<h2>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
<p>Two days are passed. It is a summer evening; the coachman has set me down at a
place called Whitcross; he could take me no farther for the sum I had given,
and I was not possessed of another shilling in the world. The coach is a mile
off by this time; I am alone. At this moment I discover that I forgot to take
my parcel out of the pocket of the coach, where I had placed it for safety;
there it remains, there it must remain; and now, I am absolutely destitute.</p>
<p>Whitcross is no town, nor even a hamlet; it is but a stone pillar set up where
four roads meet: whitewashed, I suppose, to be more obvious at a distance and
in darkness. Four arms spring from its summit: the nearest town to which these
point is, according to the inscription, distant ten miles; the farthest, above
twenty. From the well-known names of these towns I learn in what county I have
lighted; a north-midland shire, dusk with moorland, ridged with mountain: this
I see. There are great moors behind and on each hand of me; there are waves of
mountains far beyond that deep valley at my feet. The population here
must be thin, and I see no passengers on these roads: they stretch out east,
west, north, and south—white, broad, lonely; they are all cut in the
moor, and the heather grows deep and wild to their very verge. Yet a chance
traveller might pass by; and I wish no eye to see me now: strangers would
wonder what I am doing, lingering here at the sign-post, evidently objectless
and lost. I might be questioned: I could give no answer but what would sound
incredible and excite suspicion. Not a tie holds me to human society at this
moment—not a charm or hope calls me where my fellow-creatures
are—none that saw me would have a kind thought or a good wish for me. I
have no relative but the universal mother, Nature: I will seek her breast and
ask repose.</p>
<p>I struck straight into the heath; I held on to a hollow I saw deeply furrowing
the brown moorside; I waded knee-deep in its dark growth; I turned with its
turnings, and finding a moss-blackened granite crag in a hidden angle, I sat
down under it. High banks of moor were about me; the crag protected my head:
the sky was over that.</p>
<p>Some time passed before I felt tranquil even here: I had a vague dread that
wild cattle might be near, or that some sportsman or poacher might discover me.
If a gust of wind swept the waste, I looked up, fearing it was the rush of a
bull; if a plover whistled, I imagined it a man. Finding my apprehensions
unfounded, however, and calmed by the deep silence that reigned as evening
declined at nightfall, I took confidence. As yet I had not thought; I had only
listened, watched, dreaded; now I regained the faculty of reflection.</p>
<p>What was I to do? Where to go? Oh, intolerable questions, when I could do
nothing and go nowhere!—when a long way must yet be measured by my weary,
trembling limbs before I could reach human habitation—when cold charity
must be entreated before I could get a lodging: reluctant sympathy importuned,
almost certain repulse incurred, before my tale could be listened to, or one of
my wants relieved!</p>
<p>I touched the heath: it was dry, and yet warm with the heat of the summer day.
I looked at the sky; it was pure: a kindly star twinkled just above the chasm
ridge. The dew fell, but with propitious softness; no breeze whispered. Nature
seemed to me benign and good; I thought she loved me, outcast as I was; and I,
who from man could anticipate only mistrust, rejection, insult, clung to her
with filial fondness. To-night, at least, I would be her guest, as I was her
child: my mother would lodge me without money and without price. I had one
morsel of bread yet: the remnant of a roll I had bought in a town we passed
through at noon with a stray penny—my last coin. I saw ripe bilberries
gleaming here and there, like jet beads in the heath: I gathered a handful and
ate them with the bread. My hunger, sharp before, was, if not satisfied,
appeased by this hermit’s meal. I said my evening prayers at its
conclusion, and then chose my couch.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN href="images/p311b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="I said my evening prayers" src="images/p311s.jpg" /> </SPAN></div>
<p>Beside the crag the heath was very deep: when I lay down my feet were buried in
it; rising high on each side, it left only a narrow space for the night-air to
invade. I folded my shawl double, and spread it over me for a coverlet; a low,
mossy swell was my pillow. Thus lodged, I was not, at least at the commencement
of the night, cold.</p>
<p>My rest might have been blissful enough, only a sad heart broke it. It plained
of its gaping wounds, its inward bleeding, its riven chords. It trembled for
Mr. Rochester and his doom; it bemoaned him with bitter pity; it demanded him
with ceaseless longing; and, impotent as a bird with both wings broken, it
still quivered its shattered pinions in vain attempts to seek him.</p>
<p>Worn out with this torture of thought, I rose to my knees. Night was come, and
her planets were risen: a safe, still night: too serene for the companionship
of fear. We know that God is everywhere; but certainly we feel His presence
most when His works are on the grandest scale spread before us; and it is in
the unclouded night-sky, where His worlds wheel their silent course, that we
read clearest His infinitude, His omnipotence, His omnipresence. I had risen to
my knees to pray for Mr. Rochester. Looking up, I, with tear-dimmed eyes,
saw the mighty Milky-way. Remembering what it was—what countless
systems there swept space like a soft trace of light—I felt the might and
strength of God. Sure was I of His efficiency to save what He had made:
convinced I grew that neither earth should perish, nor one of the souls it
treasured. I turned my prayer to thanksgiving: the Source of Life was also the
Saviour of spirits. Mr. Rochester was safe: he was God’s, and by God
would he be guarded. I again nestled to the breast of the hill; and ere long in
sleep forgot sorrow.</p>
<p>But next day, Want came to me pale and bare. Long after the little birds had
left their nests; long after bees had come in the sweet prime of day to gather
the heath honey before the dew was dried—when the long morning shadows
were curtailed, and the sun filled earth and sky—I got up, and I looked
round me.</p>
<p>What a still, hot, perfect day! What a golden desert this spreading moor!
Everywhere sunshine. I wished I could live in it and on it. I saw a lizard run
over the crag; I saw a bee busy among the sweet bilberries. I would fain at the
moment have become bee or lizard, that I might have found fitting nutriment,
permanent shelter here. But I was a human being, and had a human being’s
wants: I must not linger where there was nothing to supply them. I rose; I
looked back at the bed I had left. Hopeless of the future, I wished but
this—that my Maker had that night thought good to require my soul of me
while I slept; and that this weary frame, absolved by death from further
conflict with fate, had now but to decay quietly, and mingle in peace with the
soil of this wilderness. Life, however, was yet in my possession, with
all its requirements, and pains, and responsibilities. The burden must be
carried; the want provided for; the suffering endured; the responsibility
fulfilled. I set out.</p>
<p>Whitcross regained, I followed a road which led from the sun, now fervent and
high. By no other circumstance had I will to decide my choice. I walked a long
time, and when I thought I had nearly done enough, and might conscientiously
yield to the fatigue that almost overpowered me—might relax this forced
action, and, sitting down on a stone I saw near, submit resistlessly to the
apathy that clogged heart and limb—I heard a bell chime—a church
bell.</p>
<p>I turned in the direction of the sound, and there, amongst the romantic hills,
whose changes and aspect I had ceased to note an hour ago, I saw a hamlet and a
spire. All the valley at my right hand was full of pasture-fields, and
cornfields, and wood; and a glittering stream ran zig-zag through the varied
shades of green, the mellowing grain, the sombre woodland, the clear and sunny
lea. Recalled by the rumbling of wheels to the road before me, I saw a
heavily-laden waggon labouring up the hill, and not far beyond were two cows
and their drover. Human life and human labour were near. I must struggle on:
strive to live and bend to toil like the rest.</p>
<p>About two o’clock <small>P.M.</small> I entered the village. At the
bottom of its one street there was a little shop with some cakes of bread in
the window. I coveted a cake of bread. With that refreshment I could perhaps
regain a degree of energy: without it, it would be difficult to proceed. The
wish to have some strength and some vigour returned to me as soon as I was
amongst my fellow-beings. I felt it would be degrading to faint with hunger on
the causeway of a hamlet. Had I nothing about me I could offer in exchange for
one of these rolls? I considered. I had a small silk handkerchief tied round my
throat; I had my gloves. I could hardly tell how men and women in extremities
of destitution proceeded. I did not know whether either of these articles would
be accepted: probably they would not; but I must try.</p>
<p>I entered the shop: a woman was there. Seeing a respectably-dressed person, a
lady as she supposed, she came forward with civility. How could she serve me? I
was seized with shame: my tongue would not utter the request I had prepared. I
dared not offer her the half-worn gloves, the creased handkerchief: besides, I
felt it would be absurd. I only begged permission to sit down a moment, as I
was tired. Disappointed in the expectation of a customer, she coolly acceded to
my request. She pointed to a seat; I sank into it. I felt sorely urged to weep;
but conscious how unseasonable such a manifestation would be, I restrained it.
Soon I asked her “if there were any dressmaker or plain-workwoman in the
village?”</p>
<p>“Yes; two or three. Quite as many as there was employment for.”</p>
<p>I reflected. I was driven to the point now. I was brought face to face with
Necessity. I stood in the position of one without a resource, without a friend,
without a coin. I must do something. What? I must apply somewhere. Where?</p>
<p>“Did she know of any place in the neighbourhood where a servant was
wanted?”</p>
<p>“Nay; she couldn’t say.”</p>
<p>“What was the chief trade in this place? What did most of the people
do?”</p>
<p>“Some were farm labourers; a good deal worked at Mr. Oliver’s
needle-factory, and at the foundry.”</p>
<p>“Did Mr. Oliver employ women?”</p>
<p>“Nay; it was men’s work.”</p>
<p>“And what do the women do?”</p>
<p>“I knawn’t,” was the answer. “Some does one thing, and
some another. Poor folk mun get on as they can.”</p>
<p>She seemed to be tired of my questions: and, indeed, what claim had I to
importune her? A neighbour or two came in; my chair was evidently wanted. I
took leave.</p>
<p>I passed up the street, looking as I went at all the houses to the right hand
and to the left; but I could discover no pretext, nor see an inducement to
enter any. I rambled round the hamlet, going sometimes to a little distance and
returning again, for an hour or more. Much exhausted, and suffering greatly now
for want of food, I turned aside into a lane and sat down under the hedge. Ere
many minutes had elapsed, I was again on my feet, however, and again searching
something—a resource, or at least an informant. A pretty little house
stood at the top of the lane, with a garden before it, exquisitely neat and
brilliantly blooming. I stopped at it. What business had I to approach the
white door or touch the glittering knocker? In what way could it possibly be
the interest of the inhabitants of that dwelling to serve me? Yet I drew near
and knocked. A mild-looking, cleanly-attired young woman opened the door. In
such a voice as might be expected from a hopeless heart and fainting
frame—a voice wretchedly low and faltering—I asked if a servant was
wanted here?</p>
<p>“No,” said she; “we do not keep a servant.”</p>
<p>“Can you tell me where I could get employment of any kind?” I
continued. “I am a stranger, without acquaintance in this place. I want
some work: no matter what.”</p>
<p>But it was not her business to think for me, or to seek a place for me:
besides, in her eyes, how doubtful must have appeared my character, position,
tale. She shook her head, she “was sorry she could give me no
information,” and the white door closed, quite gently and civilly: but it
shut me out. If she had held it open a little longer, I believe I should have
begged a piece of bread; for I was now brought low.</p>
<p>I could not bear to return to the sordid village, where, besides, no prospect
of aid was visible. I should have longed rather to deviate to a wood I saw not
far off, which appeared in its thick shade to offer inviting shelter; but I was
so sick, so weak, so gnawed with nature’s cravings, instinct kept me
roaming round abodes where there was a chance of food. Solitude would be no
solitude—rest no rest—while the vulture, hunger, thus sank beak and
talons in my side.</p>
<p>I drew near houses; I left them, and came back again, and again I wandered
away: always repelled by the consciousness of having no claim to ask—no
right to expect interest in my isolated lot. Meantime, the afternoon advanced,
while I thus wandered about like a lost and starving dog. In crossing a field,
I saw the church spire before me: I hastened towards it. Near the churchyard,
and in the middle of a garden, stood a well-built though small house, which I
had no doubt was the parsonage. I remembered that strangers who arrive at a
place where they have no friends, and who want employment, sometimes apply to
the clergyman for introduction and aid. It is the clergyman’s function to
help—at least with advice—those who wished to help themselves. I
seemed to have something like a right to seek counsel here. Renewing then my
courage, and gathering my feeble remains of strength, I pushed on. I reached
the house, and knocked at the kitchen-door. An old woman opened: I asked was
this the parsonage?</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Was the clergyman in?”</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“Would he be in soon?”</p>
<p>“No, he was gone from home.”</p>
<p>“To a distance?”</p>
<p>“Not so far—happen three mile. He had been called away by the
sudden death of his father: he was at Marsh End now, and would very likely stay
there a fortnight longer.”</p>
<p>“Was there any lady of the house?”</p>
<p>“Nay, there was naught but her, and she was housekeeper;” and of
her, reader, I could not bear to ask the relief for want of which I was
sinking; I could not yet beg; and again I crawled away.</p>
<p>Once more I took off my handkerchief—once more I thought of the cakes of
bread in the little shop. Oh, for but a crust! for but one mouthful to allay
the pang of famine! Instinctively I turned my face again to the village; I
found the shop again, and I went in; and though others were there besides the
woman I ventured the request—“Would she give me a roll for this
handkerchief?”</p>
<p>She looked at me with evident suspicion: “Nay, she never sold stuff
i’ that way.”</p>
<p>Almost desperate, I asked for half a cake; she again refused. “How could
she tell where I had got the handkerchief?” she said.</p>
<p>“Would she take my gloves?”</p>
<p>“No! what could she do with them?”</p>
<p>Reader, it is not pleasant to dwell on these details. Some say there is
enjoyment in looking back to painful experience past; but at this day I can
scarcely bear to review the times to which I allude: the moral degradation,
blent with the physical suffering, form too distressing a recollection ever to
be willingly dwelt on. I blamed none of those who repulsed me. I felt it was
what was to be expected, and what could not be helped: an ordinary beggar is
frequently an object of suspicion; a well-dressed beggar inevitably so. To be
sure, what I begged was employment; but whose business was it to provide me
with employment? Not, certainly, that of persons who saw me then for the first
time, and who knew nothing about my character. And as to the woman who would
not take my handkerchief in exchange for her bread, why, she was right, if the
offer appeared to her sinister or the exchange unprofitable. Let me condense
now. I am sick of the subject.</p>
<p>A little before dark I passed a farm-house, at the open door of which the
farmer was sitting, eating his supper of bread and cheese. I stopped and
said—</p>
<p>“Will you give me a piece of bread? for I am very hungry.” He cast
on me a glance of surprise; but without answering, he cut a thick slice from
his loaf, and gave it to me. I imagine he did not think I was a beggar, but
only an eccentric sort of lady, who had taken a fancy to his brown loaf. As
soon as I was out of sight of his house, I sat down and ate it.</p>
<p>I could not hope to get a lodging under a roof, and sought it in the wood I
have before alluded to. But my night was wretched, my rest broken: the ground
was damp, the air cold: besides, intruders passed near me more than once, and I
had again and again to change my quarters: no sense of safety or tranquillity
befriended me. Towards morning it rained; the whole of the following day was
wet. Do not ask me, reader, to give a minute account of that day; as before, I
sought work; as before, I was repulsed; as before, I starved; but once did food
pass my lips. At the door of a cottage I saw a little girl about to throw a
mess of cold porridge into a pig trough. “Will you give me
that?” I asked.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN href="images/p316b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="“Will you give me that?” I asked" src="images/p316s.jpg" /> </SPAN></div>
<p>She stared at me. “Mother!” she exclaimed, “there is a woman
wants me to give her these porridge.”</p>
<p>“Well lass,” replied a voice within, “give it her if
she’s a beggar. T’ pig doesn’t want it.”</p>
<p>The girl emptied the stiffened mould into my hand, and I devoured it
ravenously.</p>
<p>As the wet twilight deepened, I stopped in a solitary bridle-path, which I had
been pursuing an hour or more.</p>
<p>“My strength is quite failing me,” I said in a soliloquy.
“I feel I cannot go much farther. Shall I be an outcast again this night?
While the rain descends so, must I lay my head on the cold, drenched ground? I
fear I cannot do otherwise: for who will receive me? But it will be very
dreadful, with this feeling of hunger, faintness, chill, and this sense of
desolation—this total prostration of hope. In all likelihood,
though, I should die before morning. And why cannot I reconcile myself to the
prospect of death? Why do I struggle to retain a valueless life? Because I
know, or believe, Mr. Rochester is living: and then, to die of want and cold is
a fate to which nature cannot submit passively. Oh, Providence! sustain me a
little longer! Aid!—direct me!”</p>
<p>My glazed eye wandered over the dim and misty landscape. I saw I had strayed
far from the village: it was quite out of sight. The very cultivation
surrounding it had disappeared. I had, by cross-ways and by-paths, once more
drawn near the tract of moorland; and now, only a few fields, almost as wild
and unproductive as the heath from which they were scarcely reclaimed, lay
between me and the dusky hill.</p>
<p>“Well, I would rather die yonder than in a street or on a frequented
road,” I reflected. “And far better that crows and ravens—if
any ravens there be in these regions—should pick my flesh from my bones,
than that they should be prisoned in a workhouse coffin and moulder in a
pauper’s grave.”</p>
<p>To the hill, then, I turned. I reached it. It remained now only to find a
hollow where I could lie down, and feel at least hidden, if not secure. But all
the surface of the waste looked level. It showed no variation but of tint:
green, where rush and moss overgrew the marshes; black, where the dry soil bore
only heath. Dark as it was getting, I could still see these changes, though but
as mere alternations of light and shade; for colour had faded with the
daylight.</p>
<p>My eye still roved over the sullen swell and along the moor-edge, vanishing
amidst the wildest scenery, when at one dim point, far in among the marshes and
the ridges, a light sprang up. “That is an <i>ignis fatuus</i>,”
was my first thought; and I expected it would soon vanish. It burnt on,
however, quite steadily, neither receding nor advancing. “Is it, then, a
bonfire just kindled?” I questioned. I watched to see whether it would
spread: but no; as it did not diminish, so it did not enlarge. “It may be
a candle in a house,” I then conjectured; “but if so, I can never
reach it. It is much too far away: and were it within a yard of me, what
would it avail? I should but knock at the door to have it shut in my
face.”</p>
<p>And I sank down where I stood, and hid my face against the ground. I lay still
a while: the night-wind swept over the hill and over me, and died moaning in
the distance; the rain fell fast, wetting me afresh to the skin. Could I but
have stiffened to the still frost—the friendly numbness of death—it
might have pelted on; I should not have felt it; but my yet living flesh
shuddered at its chilling influence. I rose ere long.</p>
<p>The light was yet there, shining dim but constant through the rain. I tried to
walk again: I dragged my exhausted limbs slowly towards it. It led me aslant
over the hill, through a wide bog, which would have been impassable in winter,
and was splashy and shaking even now, in the height of summer. Here I fell
twice; but as often I rose and rallied my faculties. This light was my forlorn
hope: I must gain it.</p>
<p>Having crossed the marsh, I saw a trace of white over the moor. I approached
it; it was a road or a track: it led straight up to the light, which now beamed
from a sort of knoll, amidst a clump of trees—firs, apparently, from what
I could distinguish of the character of their forms and foliage through the
gloom. My star vanished as I drew near: some obstacle had intervened between me
and it. I put out my hand to feel the dark mass before me: I discriminated the
rough stones of a low wall—above it, something like palisades, and
within, a high and prickly hedge. I groped on. Again a whitish object gleamed
before me: it was a gate—a wicket; it moved on its hinges as I touched
it. On each side stood a sable bush—holly or yew.</p>
<p>Entering the gate and passing the shrubs, the silhouette of a house rose to
view, black, low, and rather long; but the guiding light shone nowhere.
All was obscurity. Were the inmates retired to rest? I feared it must be so. In
seeking the door, I turned an angle: there shot out the friendly gleam again,
from the lozenged panes of a very small latticed window, within a foot of the
ground, made still smaller by the growth of ivy or some other creeping plant,
whose leaves clustered thick over the portion of the house wall in which it was
set. The aperture was so screened and narrow, that curtain or shutter had been
deemed unnecessary; and when I stooped down and put aside the spray of foliage
shooting over it, I could see all within. I could see clearly a room with a
sanded floor, clean scoured; a dresser of walnut, with pewter plates ranged in
rows, reflecting the redness and radiance of a glowing peat-fire. I could see a
clock, a white deal table, some chairs. The candle, whose ray had been my
beacon, burnt on the table; and by its light an elderly woman, somewhat
rough-looking, but scrupulously clean, like all about her, was knitting a
stocking.</p>
<p>I noticed these objects cursorily only—in them there was nothing
extraordinary. A group of more interest appeared near the hearth, sitting still
amidst the rosy peace and warmth suffusing it. Two young, graceful
women—ladies in every point—sat, one in a low rocking-chair, the
other on a lower stool; both wore deep mourning of crape and bombazeen, which
sombre garb singularly set off very fair necks and faces: a large old pointer
dog rested its massive head on the knee of one girl—in the lap of the
other was cushioned a black cat.</p>
<p>A strange place was this humble kitchen for such occupants! Who were they? They
could not be the daughters of the elderly person at the table; for she looked
like a rustic, and they were all delicacy and cultivation. I had nowhere
seen such faces as theirs: and yet, as I gazed on them, I seemed intimate with
every lineament. I cannot call them handsome—they were too pale and grave
for the word: as they each bent over a book, they looked thoughtful almost to
severity. A stand between them supported a second candle and two great volumes,
to which they frequently referred, comparing them, seemingly, with the smaller
books they held in their hands, like people consulting a dictionary to aid them
in the task of translation. This scene was as silent as if all the figures had
been shadows and the firelit apartment a picture: so hushed was it, I could
hear the cinders fall from the grate, the clock tick in its obscure corner; and
I even fancied I could distinguish the click-click of the woman’s
knitting-needles. When, therefore, a voice broke the strange stillness at last,
it was audible enough to me.</p>
<p>“Listen, Diana,” said one of the absorbed students; “Franz
and old Daniel are together in the night-time, and Franz is telling a dream
from which he has awakened in terror—listen!” And in a low voice
she read something, of which not one word was intelligible to me; for it was in
an unknown tongue—neither French nor Latin. Whether it were Greek or
German I could not tell.</p>
<p>“That is strong,” she said, when she had finished: “I relish
it.” The other girl, who had lifted her head to listen to her sister,
repeated, while she gazed at the fire, a line of what had been read. At a later
day, I knew the language and the book; therefore, I will here quote the line:
though, when I first heard it, it was only like a stroke on sounding brass to
me—conveying no meaning:—</p>
<p>“‘Da trat hervor Einer, anzusehen wie die Sternen Nacht.’
Good! good!” she exclaimed, while her dark and deep eye sparkled.
“There you have a dim and mighty archangel fitly set before you! The line
is worth a hundred pages of fustian. ‘Ich wäge die Gedanken in
der Schale meines Zornes und die Werke mit dem Gewichte meines Grimms.’ I
like it!”</p>
<p>Both were again silent.</p>
<p>“Is there ony country where they talk i’ that way?” asked the
old woman, looking up from her knitting.</p>
<p>“Yes, Hannah—a far larger country than England, where they talk in
no other way.”</p>
<p>“Well, for sure case, I knawn’t how they can understand t’
one t’other: and if either o’ ye went there, ye could tell what
they said, I guess?”</p>
<p>“We could probably tell something of what they said, but not
all—for we are not as clever as you think us, Hannah. We don’t
speak German, and we cannot read it without a dictionary to help us.”</p>
<p>“And what good does it do you?”</p>
<p>“We mean to teach it some time—or at least the elements, as they
say; and then we shall get more money than we do now.”</p>
<p>“Varry like: but give ower studying; ye’ve done enough for
to-night.”</p>
<p>“I think we have: at least I’m tired. Mary, are you?”</p>
<p>“Mortally: after all, it’s tough work fagging away at a language
with no master but a lexicon.”</p>
<p>“It is, especially such a language as this crabbed but glorious Deutsch.
I wonder when St. John will come home.”</p>
<p>“Surely he will not be long now: it is just ten (looking at a little gold
watch she drew from her girdle). It rains fast, Hannah: will you have the
goodness to look at the fire in the parlour?”</p>
<p>The woman rose: she opened a door, through which I dimly saw a passage: soon I
heard her stir a fire in an inner room; she presently came back.</p>
<p>“Ah, childer!” said she, “it fair troubles me to go into
yond’ room now: it looks so lonesome wi’ the chair empty and set
back in a corner.”</p>
<p>She wiped her eyes with her apron: the two girls, grave before, looked sad now.</p>
<p>“But he is in a better place,” continued Hannah: “we
shouldn’t wish him here again. And then, nobody need to have a quieter
death nor he had.”</p>
<p>“You say he never mentioned us?” inquired one of the ladies.</p>
<p>“He hadn’t time, bairn: he was gone in a minute, was your father.
He had been a bit ailing like the day before, but naught to signify; and when
Mr. St. John asked if he would like either o’ ye to be sent for, he fair
laughed at him. He began again with a bit of a heaviness in his head the next
day—that is, a fortnight sin’—and he went to sleep and niver
wakened: he wor a’most stark when your brother went into t’ chamber
and fand him. Ah, childer! that’s t’ last o’ t’ old
stock—for ye and Mr. St. John is like of different soart to them
’at’s gone; for all your mother wor mich i’ your way, and
a’most as book-learned. She wor the pictur’ o’ ye, Mary:
Diana is more like your father.”</p>
<p>I thought them so similar I could not tell where the old servant (for such I
now concluded her to be) saw the difference. Both were fair complexioned and
slenderly made; both possessed faces full of distinction and intelligence. One,
to be sure, had hair a shade darker than the other, and there was a difference
in their style of wearing it; Mary’s pale brown locks were parted and
braided smooth: Diana’s duskier tresses covered her neck with thick
curls. The clock struck ten.</p>
<p>“Ye’ll want your supper, I am sure,” observed Hannah;
“and so will Mr. St. John when he comes in.”</p>
<p>And she proceeded to prepare the meal. The ladies rose; they seemed about to
withdraw to the parlour. Till this moment, I had been so intent on watching
them, their appearance and conversation had excited in me so keen an interest,
I had half-forgotten my own wretched position: now it recurred to me. More
desolate, more desperate than ever, it seemed from contrast. And how impossible
did it appear to touch the inmates of this house with concern on my behalf; to
make them believe in the truth of my wants and woes—to induce them to
vouchsafe a rest for my wanderings! As I groped out the door, and knocked at it
hesitatingly, I felt that last idea to be a mere chimera. Hannah opened.</p>
<p>“What do you want?” she inquired, in a voice of surprise, as she
surveyed me by the light of the candle she held.</p>
<p>“May I speak to your mistresses?” I said.</p>
<p>“You had better tell me what you have to say to them. Where do you come
from?”</p>
<p>“I am a stranger.”</p>
<p>“What is your business here at this hour?”</p>
<p>“I want a night’s shelter in an out-house or anywhere, and a morsel
of bread to eat.”</p>
<p>Distrust, the very feeling I dreaded, appeared in Hannah’s face.
“I’ll give you a piece of bread,” she said, after a pause;
“but we can’t take in a vagrant to lodge. It isn’t
likely.”</p>
<p>“Do let me speak to your mistresses.”</p>
<p>“No, not I. What can they do for you? You should not be roving about now;
it looks very ill.”</p>
<p>“But where shall I go if you drive me away? What shall I do?”</p>
<p>“Oh, I’ll warrant you know where to go and what to do. Mind you
don’t do wrong, that’s all. Here is a penny; now go—”</p>
<p>“A penny cannot feed me, and I have no strength to go farther.
Don’t shut the door:—oh, don’t, for God’s sake!”</p>
<p>“I must; the rain is driving in—”</p>
<p>“Tell the young ladies. Let me see them—”</p>
<p>“Indeed, I will not. You are not what you ought to be, or you
wouldn’t make such a noise. Move off.”</p>
<p>“But I must die if I am turned away.”</p>
<p>“Not you. I’m fear’d you have some ill plans agate, that
bring you about folk’s houses at this time o’ night. If
you’ve any followers—housebreakers or such like—anywhere
near, you may tell them we are not by ourselves in the house; we have a
gentleman, and dogs, and guns.” Here the honest but inflexible servant
clapped the door to and bolted it within.</p>
<p>This was the climax. A pang of exquisite suffering—a throe of true
despair—rent and heaved my heart. Worn out, indeed, I was; not another
step could I stir. I sank on the wet doorstep: I groaned—I wrung my
hands—I wept in utter anguish. Oh, this spectre of death! Oh, this last
hour, approaching in such horror! Alas, this isolation—this banishment
from my kind! Not only the anchor of hope, but the footing of fortitude was
gone—at least for a moment; but the last I soon endeavoured to regain.</p>
<p>“I can but die,” I said, “and I believe in God. Let me try to
wait His will in silence.”</p>
<p>These words I not only thought, but uttered; and thrusting back all my misery
into my heart, I made an effort to compel it to remain there—dumb and
still.</p>
<p>“All men must die,” said a voice quite close at hand; “but
all are not condemned to meet a lingering and premature doom, such as yours
would be if you perished here of want.”</p>
<p>“Who or what speaks?” I asked, terrified at the unexpected sound,
and incapable now of deriving from any occurrence a hope of aid. A form was
near—what form, the pitch-dark night and my enfeebled vision prevented me
from distinguishing. With a loud long knock, the new-comer appealed to the
door.</p>
<p>“Is it you, Mr. St. John?” cried Hannah.</p>
<p>“Yes—yes; open quickly.”</p>
<p>“Well, how wet and cold you must be, such a wild night as it is!
Come in—your sisters are quite uneasy about you, and I believe there are
bad folks about. There has been a beggar-woman—I declare she is not gone
yet!—laid down there. Get up! for shame! Move off, I say!”</p>
<p>“Hush, Hannah! I have a word to say to the woman. You have done your duty
in excluding, now let me do mine in admitting her. I was near, and listened to
both you and her. I think this is a peculiar case—I must at least examine
into it. Young woman, rise, and pass before me into the house.”</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN href="images/p323b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="Hush, Hannah; I have a word to say to the woman" src="images/p323s.jpg" /> </SPAN></div>
<p>With difficulty I obeyed him. Presently I stood within that clean, bright
kitchen—on the very hearth—trembling, sickening; conscious of an
aspect in the last degree ghastly, wild, and weather-beaten. The two ladies,
their brother, Mr. St. John, the old servant, were all gazing at me.</p>
<p>“St. John, who is it?” I heard one ask.</p>
<p>“I cannot tell: I found her at the door,” was the reply.</p>
<p>“She does look white,” said Hannah.</p>
<p>“As white as clay or death,” was responded. “She will fall:
let her sit.”</p>
<p>And indeed my head swam: I dropped, but a chair received me. I still possessed
my senses, though just now I could not speak.</p>
<p>“Perhaps a little water would restore her. Hannah, fetch some. But she is
worn to nothing. How very thin, and how very bloodless!”</p>
<p>“A mere spectre!”</p>
<p>“Is she ill, or only famished?”</p>
<p>“Famished, I think. Hannah, is that milk? Give it me, and a piece of
bread.”</p>
<p>Diana (I knew her by the long curls which I saw drooping between me and the
fire as she bent over me) broke some bread, dipped it in milk, and put it to my
lips. Her face was near mine: I saw there was pity in it, and I felt sympathy
in her hurried breathing. In her simple words, too, the same balm-like emotion
spoke: “Try to eat.”</p>
<p>“Yes—try,” repeated Mary gently; and Mary’s hand
removed my sodden bonnet and lifted my head. I tasted what they offered me:
feebly at first, eagerly soon.</p>
<p>“Not too much at first—restrain her,” said the brother;
“she has had enough.” And he withdrew the cup of milk and the plate
of bread.</p>
<p>“A little more, St. John—look at the avidity in her eyes.”</p>
<p>“No more at present, sister. Try if she can speak now—ask her her
name.”</p>
<p>I felt I could speak, and I answered—“My name is Jane
Elliott.” Anxious as ever to avoid discovery, I had before resolved to
assume an <i>alias</i>.</p>
<p>“And where do you live? Where are your friends?”</p>
<p>I was silent.</p>
<p>“Can we send for any one you know?”</p>
<p>I shook my head.</p>
<p>“What account can you give of yourself?”</p>
<p>Somehow, now that I had once crossed the threshold of this house, and once was
brought face to face with its owners, I felt no longer outcast, vagrant, and
disowned by the wide world. I dared to put off the mendicant—to resume my
natural manner and character. I began once more to know myself; and when Mr.
St. John demanded an account—which at present I was far too weak to
render—I said after a brief pause—</p>
<p>“Sir, I can give you no details to-night.”</p>
<p>“But what, then,” said he, “do you expect me to do for
you?”</p>
<p>“Nothing,” I replied. My strength sufficed for but short answers.
Diana took the word—</p>
<p>“Do you mean,” she asked, “that we have now given you what
aid you require? and that we may dismiss you to the moor and the rainy
night?”</p>
<p>I looked at her. She had, I thought, a remarkable countenance, instinct both
with power and goodness. I took sudden courage. Answering her compassionate
gaze with a smile, I said—“I will trust you. If I were a masterless
and stray dog, I know that you would not turn me from your hearth to-night: as
it is, I really have no fear. Do with me and for me as you like; but excuse me
from much discourse—my breath is short—I feel a spasm when I
speak.” All three surveyed me, and all three were silent.</p>
<p>“Hannah,” said Mr. St. John, at last, “let her sit there at
present, and ask her no questions; in ten minutes more, give her the remainder
of that milk and bread. Mary and Diana, let us go into the parlour and talk the
matter over.”</p>
<p>They withdrew. Very soon one of the ladies returned—I could not tell
which. A kind of pleasant stupor was stealing over me as I sat by the genial
fire. In an undertone she gave some directions to Hannah. Ere long, with the
servant’s aid, I contrived to mount a staircase; my dripping clothes were
removed; soon a warm, dry bed received me. I thanked God—experienced
amidst unutterable exhaustion a glow of grateful joy—and slept.</p>
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