose rather to leave us miserable; and you
coolly tell me it is the will of God that we should remain
so. You may call this religion, but I call it wild
fanaticism!’</p>
<p>‘There is another life both for you and for me,’
said I. ‘If it be the will of God that we should sow
in tears now, it is only that we may reap in joy hereafter.
It is His will that we should not injure others by the
gratification of our own earthly passions; and you have a mother,
and sisters, and friends who would be seriously injured by your
disgrace; and I, too, have friends, whose peace of mind shall
never be sacrificed to my enjoyment, or yours either, with my
consent; and if I were alone in the world, I have still my God
and my religion, and I would sooner die than disgrace my calling
and break my faith with heaven to obtain a few brief years of
false and fleeting happiness—happiness sure to end in
misery even here—for myself or any other!’</p>
<p>‘There need be no disgrace, no misery or sacrifice in
any quarter,’ persisted he. ‘I do not ask you
to leave your home or defy the world’s
opinion.’ But I need not repeat all his
arguments. I refuted them to the best of my power; but that
power was provokingly small, at the moment, for I was too much
flurried with indignation—and even shame—that he
should thus dare to address me, to retain sufficient command of
thought and language to enable me adequately to contend against
his powerful sophistries. Finding, however, that he could
not be silenced by reason, and even covertly exulted in his
seeming advantage, and ventured to deride those assertions I had
not the coolness to prove, I changed my course and tried another
plan.</p>
<p>‘Do you really love me?’ said I, seriously,
pausing and looking him calmly in the face.</p>
<p>‘Do I love you!’ cried he.</p>
<p>‘Truly?’ I demanded.</p>
<p>His countenance brightened; he thought his triumph was at
hand. He commenced a passionate protestation of the truth
and fervour of his attachment, which I cut short by another
question:—</p>
<p>‘But is it not a selfish love? Have you enough
disinterested affection to enable you to sacrifice your own
pleasure to mine?’</p>
<p>‘I would give my life to serve you.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t want your life; but have you enough real
sympathy for my afflictions to induce you to make an effort to
relieve them, at the risk of a little discomfort to
yourself?’</p>
<p>‘Try me, and see.’</p>
<p>‘If you have, never mention this subject again.
You cannot recur to it in any way without doubling the weight of
those sufferings you so feelingly deplore. I have nothing
left me but the solace of a good conscience and a hopeful trust
in heaven, and you labour continually to rob me of these.
If you persist, I must regard you as my deadliest foe.’</p>
<p>‘But hear me a moment—’</p>
<p>‘No, sir! You said you would give your life to
serve me; I only ask your silence on one particular point.
I have spoken plainly; and what I say I mean. If you
torment me in this way any more, I must conclude that your
protestations are entirely false, and that you hate me in your
heart as fervently as you profess to love me!’</p>
<p>He bit his lip, and bent his eyes upon the ground in silence
for a while.</p>
<p>‘Then I must leave you,’ said he at length,
looking steadily upon me, as if with the last hope of detecting
some token of irrepressible anguish or dismay awakened by those
solemn words. ‘I must leave you. I cannot live
here, and be for ever silent on the all-absorbing subject of my
thoughts and wishes.’</p>
<p>‘Formerly, I believe, you spent but little of your time
at home,’ I answered; ‘it will do you no harm to
absent yourself again, for a while—if that be really
necessary.’</p>
<p>‘If that be really possible,’ he muttered;
‘and can you bid me go so coolly? Do you really wish
it?’</p>
<p>‘Most certainly I do. If you cannot see me without
tormenting me as you have lately done, I would gladly say
farewell and never see you more.’</p>
<p>He made no answer, but, bending from his horse, held out his
hand towards me. I looked up at his face, and saw therein
such a look of genuine agony of soul, that, whether bitter
disappointment, or wounded pride, or lingering love, or burning
wrath were uppermost, I could not hesitate to put my hand in his
as frankly as if I bade a friend farewell. He grasped it
very hard, and immediately put spurs to his horse and galloped
away. Very soon after, I learned that he was gone to Paris,
where he still is; and the longer he stays there the better for
me.</p>
<p>I thank God for this deliverance!</p>
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