<h2>CHAPTER XXXII</h2>
<p>October 5th.—Esther Hargrave is getting a fine
girl. She is not out of the school-room yet, but her mother
frequently brings her over to call in the mornings when the
gentlemen are out, and sometimes she spends an hour or two in
company with her sister and me, and the children; and when we go
to the Grove, I always contrive to see her, and talk more to her
than to any one else, for I am very much attached to my little
friend, and so is she to me. I wonder what she can see to
like in me though, for I am no longer the happy, lively girl I
used to be; but she has no other society, save that of her
uncongenial mother, and her governess (as artificial and
conventional a person as that prudent mother could procure to
rectify the pupil’s natural qualities), and, now and then,
her subdued, quiet sister. I often wonder what will be her
lot in life, and so does she; but her speculations on the future
are full of buoyant hope; so were mine once. I shudder to
think of her being awakened, like me, to a sense of their
delusive vanity. It seems as if I should feel her
disappointment, even more deeply than my own. I feel almost
as if I were born for such a fate, but she is so joyous and
fresh, so light of heart and free of spirit, and so guileless and
unsuspecting too. Oh, it would be cruel to make her feel as
I feel now, and know what I have known!</p>
<p>Her sister trembles for her too. Yesterday morning, one
of October’s brightest, loveliest days, Milicent and I were
in the garden enjoying a brief half-hour together with our
children, while Annabella was lying on the drawing-room sofa,
deep in the last new novel. We had been romping with the
little creatures, almost as merry and wild as themselves, and now
paused in the shade of the tall copper beech, to recover breath
and rectify our hair, disordered by the rough play and the
frolicsome breeze, while they toddled together along the broad,
sunny walk; my Arthur supporting the feebler steps of her little
Helen, and sagaciously pointing out to her the brightest beauties
of the border as they passed, with semi-articulate prattle, that
did as well for her as any other mode of discourse. From
laughing at the pretty sight, we began to talk of the
children’s future life; and that made us thoughtful.
We both relapsed into silent musing as we slowly proceeded up the
walk; and I suppose Milicent, by a train of associations, was led
to think of her sister.</p>
<p>‘Helen,’ said she, ‘you often see Esther,
don’t you?’</p>
<p>‘Not very often.’</p>
<p>‘But you have more frequent opportunities of meeting her
than I have; and she loves you, I know, and reverences you too:
there is nobody’s opinion she thinks so much of; and she
says you have more sense than mamma.’</p>
<p>‘That is because she is self-willed, and my opinions
more generally coincide with her own than your
mamma’s. But what then, Milicent?’</p>
<p>‘Well, since you have so much influence with her, I wish
you would seriously impress it upon her, never, on any account,
or for anybody’s persuasion, to marry for the sake of
money, or rank, or establishment, or any earthly thing, but true
affection and well-grounded esteem.’</p>
<p>‘There is no necessity for that,’ said I,
‘for we have had some discourse on that subject already,
and I assure you her ideas of love and matrimony are as romantic
as any one could desire.’</p>
<p>‘But romantic notions will not do: I want her to have
true notions.’</p>
<p>‘Very right: but in my judgment, what the world
stigmatises as romantic, is often more nearly allied to the truth
than is commonly supposed; for, if the generous ideas of youth
are too often over-clouded by the sordid views of after-life,
that scarcely proves them to be false.’</p>
<p>‘Well, but if you think her ideas are what they ought to
be, strengthen them, will you? and confirm them, as far as you
can; for I had romantic notions once, and—I don’t
mean to say that I regret my lot, for I am quite sure I
don’t, but—’</p>
<p>‘I understand you,’ said I; ‘you are
contented for yourself, but you would not have your sister to
suffer the same as you.’</p>
<p>‘No—or worse. She might have far worse to
suffer than I, for I am really contented, Helen, though you
mayn’t think it: I speak the solemn truth in saying that I
would not exchange my husband for any man on earth, if I might do
it by the plucking of this leaf.’</p>
<p>‘Well, I believe you: now that you have him, you would
not exchange him for another; but then you would gladly exchange
some of his qualities for those of better men.’</p>
<p>‘Yes: just as I would gladly exchange some of my own
qualities for those of better women; for neither he nor I are
perfect, and I desire his improvement as earnestly as my
own. And he will improve, don’t you think so, Helen?
he’s only six-and-twenty yet.’</p>
<p>‘He may,’ I answered,</p>
<p>‘He will, he <span class="smcap">will</span>!’
repeated she.</p>
<p>‘Excuse the faintness of my acquiescence, Milicent, I
would not discourage your hopes for the world, but mine have been
so often disappointed, that I am become as cold and doubtful in
my expectations as the flattest of octogenarians.’</p>
<p>‘And yet you do hope, still, even for Mr.
Huntingdon?’</p>
<p>‘I do, I confess, “even” for him; for it
seems as if life and hope must cease together. And is he so
much worse, Milicent, than Mr. Hattersley?’</p>
<p>‘Well, to give you my candid opinion, I think there is
no comparison between them. But you mustn’t be
offended, Helen, for you know I always speak my mind, and you may
speak yours too. I sha’n’t care.’</p>
<p>‘I am not offended, love; and my opinion is, that if
there be a comparison made between the two, the difference, for
the most part, is certainly in Hattersley’s
favour.’</p>
<p>Milicent’s own heart told her how much it cost me to
make this acknowledgment; and, with a childlike impulse, she
expressed her sympathy by suddenly kissing my cheek, without a
word of reply, and then turning quickly away, caught up her baby,
and hid her face in its frock. How odd it is that we so
often weep for each other’s distresses, when we shed not a
tear for our own! Her heart had been full enough of her own
sorrows, but it overflowed at the idea of mine; and I, too, shed
tears at the sight of her sympathetic emotion, though I had not
wept for myself for many a week.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p286b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt= "Blake Hall—Side (Grassdale Manor)" title= "Blake Hall—Side (Grassdale Manor)" src="images/p286s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>It was one rainy day last week; most of the company were
killing time in the billiard-room, but Milicent and I were with
little Arthur and Helen in the library, and between our books,
our children, and each other, we expected to make out a very
agreeable morning. We had not been thus secluded above two
hours, however, when Mr. Hattersley came in, attracted, I
suppose, by the voice of his child, as he was crossing the hall,
for he is prodigiously fond of her, and she of him.</p>
<p>He was redolent of the stables, where he had been regaling
himself with the company of his fellow-creatures the horses ever
since breakfast. But that was no matter to my little
namesake; as soon as the colossal person of her father darkened
the door, she uttered a shrill scream of delight, and, quitting
her mother’s side, ran crowing towards him, balancing her
course with outstretched arms, and embracing his knee, threw back
her head and laughed in his face. He might well look
smilingly down upon those small, fair features, radiant with
innocent mirth, those clear blue shining eyes, and that soft
flaxen hair cast back upon the little ivory neck and
shoulders. Did he not think how unworthy he was of such a
possession? I fear no such idea crossed his mind. He
caught her up, and there followed some minutes of very rough
play, during which it is difficult to say whether the father or
the daughter laughed and shouted the loudest. At length,
however, the boisterous pastime terminated, suddenly, as might be
expected: the little one was hurt, and began to cry; and the
ungentle play-fellow tossed it into its mother’s lap,
bidding her ‘make all straight.’ As happy to return
to that gentle comforter as it had been to leave her, the child
nestled in her arms, and hushed its cries in a moment; and
sinking its little weary head on her bosom, soon dropped
asleep.</p>
<p>Meantime Mr. Hattersley strode up to the fire, and interposing
his height and breadth between us and it, stood with arms akimbo,
expanding his chest, and gazing round him as if the house and all
its appurtenances and contents were his own undisputed
possessions.</p>
<p>‘Deuced bad weather this!’ he began.
‘There’ll be no shooting to-day, I
guess.’ Then, suddenly lifting up his voice, he
regaled us with a few bars of a rollicking song, which abruptly
ceasing, he finished the tune with a whistle, and then
continued:—‘I say, Mrs. Huntingdon, what a fine stud
your husband has! not large, but good. I’ve been
looking at them a bit this morning; and upon my word, Black Boss,
and Grey Tom, and that young Nimrod are the finest animals
I’ve seen for many a day!’ Then followed a
particular discussion of their various merits, succeeded by a
sketch of the great things he intended to do in the horse-jockey
line, when his old governor thought proper to quit the
stage. ‘Not that I wish him to close his
accounts,’ added he: ‘the old Trojan is welcome to
keep his books open as long as he pleases for me.’</p>
<p>‘I hope so, indeed, Mr. Hattersley.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, yes! It’s only my way of talking.
The event must come some time, and so I look to the bright side
of it: that’s the right plan—isn’t it, Mrs.
H.? What are you two doing here? By-the-by,
where’s Lady Lowborough?’</p>
<p>‘In the billiard-room.’</p>
<p>‘What a splendid creature she is!’ continued he,
fixing his eyes on his wife, who changed colour, and looked more
and more disconcerted as he proceeded. ‘What a noble
figure she has; and what magnificent black eyes; and what a fine
spirit of her own; and what a tongue of her own, too, when she
likes to use it. I perfectly adore her! But never
mind, Milicent: I wouldn’t have her for my wife, not if
she’d a kingdom for her dowry! I’m better
satisfied with the one I have. Now then! what do you look
so sulky for? don’t you believe me?’</p>
<p>‘Yes, I believe you,’ murmured she, in a tone of
half sad, half sullen resignation, as she turned away to stroke
the hair of her sleeping infant, that she had laid on the sofa
beside her.</p>
<p>‘Well, then, what makes you so cross? Come here,
Milly, and tell me why you can’t be satisfied with my
assurance.’</p>
<p>She went, and putting her little hand within his arm, looked
up in his face, and said softly,—</p>
<p>‘What does it amount to, Ralph? Only to this, that
though you admire Annabella so much, and for qualities that I
don’t possess, you would still rather have me than her for
your wife, which merely proves that you don’t think it
necessary to love your wife; you are satisfied if she can keep
your house, and take care of your child. But I’m not
cross; I’m only sorry; for,’ added she, in a low,
tremulous accent, withdrawing her hand from his arm, and bending
her looks on the rug, ‘if you don’t love me, you
don’t, and it can’t be helped.’</p>
<p>‘Very true; but who told you I didn’t? Did I
say I loved Annabella?’</p>
<p>‘You said you adored her.’</p>
<p>‘True, but adoration isn’t love. I adore
Annabella, but I don’t love her; and I love thee, Milicent,
but I don’t adore thee.’ In proof of his
affection, he clutched a handful of her light brown ringlets, and
appeared to twist them unmercifully.</p>
<p>‘Do you really, Ralph?’ murmured she, with a faint
smile beaming through her tears, just putting up her hand to his,
in token that he pulled rather too hard.</p>
<p>‘To be sure I do,’ responded he: ‘only you
bother me rather, sometimes.’</p>
<p>‘I bother you!’ cried she, in very natural
surprise.</p>
<p>‘Yes, you—but only by your exceeding
goodness. When a boy has been eating raisins and
sugar-plums all day, he longs for a squeeze of sour orange by way
of a change. And did you never, Milly, observe the sands on
the sea-shore; how nice and smooth they look, and how soft and
easy they feel to the foot? But if you plod along, for half
an hour, over this soft, easy carpet—giving way at every
step, yielding the more the harder you press,—you’ll
find it rather wearisome work, and be glad enough to come to a
bit of good, firm rock, that won’t budge an inch whether
you stand, walk, or stamp upon it; and, though it be hard as the
nether millstone, you’ll find it the easier footing after
all.’</p>
<p>‘I know what you mean, Ralph,’ said she, nervously
playing with her watchguard and tracing the figure on the rug
with the point of her tiny foot—‘I know what you
mean: but I thought you always liked to be yielded to, and I
can’t alter now.’</p>
<p>‘I do like it,’ replied he, bringing her to him by
another tug at her hair. ‘You mustn’t mind my
talk, Milly. A man must have something to grumble about;
and if he can’t complain that his wife harries him to death
with her perversity and ill-humour, he must complain that she
wears him out with her kindness and gentleness.’</p>
<p>‘But why complain at all, unless because you are tired
and dissatisfied?’</p>
<p>‘To excuse my own failings, to be sure. Do you
think I’ll bear all the burden of my sins on my own
shoulders, as long as there’s another ready to help me,
with none of her own to carry?’</p>
<p>‘There is no such one on earth,’ said she
seriously; and then, taking his hand from her head, she kissed it
with an air of genuine devotion, and tripped away to the
door.</p>
<p>‘What now?’ said he. ‘Where are you
going?’</p>
<p>‘To tidy my hair,’ she answered, smiling through
her disordered locks; ‘you’ve made it all come
down.’</p>
<p>‘Off with you then!—An excellent little
woman,’ he remarked when she was gone, ‘but a thought
too soft—she almost melts in one’s hands. I
positively think I ill-use her sometimes, when I’ve taken
too much—but I can’t help it, for she never
complains, either at the time or after. I suppose she
doesn’t mind it.’</p>
<p>‘I can enlighten you on that subject, Mr.
Hattersley,’ said I: ‘she does mind it; and some
other things she minds still more, which yet you may never hear
her complain of.’</p>
<p>‘How do you know?—does she complain to you?’
demanded he, with a sudden spark of fury ready to burst into a
flame if I should answer “yes.”</p>
<p>‘No,’ I replied; ‘but I have known her
longer and studied her more closely than you have done.—And
I can tell you, Mr. Hattersley, that Milicent loves you more than
you deserve, and that you have it in your power to make her very
happy, instead of which you are her evil genius, and, I will
venture to say, there is not a single day passes in which you do
not inflict upon her some pang that you might spare her if you
would.’</p>
<p>‘Well—it’s not my fault,’ said he,
gazing carelessly up at the ceiling and plunging his hands into
his pockets: ‘if my ongoings don’t suit her, she
should tell me so.’</p>
<p>‘Is she not exactly the wife you wanted? Did you
not tell Mr. Huntingdon you must have one that would submit to
anything without a murmur, and never blame you, whatever you
did?’</p>
<p>‘True, but we shouldn’t always have what we want:
it spoils the best of us, doesn’t it? How can I help
playing the deuce when I see it’s all one to her whether I
behave like a Christian or like a scoundrel, such as nature made
me? and how can I help teasing her when she’s so invitingly
meek and mim, when she lies down like a spaniel at my feet and
never so much as squeaks to tell me that’s
enough?’</p>
<p>‘If you are a tyrant by nature, the temptation is
strong, I allow; but no generous mind delights to oppress the
weak, but rather to cherish and protect.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t oppress her; but it’s so confounded
flat to be always cherishing and protecting; and then, how can I
tell that I am oppressing her when she “melts away and
makes no sign”? I sometimes think she has no feeling
at all; and then I go on till she cries, and that satisfies
me.’</p>
<p>‘Then you do delight to oppress her?’</p>
<p>‘I don’t, I tell you! only when I’m in a bad
humour, or a particularly good one, and want to afflict for the
pleasure of comforting; or when she looks flat and wants shaking
up a bit. And sometimes she provokes me by crying for
nothing, and won’t tell me what it’s for; and then, I
allow, it enrages me past bearing, especially when I’m not
my own man.’</p>
<p>‘As is no doubt generally the case on such
occasions,’ said I. ‘But in future, Mr.
Hattersley, when you see her looking flat, or crying for
“nothing” (as you call it), ascribe it all to
yourself: be assured it is something you have done amiss, or your
general misconduct, that distresses her.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t believe it. If it were, she should
tell me so: I don’t like that way of moping and fretting in
silence, and saying nothing: it’s not honest. How can
she expect me to mend my ways at that rate?’</p>
<p>‘Perhaps she gives you credit for having more sense than
you possess, and deludes herself with the hope that you will one
day see your own errors and repair them, if left to your own
reflection.’</p>
<p>‘None of your sneers, Mrs. Huntingdon. I have the
sense to see that I’m not always quite correct, but
sometimes I think that’s no great matter, as long as I
injure nobody but myself—’</p>
<p>‘It is a great matter,’ interrupted I, ‘both
to yourself (as you will hereafter find to your cost) and to all
connected with you, most especially your wife. But, indeed,
it is nonsense to talk about injuring no one but yourself: it is
impossible to injure yourself, especially by such acts as we
allude to, without injuring hundreds, if not thousands, besides,
in a greater or less, degree, either by the evil you do or the
good you leave undone.’ ‘And as I was
saying,’ continued he, ‘or would have said if you
hadn’t taken me up so short, I sometimes think I should do
better if I were joined to one that would always remind me when I
was wrong, and give me a motive for doing good and eschewing
evil, by decidedly showing her approval of the one and
disapproval of the other.’</p>
<p>‘If you had no higher motive than the approval of your
fellow-mortal, it would do you little good.’</p>
<p>‘Well, but if I had a mate that would not always be
yielding, and always equally kind, but that would have the spirit
to stand at bay now and then, and honestly tell me her mind at
all times, such a one as yourself for instance. Now, if I
went on with you as I do with her when I’m in London,
you’d make the house too hot to hold me at times,
I’ll be sworn.’</p>
<p>‘You mistake me: I’m no termagant.’</p>
<p>‘Well, all the better for that, for I can’t stand
contradiction, in a general way, and I’m as fond of my own
will as another; only I think too much of it doesn’t answer
for any man.’</p>
<p>‘Well, I would never contradict you without a cause, but
certainly I would always let you know what I thought of your
conduct; and if you oppressed me, in body, mind, or estate, you
should at least have no reason to suppose “I didn’t
mind it.”’</p>
<p>‘I know that, my lady; and I think if my little wife
were to follow the same plan, it would be better for us
both.’</p>
<p>‘I’ll tell her.’</p>
<p>‘No, no, let her be; there’s much to be said on
both sides, and, now I think upon it, Huntingdon often regrets
that you are not more like her, scoundrelly dog that he is, and
you see, after all, you can’t reform him: he’s ten
times worse than I. He’s afraid of you, to be sure;
that is, he’s always on his best behaviour in your
presence—but—’</p>
<p>‘I wonder what his worst behaviour is like, then?’
I could not forbear observing.</p>
<p>‘Why, to tell you the truth, it’s very bad
indeed—isn’t it, Hargrave?’ said he, addressing
that gentleman, who had entered the room unperceived by me, for I
was now standing near the fire, with my back to the door.
‘Isn’t Huntingdon,’ he continued, ‘as
great a reprobate as ever was d—d?’</p>
<p>‘His lady will not hear him censured with
impunity,’ replied Mr. Hargrave, coming forward; ‘but
I must say, I thank God I am not such another.’</p>
<p>‘Perhaps it would become you better,’ said I,
‘to look at what you are, and say, “God be merciful
to me a sinner.”’</p>
<p>‘You are severe,’ returned he, bowing slightly and
drawing himself up with a proud yet injured air. Hattersley
laughed, and clapped him on the shoulder. Moving from under
his hand with a gesture of insulted dignity, Mr. Hargrave took
himself away to the other end of the rug.</p>
<p>‘Isn’t it a shame, Mrs. Huntingdon?’ cried
his brother-in-law; ‘I struck Walter Hargrave when I was
drunk, the second night after we came, and he’s turned a
cold shoulder on me ever since; though I asked his pardon the
very morning after it was done!’</p>
<p>‘Your manner of asking it,’ returned the other,
‘and the clearness with which you remembered the whole
transaction, showed you were not too drunk to be fully conscious
of what you were about, and quite responsible for the
deed.’</p>
<p>‘You wanted to interfere between me and my wife,’
grumbled Hattersley, ‘and that is enough to provoke any
man.’</p>
<p>‘You justify it, then?’ said his opponent, darting
upon him a most vindictive glance.</p>
<p>‘No, I tell you I wouldn’t have done it if I
hadn’t been under excitement; and if you choose to bear
malice for it after all the handsome things I’ve said, do
so and be d—d!’</p>
<p>‘I would refrain from such language in a lady’s
presence, at least,’ said Mr. Hargrave, hiding his anger
under a mask of disgust.</p>
<p>‘What have I said?’ returned Hattersley:
‘nothing but heaven’s truth. He will be damned,
won’t he, Mrs. Huntingdon, if he doesn’t forgive his
brother’s trespasses?’</p>
<p>‘You ought to forgive him, Mr. Hargrave, since he asks
you,’ said I.</p>
<p>‘Do you say so? Then I will!’ And,
smiling almost frankly, he stepped forward and offered his
hand. It was immediately clasped in that of his relative,
and the reconciliation was apparently cordial on both sides.</p>
<p>‘The affront,’ continued Hargrave, turning to me,
‘owed half its bitterness to the fact of its being offered
in your presence; and since you bid me forgive it, I will, and
forget it too.’</p>
<p>‘I guess the best return I can make will be to take
myself off,’ muttered Hattersley, with a broad grin.
His companion smiled, and he left the room. This put me on
my guard. Mr. Hargrave turned seriously to me, and
earnestly began,—</p>
<p>‘Dear Mrs. Huntingdon, how I have longed for, yet
dreaded, this hour! Do not be alarmed,’ he added, for
my face was crimson with anger: ‘I am not about to offend
you with any useless entreaties or complaints. I am not
going to presume to trouble you with the mention of my own
feelings or your perfections, but I have something to reveal to
you which you ought to know, and which, yet, it pains me
inexpressibly—’</p>
<p>‘Then don’t trouble yourself to reveal
it!’</p>
<p>‘But it is of importance—’</p>
<p>‘If so I shall hear it soon enough, especially if it is
bad news, as you seem to consider it. At present I am going
to take the children to the nursery.’</p>
<p>‘But can’t you ring and send them?’</p>
<p>‘No; I want the exercise of a run to the top of the
house. Come, Arthur.’</p>
<p>‘But you will return?’</p>
<p>‘Not yet; don’t wait.’</p>
<p>‘Then when may I see you again?’</p>
<p>‘At lunch,’ said I, departing with little Helen in
one arm and leading Arthur by the hand.</p>
<p>He turned away, muttering some sentence of impatient censure
or complaint, in which ‘heartless’ was the only
distinguishable word.</p>
<p>‘What nonsense is this, Mr. Hargrave?’ said I,
pausing in the doorway. ‘What do you mean?’</p>
<p>‘Oh, nothing; I did not intend you should hear my
soliloquy. But the fact is, Mrs. Huntingdon, I have a
disclosure to make, painful for me to offer as for you to hear;
and I want you to give me a few minutes of your attention in
private at any time and place you like to appoint. It is
from no selfish motive that I ask it, and not for any cause that
could alarm your superhuman purity: therefore you need not kill
me with that look of cold and pitiless disdain. I know too
well the feelings with which the bearers of bad tidings are
commonly regarded not to—’</p>
<p>‘What is this wonderful piece of intelligence?’
said I, impatiently interrupting him. ‘If it is
anything of real importance, speak it in three words before I
go.’</p>
<p>‘In three words I cannot. Send those children away
and stay with me.’</p>
<p>‘No; keep your bad tidings to yourself. I know it
is something I don’t want to hear, and something you would
displease me by telling.’</p>
<p>‘You have divined too truly, I fear; but still, since I
know it, I feel it my duty to disclose it to you.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, spare us both the infliction, and I will exonerate
you from the duty. You have offered to tell; I have refused
to hear: my ignorance will not be charged on you.’</p>
<p>‘Be it so: you shall not hear it from me. But if
the blow fall too suddenly upon you when it comes, remember I
wished to soften it!’</p>
<p>I left him. I was determined his words should not alarm
me. What could he, of all men, have to reveal that was of
importance for me to hear? It was no doubt some exaggerated
tale about my unfortunate husband that he wished to make the most
of to serve his own bad purposes.</p>
<p>6th.—He has not alluded to this momentous mystery since,
and I have seen no reason to repent of my unwillingness to hear
it. The threatened blow has not been struck yet, and I do
not greatly fear it. At present I am pleased with Arthur:
he has not positively disgraced himself for upwards of a
fortnight, and all this last week has been so very moderate in
his indulgence at table that I can perceive a marked difference
in his general temper and appearance. Dare I hope this will
continue?</p>
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