<h2>CHAPTER XLVI</h2>
<p>I felt strongly tempted, at times, to enlighten my mother and
sister on the real character and circumstances of the persecuted
tenant of Wildfell Hall, and at first I greatly regretted having
omitted to ask that lady’s permission to do so; but, on due
reflection, I considered that if it were known to them, it could
not long remain a secret to the Millwards and Wilsons, and such
was my present appreciation of Eliza Millward’s
disposition, that, if once she got a clue to the story, I should
fear she would soon find means to enlighten Mr. Huntingdon upon
the place of his wife’s retreat. I would therefore
wait patiently till these weary six months were over, and then,
when the fugitive had found another home, and I was permitted to
write to her, I would beg to be allowed to clear her name from
these vile calumnies: at present I must content myself with
simply asserting that I knew them to be false, and would prove it
some day, to the shame of those who slandered her. I
don’t think anybody believed me, but everybody soon learned
to avoid insinuating a word against her, or even mentioning her
name in my presence. They thought I was so madly infatuated
by the seductions of that unhappy lady that I was determined to
support her in the very face of reason; and meantime I grow
insupportably morose and misanthropical from the idea that every
one I met was harbouring unworthy thoughts of the supposed Mrs.
Graham, and would express them if he dared. My poor mother
was quite distressed about me; but I couldn’t help
it—at least I thought I could not, though sometimes I felt
a pang of remorse for my undutiful conduct to her, and made an
effort to amend, attended with some partial success; and indeed I
was generally more humanised in my demeanour to her than to any
one else, Mr. Lawrence excepted. Rose and Fergus usually
shunned my presence; and it was well they did, for I was not fit
company for them, nor they for me, under the present
circumstances.</p>
<p>Mrs. Huntingdon did not leave Wildfell Hall till above two
months after our farewell interview. During that time she
never appeared at church, and I never went near the house: I only
knew she was still there by her brother’s brief answers to
my many and varied inquiries respecting her. I was a very
constant and attentive visitor to him throughout the whole period
of his illness and convalescence; not only from the interest I
took in his recovery, and my desire to cheer him up and make the
utmost possible amends for my former ‘brutality,’ but
from my growing attachment to himself, and the increasing
pleasure I found in his society—partly from his increased
cordiality to me, but chiefly on account of his close connection,
both in blood and in affection, with my adored Helen. I
loved him for it better than I liked to express: and I took a
secret delight in pressing those slender white fingers, so
marvellously like her own, considering he was not a woman, and in
watching the passing changes in his fair, pale features, and
observing the intonations of his voice, detecting resemblances
which I wondered had never struck me before. He provoked me
at times, indeed, by his evident reluctance to talk to me about
his sister, though I did not question the friendliness of his
motives in wishing to discourage my remembrance of her.</p>
<p>His recovery was not quite so rapid as he had expected it to
be; he was not able to mount his pony till a fortnight after the
date of our reconciliation; and the first use he made of his
returning strength was to ride over by night to Wildfell Hall, to
see his sister. It was a hazardous enterprise both for him
and for her, but he thought it necessary to consult with her on
the subject of her projected departure, if not to calm her
apprehensions respecting his health, and the worst result was a
slight relapse of his illness, for no one knew of the visit but
the inmates of the old Hall, except myself; and I believe it had
not been his intention to mention it to me, for when I came to
see him the next day, and observed he was not so well as he ought
to have been, he merely said he had caught cold by being out too
late in the evening.</p>
<p>‘You’ll never be able to see your sister, if you
don’t take care of yourself,’ said I, a little
provoked at the circumstance on her account, instead of
commiserating him.</p>
<p>‘I’ve seen her already,’ said he,
quietly.</p>
<p>‘You’ve seen her!’ cried I, in
astonishment.</p>
<p>‘Yes.’ And then he told me what
considerations had impelled him to make the venture, and with
what precautions he had made it.</p>
<p>‘And how was she?’ I eagerly asked.</p>
<p>‘As usual,’ was the brief though sad reply.</p>
<p>‘As usual—that is, far from happy and far from
strong.’</p>
<p>‘She is not positively ill,’ returned he;
‘and she will recover her spirits in a while, I have no
doubt—but so many trials have been almost too much for
her. How threatening those clouds look,’ continued
he, turning towards the window. ‘We shall have
thunder-showers before night, I imagine, and they are just in the
midst of stacking my corn. Have you got yours all in
yet?’</p>
<p>‘No. And, Lawrence, did she—did your sister
mention me?’</p>
<p>‘She asked if I had seen you lately.’</p>
<p>‘And what else did she say?’</p>
<p>‘I cannot tell you all she said,’ replied he, with
a slight smile; ‘for we talked a good deal, though my stay
was but short; but our conversation was chiefly on the subject of
her intended departure, which I begged her to delay till I was
better able to assist her in her search after another
home.’</p>
<p>‘But did she say no more about me?’</p>
<p>‘She did not say much about you, Markham. I should
not have encouraged her to do so, had she been inclined; but
happily she was not: she only asked a few questions concerning
you, and seemed satisfied with my brief answers, wherein she
showed herself wiser than her friend; and I may tell you, too,
that she seemed to be far more anxious lest you should think too
much of her, than lest you should forget her.’</p>
<p>‘She was right.’</p>
<p>‘But I fear your anxiety is quite the other way
respecting her.’</p>
<p>‘No, it is not: I wish her to be happy; but I
don’t wish her to forget me altogether. She knows it
is impossible that I should forget her; and she is right to wish
me not to remember her too well. I should not desire her to
regret me too deeply; but I can scarcely imagine she will make
herself very unhappy about me, because I know I am not worthy of
it, except in my appreciation of her.’</p>
<p>‘You are neither of you worthy of a broken
heart,—nor of all the sighs, and tears, and sorrowful
thoughts that have been, and I fear will be, wasted upon you
both; but, at present, each has a more exalted opinion of the
other than, I fear, he or she deserves; and my sister’s
feelings are naturally full as keen as yours, and I believe more
constant; but she has the good sense and fortitude to strive
against them in this particular; and I trust she will not rest
till she has entirely weaned her thoughts—‘ he
hesitated.</p>
<p>‘From me,’ said I.</p>
<p>‘And I wish you would make the like exertions,’
continued he.</p>
<p>‘Did she tell you that that was her
intention?’</p>
<p>‘No; the question was not broached between us: there was
no necessity for it, for I had no doubt that such was her
determination.’</p>
<p>‘To forget me?’</p>
<p>‘Yes, Markham! Why not?’</p>
<p>‘Oh, well!’ was my only audible reply; but I
internally answered,—‘No, Lawrence, you’re
wrong there: she is not determined to forget me. It would
be wrong to forget one so deeply and fondly devoted to her, who
can so thoroughly appreciate her excellencies, and sympathise
with all her thoughts, as I can do, and it would be wrong in me
to forget so excellent and divine a piece of God’s creation
as she, when I have once so truly loved and known her.’ But
I said no more to him on that subject. I instantly started
a new topic of conversation, and soon took leave of my companion,
with a feeling of less cordiality towards him than usual.
Perhaps I had no right to be annoyed at him, but I was so
nevertheless.</p>
<p>In little more than a week after this I met him returning from
a visit to the Wilsons’; and I now resolved to do him a
good turn, though at the expense of his feelings, and perhaps at
the risk of incurring that displeasure which is so commonly the
reward of those who give disagreeable information, or tender
their advice unasked. In this, believe me, I was actuated
by no motives of revenge for the occasional annoyances I had
lately sustained from him,—nor yet by any feeling of
malevolent enmity towards Miss Wilson, but purely by the fact
that I could not endure that such a woman should be Mrs.
Huntingdon’s sister, and that, as well for his own sake as
for hers, I could not bear to think of his being deceived into a
union with one so unworthy of him, and so utterly unfitted to be
the partner of his quiet home, and the companion of his
life. He had had uncomfortable suspicions on that head
himself, I imagined; but such was his inexperience, and such were
the lady’s powers of attraction, and her skill in bringing
them to bear upon his young imagination, that they had not
disturbed him long; and I believe the only effectual causes of
the vacillating indecision that had preserved him hitherto from
making an actual declaration of love, was the consideration of
her connections, and especially of her mother, whom he could not
abide. Had they lived at a distance, he might have
surmounted the objection, but within two or three miles of
Woodford it was really no light matter.</p>
<p>‘You’ve been to call on the Wilsons,
Lawrence,’ said I, as I walked beside his pony.</p>
<p>‘Yes,’ replied he, slightly averting his face:
‘I thought it but civil to take the first opportunity of
returning their kind attentions, since they have been so very
particular and constant in their inquiries throughout the whole
course of my illness.’</p>
<p>‘It’s all Miss Wilson’s doing.’</p>
<p>‘And if it is,’ returned he, with a very
perceptible blush, ‘is that any reason why I should not
make a suitable acknowledgment?’</p>
<p>‘It is a reason why you should not make the
acknowledgment she looks for.’</p>
<p>‘Let us drop that subject if you please,’ said he,
in evident displeasure.</p>
<p>‘No, Lawrence, with your leave we’ll continue it a
while longer; and I’ll tell you something, now we’re
about it, which you may believe or not as you choose—only
please to remember that it is not my custom to speak falsely, and
that in this case I can have no motive for misrepresenting the
truth—’</p>
<p>‘Well, Markham, what now?’</p>
<p>‘Miss Wilson hates your sister. It may be natural
enough that, in her ignorance of the relationship, she should
feel some degree of enmity against her, but no good or amiable
woman would be capable of evincing that bitter, cold-blooded,
designing malice towards a fancied rival that I have observed in
her.’</p>
<p>‘Markham!’</p>
<p>‘Yes—and it is my belief that Eliza Millward and
she, if not the very originators of the slanderous reports that
have been propagated, were designedly the encouragers and chief
disseminators of them. She was not desirous to mix up your
name in the matter, of course, but her delight was, and still is,
to blacken your sister’s character to the utmost of her
power, without risking too greatly the exposure of her own
malevolence!’</p>
<p>‘I cannot believe it,’ interrupted my companion,
his face burning with indignation.</p>
<p>‘Well, as I cannot prove it, I must content myself with
asserting that it is so to the best of my belief; but as you
would not willingly marry Miss Wilson if it were so, you will do
well to be cautious, till you have proved it to be
otherwise.’</p>
<p>‘I never told you, Markham, that I intended to marry
Miss Wilson,’ said he, proudly.</p>
<p>‘No, but whether you do or not, she intends to marry
you.’</p>
<p>‘Did she tell you so?’</p>
<p>‘No, but—’</p>
<p>‘Then you have no right to make such an assertion
respecting her.’ He slightly quickened his pony’s
pace, but I laid my hand on its mane, determined he should not
leave me yet.</p>
<p>‘Wait a moment, Lawrence, and let me explain myself; and
don’t be so very—I don’t know what to call
it—inaccessible as you are.—I know what you think of
Jane Wilson; and I believe I know how far you are mistaken in
your opinion: you think she is singularly charming, elegant,
sensible, and refined: you are not aware that she is selfish,
cold-hearted, ambitious, artful, shallow-minded—’</p>
<p>‘Enough, Markham—enough!’</p>
<p>‘No; let me finish:—you don’t know that, if
you married her, your home would be rayless and comfortless; and
it would break your heart at last to find yourself united to one
so wholly incapable of sharing your tastes, feelings, and
ideas—so utterly destitute of sensibility, good feeling,
and true nobility of soul.’</p>
<p>‘Have you done?’ asked my companion quietly.</p>
<p>‘Yes;—I know you hate me for my impertinence, but
I don’t care if it only conduces to preserve you from that
fatal mistake.’</p>
<p>‘Well!’ returned he, with a rather wintry
smile—‘I’m glad you have overcome or forgotten
your own afflictions so far as to be able to study so deeply the
affairs of others, and trouble your head so unnecessarily about
the fancied or possible calamities of their future
life.’</p>
<p>We parted—somewhat coldly again: but still we did not
cease to be friends; and my well-meant warning, though it might
have been more judiciously delivered, as well as more thankfully
received, was not wholly unproductive of the desired effect: his
visit to the Wilsons was not repeated, and though, in our
subsequent interviews, he never mentioned her name to me, nor I
to him,—I have reason to believe he pondered my words in
his mind, eagerly though covertly sought information respecting
the fair lady from other quarters, secretly compared my character
of her with what he had himself observed and what he heard from
others, and finally came to the conclusion that, all things
considered, she had much better remain Miss Wilson of Ryecote
Farm than be transmuted into Mrs. Lawrence of Woodford
Hall. I believe, too, that he soon learned to contemplate
with secret amazement his former predilection, and to
congratulate himself on the lucky escape he had made; but he
never confessed it to me, or hinted one word of acknowledgment
for the part I had had in his deliverance, but this was not
surprising to any one that knew him as I did.</p>
<p>As for Jane Wilson, she, of course, was disappointed and
embittered by the sudden cold neglect and ultimate desertion of
her former admirer. Had I done wrong to blight her
cherished hopes? I think not; and certainly my conscience
has never accused me, from that day to this, of any evil design
in the matter.</p>
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