<h2>CHAPTER XLI</h2>
<p>March 20th.—Having now got rid of Mr. Huntingdon for a
season, my spirits begin to revive. He left me early in
February; and the moment he was gone, I breathed again, and felt
my vital energy return; not with the hope of escape—he has
taken care to leave me no visible chance of that—but with a
determination to make the best of existing circumstances.
Here was Arthur left to me at last; and rousing from my
despondent apathy, I exerted all my powers to eradicate the weeds
that had been fostered in his infant mind, and sow again the good
seed they had rendered unproductive. Thank heaven, it is
not a barren or a stony soil; if weeds spring fast there, so do
better plants. His apprehensions are more quick, his heart
more overflowing with affection than ever his father’s
could have been, and it is no hopeless task to bend him to
obedience and win him to love and know his own true friend, as
long as there is no one to counteract my efforts.</p>
<p>I had much trouble at first in breaking him of those evil
habits his father had taught him to acquire, but already that
difficulty is nearly vanquished now: bad language seldom defiles
his mouth, and I have succeeded in giving him an absolute disgust
for all intoxicating liquors, which I hope not even his father or
his father’s friends will be able to overcome. He was
inordinately fond of them for so young a creature, and,
remembering my unfortunate father as well as his, I dreaded the
consequences of such a taste. But if I had stinted him, in
his usual quantity of wine, or forbidden him to taste it
altogether, that would only have increased his partiality for it,
and made him regard it as a greater treat than ever. I
therefore gave him quite as much as his father was accustomed to
allow him; as much, indeed, as he desired to have—but into
every glass I surreptitiously introduced a small quantity of
tartar-emetic, just enough to produce inevitable nausea and
depression without positive sickness. Finding such
disagreeable consequences invariably to result from this
indulgence, he soon grew weary of it, but the more he shrank from
the daily treat the more I pressed it upon him, till his
reluctance was strengthened to perfect abhorrence. When he
was thoroughly disgusted with every kind of wine, I allowed him,
at his own request, to try brandy-and-water, and then
gin-and-water, for the little toper was familiar with them all,
and I was determined that all should be equally hateful to
him. This I have now effected; and since he declares that
the taste, the smell, the sight of any one of them is sufficient
to make him sick, I have given up teasing him about them, except
now and then as objects of terror in cases of misbehaviour.
‘Arthur, if you’re not a good boy I shall give you a
glass of wine,’ or ‘Now, Arthur, if you say that
again you shall have some brandy-and-water,’ is as good as
any other threat; and once or twice, when he was sick, I have
obliged the poor child to swallow a little wine-and-water without
the tartar-emetic, by way of medicine; and this practice I intend
to continue for some time to come; not that I think it of any
real service in a physical sense, but because I am determined to
enlist all the powers of association in my service; I wish this
aversion to be so deeply grounded in his nature that nothing in
after-life may be able to overcome it.</p>
<p>Thus, I flatter myself, I shall secure him from this one vice;
and for the rest, if on his father’s return I find reason
to apprehend that my good lessons will be all destroyed—if
Mr. Huntingdon commence again the game of teaching the child to
hate and despise his mother, and emulate his father’s
wickedness—I will yet deliver my son from his hands.
I have devised another scheme that might be resorted to in such a
case; and if I could but obtain my brother’s consent and
assistance, I should not doubt of its success. The old hall
where he and I were born, and where our mother died, is not now
inhabited, nor yet quite sunk into decay, as I believe.
Now, if I could persuade him to have one or two rooms made
habitable, and to let them to me as a stranger, I might live
there, with my child, under an assumed name, and still support
myself by my favourite art. He should lend me the money to
begin with, and I would pay him back, and live in lowly
independence and strict seclusion, for the house stands in a
lonely place, and the neighbourhood is thinly inhabited, and he
himself should negotiate the sale of my pictures for me. I
have arranged the whole plan in my head: and all I want is to
persuade Frederick to be of the same mind as myself. He is
coming to see me soon, and then I will make the proposal to him,
having first enlightened him upon my circumstances sufficiently
to excuse the project.</p>
<p>Already, I believe, he knows much more of my situation than I
have told him. I can tell this by the air of tender sadness
pervading his letters; and by the fact of his so seldom
mentioning my husband, and generally evincing a kind of covert
bitterness when he does refer to him; as well as by the
circumstance of his never coming to see me when Mr. Huntingdon is
at home. But he has never openly expressed any
disapprobation of him or sympathy for me; he has never asked any
questions, or said anything to invite my confidence. Had he
done so, I should probably have had but few concealments from
him. Perhaps he feels hurt at my reserve. He is a
strange being; I wish we knew each other better. He used to
spend a month at Staningley every year, before I was married;
but, since our father’s death, I have only seen him once,
when he came for a few days while Mr. Huntingdon was away.
He shall stay many days this time, and there shall be more
candour and cordiality between us than ever there was before,
since our early childhood. My heart clings to him more than
ever; and my soul is sick of solitude.</p>
<p>April 16th.—He is come and gone. He would not stay
above a fortnight. The time passed quickly, but very, very
happily, and it has done me good. I must have a bad
disposition, for my misfortunes have soured and embittered me
exceedingly: I was beginning insensibly to cherish very unamiable
feelings against my fellow-mortals, the male part of them
especially; but it is a comfort to see there is at least one
among them worthy to be trusted and esteemed; and doubtless there
are more, though I have never known them, unless I except poor
Lord Lowborough, and he was bad enough in his day. But what
would Frederick have been, if he had lived in the world, and
mingled from his childhood with such men as these of my
acquaintance? and what will Arthur be, with all his natural
sweetness of disposition, if I do not save him from that world
and those companions? I mentioned my fears to Frederick,
and introduced the subject of my plan of rescue on the evening
after his arrival, when I presented my little son to his
uncle.</p>
<p>‘He is like you, Frederick,’ said I, ‘in
some of his moods: I sometimes think he resembles you more than
his father; and I am glad of it.’</p>
<p>‘You flatter me, Helen,’ replied he, stroking the
child’s soft, wavy locks.</p>
<p>‘No, you will think it no compliment when I tell you I
would rather have him to resemble Benson than his
father.’ He slightly elevated his eyebrows, but said
nothing.</p>
<p>‘Do you know what sort of man Mr. Huntingdon is?’
said I.</p>
<p>‘I think I have an idea.’</p>
<p>‘Have you so clear an idea that you can hear, without
surprise or disapproval, that I meditate escaping with that child
to some secret asylum, where we can live in peace, and never see
him again?’</p>
<p>‘Is it really so?’</p>
<p>‘If you have not,’ continued I, ‘I’ll
tell you something more about him’; and I gave a sketch of
his general conduct, and a more particular account of his
behaviour with regard to his child, and explained my
apprehensions on the latter’s account, and my determination
to deliver him from his father’s influence.</p>
<p>Frederick was exceedingly indignant against Mr. Huntingdon,
and very much grieved for me; but still he looked upon my project
as wild and impracticable. He deemed my fears for Arthur
disproportioned to the circumstances, and opposed so many
objections to my plan, and devised so many milder methods for
ameliorating my condition, that I was obliged to enter into
further details to convince him that my husband was utterly
incorrigible, and that nothing could persuade him to give up his
son, whatever became of me, he being as fully determined the
child should not leave him, as I was not to leave the child; and
that, in fact, nothing would answer but this, unless I fled the
country, as I had intended before. To obviate that, he at
length consented to have one wing of the old hall put into a
habitable condition, as a place of refuge against a time of need;
but hoped I would not take advantage of it unless circumstances
should render it really necessary, which I was ready enough to
promise: for though, for my own sake, such a hermitage appears
like paradise itself, compared with my present situation, yet for
my friends’ sakes, for Milicent and Esther, my sisters in
heart and affection, for the poor tenants of Grassdale, and,
above all, for my aunt, I will stay if I possibly can.</p>
<p>July 29th.—Mrs. Hargrave and her daughter are come back
from London. Esther is full of her first season in town;
but she is still heart-whole and unengaged. Her mother
sought out an excellent match for her, and even brought the
gentleman to lay his heart and fortune at her feet; but Esther
had the audacity to refuse the noble gifts. He was a man of
good family and large possessions, but the naughty girl
maintained he was old as Adam, ugly as sin, and hateful
as—one who shall be nameless.</p>
<p>‘But, indeed, I had a hard time of it,’ said she:
‘mamma was very greatly disappointed at the failure of her
darling project, and very, very angry at my obstinate resistance
to her will, and is so still; but I can’t help it.
And Walter, too, is so seriously displeased at my perversity and
absurd caprice, as he calls it, that I fear he will never forgive
me—I did not think he could be so unkind as he has lately
shown himself. But Milicent begged me not to yield, and
I’m sure, Mrs. Huntingdon, if you had seen the man they
wanted to palm upon me, you would have advised me not to take him
too.’</p>
<p>‘I should have done so whether I had seen him or
not,’ said I; ‘it is enough that you dislike
him.’</p>
<p>‘I knew you would say so; though mamma affirmed you
would be quite shocked at my undutiful conduct. You
can’t imagine how she lectures me: I am disobedient and
ungrateful; I am thwarting her wishes, wronging my brother, and
making myself a burden on her hands. I sometimes fear
she’ll overcome me after all. I have a strong will,
but so has she, and when she says such bitter things, it provokes
me to such a pass that I feel inclined to do as she bids me, and
then break my heart and say, “There, mamma, it’s all
your fault!”’</p>
<p>‘Pray don’t!’ said I. ‘Obedience
from such a motive would be positive wickedness, and certain to
bring the punishment it deserves. Stand firm, and your
mamma will soon relinquish her persecution; and the gentleman
himself will cease to pester you with his addresses if he finds
them steadily rejected.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, no! mamma will weary all about her before she tires
herself with her exertions; and as for Mr. Oldfield, she has
given him to understand that I have refused his offer, not from
any dislike of his person, but merely because I am giddy and
young, and cannot at present reconcile myself to the thoughts of
marriage under any circumstances: but by next season, she has no
doubt, I shall have more sense, and hopes my girlish fancies will
be worn away. So she has brought me home, to school me into
a proper sense of my duty, against the time comes round
again. Indeed, I believe she will not put herself to the
expense of taking me up to London again, unless I surrender: she
cannot afford to take me to town for pleasure and nonsense, she
says, and it is not every rich gentleman that will consent to
take me without a fortune, whatever exalted ideas I may have of
my own attractions.’</p>
<p>‘Well, Esther, I pity you; but still, I repeat, stand
firm. You might as well sell yourself to slavery at once,
as marry a man you dislike. If your mother and brother are
unkind to you, you may leave them, but remember you are bound to
your husband for life.’</p>
<p>‘But I cannot leave them unless I get married, and I
cannot get married if nobody sees me. I saw one or two
gentlemen in London that I might have liked, but they were
younger sons, and mamma would not let me get to know
them—one especially, who I believe rather liked
me—but she threw every possible obstacle in the way of our
better acquaintance. Wasn’t it provoking?’</p>
<p>‘I have no doubt you would feel it so, but it is
possible that if you married him, you might have more reason to
regret it hereafter than if you married Mr. Oldfield. When
I tell you not to marry without love, I do not advise you to
marry for love alone: there are many, many other things to be
considered. Keep both heart and hand in your own
possession, till you see good reason to part with them; and if
such an occasion should never present itself, comfort your mind
with this reflection, that though in single life your joys may
not be very many, your sorrows, at least, will not be more than
you can bear. Marriage may change your circumstances for
the better, but, in my private opinion, it is far more likely to
produce a contrary result.’</p>
<p>‘So thinks Milicent; but allow me to say I think
otherwise. If I thought myself doomed to old-maidenhood, I
should cease to value my life. The thoughts of living on,
year after year, at the Grove—a hanger-on upon mamma and
Walter, a mere cumberer of the ground (now that I know in what
light they would regard it), is perfectly intolerable; I would
rather run away with the butler.’</p>
<p>‘Your circumstances are peculiar, I allow; but have
patience, love; do nothing rashly. Remember you are not yet
nineteen, and many years are yet to pass before any one can set
you down as an old maid: you cannot tell what Providence may have
in store for you. And meantime, remember you have a right
to the protection and support of your mother and brother, however
they may seem to grudge it.’</p>
<p>‘You are so grave, Mrs. Huntingdon,’ said Esther,
after a pause. ‘When Milicent uttered the same
discouraging sentiments concerning marriage, I asked if she was
happy: she said she was; but I only half believed her; and now I
must put the same question to you.’</p>
<p>‘It is a very impertinent question,’ laughed I,
‘from a young girl to a married woman so many years her
senior, and I shall not answer it.’</p>
<p>‘Pardon me, dear madam,’ said she, laughingly
throwing herself into my arms, and kissing me with playful
affection; but I felt a tear on my neck, as she dropped her head
on my bosom and continued, with an odd mixture of sadness and
levity, timidity and audacity,—‘I know you are not so
happy as I mean to be, for you spend half your life alone at
Grassdale, while Mr. Huntingdon goes about enjoying himself where
and how he pleases. I shall expect my husband to have no
pleasures but what he shares with me; and if his greatest
pleasure of all is not the enjoyment of my company, why, it will
be the worse for him, that’s all.’</p>
<p>‘If such are your expectations of matrimony, Esther, you
must, indeed, be careful whom you marry—or rather, you must
avoid it altogether.’</p>
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