<h2>CHAPTER LIII</h2>
<p>While standing thus, absorbed in my gloomy reverie, a
gentleman’s carriage came round the corner of the
road. I did not look at it; and had it rolled quietly by
me, I should not have remembered the fact of its appearance at
all; but a tiny voice from within it roused me by exclaiming,
‘Mamma, mamma, here’s Mr. Markham!’</p>
<p>I did not hear the reply, but presently the same voice
answered, ‘It is indeed, mamma—look for
yourself.’</p>
<p>I did not raise my eyes, but I suppose mamma looked, for a
clear melodious voice, whose tones thrilled through my nerves,
exclaimed, ‘Oh, aunt! here’s Mr. Markham,
Arthur’s friend! Stop, Richard!’</p>
<p>There was such evidence of joyous though suppressed excitement
in the utterance of those few words—especially that
tremulous, ‘Oh, aunt’—that it threw me almost
off my guard. The carriage stopped immediately, and I
looked up and met the eye of a pale, grave, elderly lady
surveying me from the open window. She bowed, and so did I,
and then she withdrew her head, while Arthur screamed to the
footman to let him out; but before that functionary could descend
from his box a hand was silently put forth from the carriage
window. I knew that hand, though a black glove concealed
its delicate whiteness and half its fair proportions, and quickly
seizing it, I pressed it in my own—ardently for a moment,
but instantly recollecting myself, I dropped it, and it was
immediately withdrawn.</p>
<p>‘Were you coming to see us, or only passing by?’
asked the low voice of its owner, who, I felt, was attentively
surveying my countenance from behind the thick black veil which,
with the shadowing panels, entirely concealed her own from
me.</p>
<p>‘I—I came to see the place,’ faltered I.</p>
<p>‘The place,’ repeated she, in a tone which
betokened more displeasure or disappointment than surprise.</p>
<p>‘Will you not enter it, then?’</p>
<p>‘If you wish it.’</p>
<p>‘Can you doubt?’</p>
<p>‘Yes, yes! he must enter,’ cried Arthur, running
round from the other door; and seizing my hand in both his, he
shook it heartily.</p>
<p>‘Do you remember me, sir?’ said he.</p>
<p>‘Yes, full well, my little man, altered though you
are,’ replied I, surveying the comparatively tall, slim
young gentleman, with his mother’s image visibly stamped
upon his fair, intelligent features, in spite of the blue eyes
beaming with gladness, and the bright locks clustering beneath
his cap.</p>
<p>‘Am I not grown?’ said he, stretching himself up
to his full height.</p>
<p>‘Grown! three inches, upon my word!’</p>
<p>‘I was seven last birthday,’ was the proud
rejoinder. ‘In seven years more I shall be as tall as
you nearly.’</p>
<p>‘Arthur,’ said his mother, ‘tell him to come
in. Go on, Richard.’</p>
<p>There was a touch of sadness as well as coldness in her voice,
but I knew not to what to ascribe it. The carriage drove on
and entered the gates before us. My little companion led me
up the park, discoursing merrily all the way. Arrived at
the hall-door, I paused on the steps and looked round me, waiting
to recover my composure, if possible—or, at any rate, to
remember my new-formed resolutions and the principles on which
they were founded; and it was not till Arthur had been for some
time gently pulling my coat, and repeating his invitations to
enter, that I at length consented to accompany him into the
apartment where the ladies awaited us.</p>
<p>Helen eyed me as I entered with a kind of gentle, serious
scrutiny, and politely asked after Mrs. Markham and Rose. I
respectfully answered her inquiries. Mrs. Maxwell begged me
to be seated, observing it was rather cold, but she supposed I
had not travelled far that morning.</p>
<p>‘Not quite twenty miles,’ I answered.</p>
<p>‘Not on foot!’</p>
<p>‘No, Madam, by coach.’</p>
<p>‘Here’s Rachel, sir,’ said Arthur, the only
truly happy one amongst us, directing my attention to that worthy
individual, who had just entered to take her mistress’s
things. She vouchsafed me an almost friendly smile of
recognition—a favour that demanded, at least, a civil
salutation on my part, which was accordingly given and
respectfully returned—she had seen the error of her former
estimation of my character.</p>
<p>When Helen was divested of her lugubrious bonnet and veil, her
heavy winter cloak, &c., she looked so like herself that I
knew not how to bear it. I was particularly glad to see her
beautiful black hair, unstinted still, and unconcealed in its
glossy luxuriance.</p>
<p>‘Mamma has left off her widow’s cap in honour of
uncle’s marriage,’ observed Arthur, reading my looks
with a child’s mingled simplicity and quickness of
observation. Mamma looked grave and Mrs. Maxwell shook her
head. ‘And aunt Maxwell is never going to leave off
hers,’ persisted the naughty boy; but when he saw that his
pertness was seriously displeasing and painful to his aunt, he
went and silently put his arm round her neck, kissed her cheek,
and withdrew to the recess of one of the great bay-windows, where
he quietly amused himself with his dog, while Mrs. Maxwell
gravely discussed with me the interesting topics of the weather,
the season, and the roads. I considered her presence very
useful as a check upon my natural impulses—an antidote to
those emotions of tumultuous excitement which would otherwise
have carried me away against my reason and my will; but just then
I felt the restraint almost intolerable, and I had the greatest
difficulty in forcing myself to attend to her remarks and answer
them with ordinary politeness; for I was sensible that Helen was
standing within a few feet of me beside the fire. I dared
not look at her, but I felt her eye was upon me, and from one
hasty, furtive glance, I thought her cheek was slightly flushed,
and that her fingers, as she played with her watch-chain, were
agitated with that restless, trembling motion which betokens high
excitement.</p>
<p>‘Tell me,’ said she, availing herself of the first
pause in the attempted conversation between her aunt and me, and
speaking fast and low, with her eyes bent on the gold
chain—for I now ventured another glance—‘Tell
me how you all are at Linden-hope—has nothing happened
since I left you?’</p>
<p>‘I believe not.’</p>
<p>‘Nobody dead? nobody married?’</p>
<p>‘No.’</p>
<p>‘Or—or expecting to marry?—No old ties
dissolved or new ones formed? no old friends forgotten or
supplanted?’</p>
<p>She dropped her voice so low in the last sentence that no one
could have caught the concluding words but myself, and at the
same time turned her eyes upon me with a dawning smile, most
sweetly melancholy, and a look of timid though keen inquiry that
made my cheeks tingle with inexpressible emotions.</p>
<p>‘I believe not,’ I answered.
‘Certainly not, if others are as little changed as
I.’ Her face glowed in sympathy with mine.</p>
<p>‘And you really did not mean to call?’ she
exclaimed.</p>
<p>‘I feared to intrude.’</p>
<p>‘To intrude!’ cried she, with an impatient
gesture. ‘What—‘ but as if suddenly
recollecting her aunt’s presence, she checked herself, and,
turning to that lady, continued—‘Why, aunt, this man
is my brother’s close friend, and was my own intimate
acquaintance (for a few short months at least), and professed a
great attachment to my boy—and when he passes the house, so
many scores of miles from his home, he declines to look in for
fear of intruding!’</p>
<p>‘Mr. Markham is over-modest,’ observed Mrs.
Maxwell.</p>
<p>‘Over-ceremonious rather,’ said her
niece—‘over—well, it’s no
matter.’ And turning from me, she seated herself in a
chair beside the table, and pulling a book to her by the cover,
began to turn over the leaves in an energetic kind of
abstraction.</p>
<p>‘If I had known,’ said I, ‘that you would
have honoured me by remembering me as an intimate acquaintance, I
most likely should not have denied myself the pleasure of calling
upon you, but I thought you had forgotten me long ago.’</p>
<p>‘You judged of others by yourself,’ muttered she
without raising her eyes from the book, but reddening as she
spoke, and hastily turning over a dozen leaves at once.</p>
<p>There was a pause, of which Arthur thought he might venture to
avail himself to introduce his handsome young setter, and show me
how wonderfully it was grown and improved, and to ask after the
welfare of its father Sancho. Mrs. Maxwell then withdrew to
take off her things. Helen immediately pushed the book from
her, and after silently surveying her son, his friend, and his
dog for a few moments, she dismissed the former from the room
under pretence of wishing him to fetch his last new book to show
me. The child obeyed with alacrity; but I continued
caressing the dog. The silence might have lasted till its
master’s return, had it depended on me to break it; but, in
half a minute or less, my hostess impatiently rose, and, taking
her former station on the rug between me and the chimney corner,
earnestly exclaimed—</p>
<p>‘Gilbert, what is the matter with you?—why are you
so changed? It is a very indiscreet question, I
know,’ she hastened to add: ‘perhaps a very rude
one—don’t answer it if you think so—but I hate
mysteries and concealments.’</p>
<p>‘I am not changed, Helen—unfortunately I am as
keen and passionate as ever—it is not I, it is
circumstances that are changed.’</p>
<p>‘What circumstances? Do tell me!’ Her
cheek was blanched with the very anguish of anxiety—could
it be with the fear that I had rashly pledged my faith to
another?</p>
<p>‘I’ll tell you at once,’ said I.
‘I will confess that I came here for the purpose of seeing
you (not without some monitory misgivings at my own presumption,
and fears that I should be as little welcome as expected when I
came), but I did not know that this estate was yours until
enlightened on the subject of your inheritance by the
conversation of two fellow-passengers in the last stage of my
journey; and then I saw at once the folly of the hopes I had
cherished, and the madness of retaining them a moment longer; and
though I alighted at your gates, I determined not to enter within
them; I lingered a few minutes to see the place, but was fully
resolved to return to M— without seeing its
mistress.’</p>
<p>‘And if my aunt and I had not been just returning from
our morning drive, I should have seen and heard no more of
you?’</p>
<p>‘I thought it would be better for both that we should
not meet,’ replied I, as calmly as I could, but not daring
to speak above my breath, from conscious inability to steady my
voice, and not daring to look in her face lest my firmness should
forsake me altogether. ‘I thought an interview would
only disturb your peace and madden me. But I am glad, now,
of this opportunity of seeing you once more and knowing that you
have not forgotten me, and of assuring you that I shall never
cease to remember you.’</p>
<p>There was a moment’s pause. Mrs. Huntingdon moved
away, and stood in the recess of the window. Did she regard
this as an intimation that modesty alone prevented me from asking
her hand? and was she considering how to repulse me with the
smallest injury to my feelings? Before I could speak to
relieve her from such a perplexity, she broke the silence herself
by suddenly turning towards me and observing—</p>
<p>‘You might have had such an opportunity before—as
far, I mean, as regards assuring me of your kindly recollections,
and yourself of mine, if you had written to me.’</p>
<p>‘I would have done so, but I did not know your address,
and did not like to ask your brother, because I thought he would
object to my writing; but this would not have deterred me for a
moment, if I could have ventured to believe that you expected to
hear from me, or even wasted a thought upon your unhappy friend;
but your silence naturally led me to conclude myself
forgotten.’</p>
<p>‘Did you expect me to write to you, then?’</p>
<p>‘No, Helen—Mrs. Huntingdon,’ said I,
blushing at the implied imputation, ‘certainly not; but if
you had sent me a message through your brother, or even asked him
about me now and then—’</p>
<p>‘I did ask about you frequently. I was not going
to do more,’ continued she, smiling, ‘so long as you
continued to restrict yourself to a few polite inquiries about my
health.’</p>
<p>‘Your brother never told me that you had mentioned my
name.’</p>
<p>‘Did you ever ask him?’</p>
<p>‘No; for I saw he did not wish to be questioned about
you, or to afford the slightest encouragement or assistance to my
too obstinate attachment.’ Helen did not reply.
‘And he was perfectly right,’ added I. But she
remained in silence, looking out upon the snowy lawn.
‘Oh, I will relieve her of my presence,’ thought I;
and immediately I rose and advanced to take leave, with a most
heroic resolution—but pride was at the bottom of it, or it
could not have carried me through.</p>
<p>‘Are you going already?’ said she, taking the hand
I offered, and not immediately letting it go.</p>
<p>‘Why should I stay any longer?’</p>
<p>‘Wait till Arthur comes, at least.’</p>
<p>Only too glad to obey, I stood and leant against the opposite
side of the window.</p>
<p>‘You told me you were not changed,’ said my
companion: ‘you are—very much so.’</p>
<p>‘No, Mrs. Huntingdon, I only ought to be.’</p>
<p>‘Do you mean to maintain that you have the same regard
for me that you had when last we met?’</p>
<p>‘I have; but it would be wrong to talk of it
now.’</p>
<p>‘It was wrong to talk of it then, Gilbert; it would not
now—unless to do so would be to violate the
truth.’</p>
<p>I was too much agitated to speak; but, without waiting for an
answer, she turned away her glistening eye and crimson cheek, and
threw up the window and looked out, whether to calm her own,
excited feelings, or to relieve her embarrassment, or only to
pluck that beautiful half-blown Christmas-rose that grew upon the
little shrub without, just peeping from the snow that had
hitherto, no doubt, defended it from the frost, and was now
melting away in the sun. Pluck it, however, she did, and
having gently dashed the glittering powder from its leaves,
approached it to her lips and said:</p>
<p>‘This rose is not so fragrant as a summer flower, but it
has stood through hardships none of them could bear: the cold
rain of winter has sufficed to nourish it, and its faint sun to
warm it; the bleak winds have not blanched it, or broken its
stem, and the keen frost has not blighted it. Look,
Gilbert, it is still fresh and blooming as a flower can be, with
the cold snow even now on its petals.—Will you have
it?’</p>
<p>I held out my hand: I dared not speak lest my emotion should
overmaster me. She laid the rose across my palm, but I
scarcely closed my fingers upon it, so deeply was I absorbed in
thinking what might be the meaning of her words, and what I ought
to do or say upon the occasion; whether to give way to my
feelings or restrain them still. Misconstruing this
hesitation into indifference—or reluctance even—to
accept her gift, Helen suddenly snatched it from my hand, threw
it out on to the snow, shut down the window with an emphasis, and
withdrew to the fire.</p>
<p>‘Helen, what means this?’ I cried, electrified at
this startling change in her demeanour.</p>
<p>‘You did not understand my gift,’ said
she—‘or, what is worse, you despised it.
I’m sorry I gave it you; but since I did make such a
mistake, the only remedy I could think of was to take it
away.’</p>
<p>‘You misunderstood me cruelly,’ I replied, and in
a minute I had opened the window again, leaped out, picked up the
flower, brought it in, and presented it to her, imploring her to
give it me again, and I would keep it for ever for her sake, and
prize it more highly than anything in the world I possessed.</p>
<p>‘And will this content you?’ said she, as she took
it in her hand.</p>
<p>‘It shall,’ I answered.</p>
<p>‘There, then; take it.’</p>
<p>I pressed it earnestly to my lips, and put it in my bosom,
Mrs. Huntingdon looking on with a half-sarcastic smile.</p>
<p>‘Now, are you going?’ said she.</p>
<p>‘I will if—if I must.’</p>
<p>‘You are changed,’ persisted she—‘you
are grown either very proud or very indifferent.’</p>
<p>‘I am neither, Helen—Mrs. Huntingdon. If you
could see my heart—’</p>
<p>‘You must be one,—if not both. And why Mrs.
Huntingdon?—why not Helen, as before?’</p>
<p>‘Helen, then—dear Helen!’ I murmured.
I was in an agony of mingled love, hope, delight, uncertainty,
and suspense.</p>
<p>‘The rose I gave you was an emblem of my heart,’
said she; ‘would you take it away and leave me here
alone?’</p>
<p>‘Would you give me your hand too, if I asked
it?’</p>
<p>‘Have I not said enough?’ she answered, with a
most enchanting smile. I snatched her hand, and would have
fervently kissed it, but suddenly checked myself, and
said,—</p>
<p>‘But have you considered the consequences?’</p>
<p>‘Hardly, I think, or I should not have offered myself to
one too proud to take me, or too indifferent to make his
affection outweigh my worldly goods.’</p>
<p>Stupid blockhead that I was!—I trembled to clasp her in
my arms, but dared not believe in so much joy, and yet restrained
myself to say,—</p>
<p>‘But if you should repent!’</p>
<p>‘It would be your fault,’ she replied: ‘I
never shall, unless you bitterly disappoint me. If you have
not sufficient confidence in my affection to believe this, let me
alone.’</p>
<p>‘My darling angel—my own Helen,’ cried I,
now passionately kissing the hand I still retained, and throwing
my left arm around her, ‘you never shall repent, if it
depend on me alone. But have you thought of your
aunt?’ I trembled for the answer, and clasped her
closer to my heart in the instinctive dread of losing my
new-found treasure.</p>
<p>‘My aunt must not know of it yet,’ said she.
‘She would think it a rash, wild step, because she could
not imagine how well I know you; but she must know you herself,
and learn to like you. You must leave us now, after lunch,
and come again in spring, and make a longer stay, and cultivate
her acquaintance, and I know you will like each other.’</p>
<p>‘And then you will be mine,’ said I, printing a
kiss upon her lips, and another, and another; for I was as daring
and impetuous now as I had been backward and constrained
before.</p>
<p>‘No—in another year,’ replied she, gently
disengaging herself from my embrace, but still fondly clasping my
hand.</p>
<p>‘Another year! Oh, Helen, I could not wait so
long!’</p>
<p>‘Where is your fidelity?’</p>
<p>‘I mean I could not endure the misery of so long a
separation.’</p>
<p>‘It would not be a separation: we will write every day:
my spirit shall be always with you, and sometimes you shall see
me with your bodily eye. I will not be such a hypocrite as
to pretend that I desire to wait so long myself, but as my
marriage is to please myself, alone, I ought to consult my
friends about the time of it.’</p>
<p>‘Your friends will disapprove.’</p>
<p>‘They will not greatly disapprove, dear Gilbert,’
said she, earnestly kissing my hand; ‘they cannot, when
they know you, or, if they could, they would not be true
friends—I should not care for their estrangement. Now
are you satisfied?’ She looked up in my face with a
smile of ineffable tenderness.</p>
<p>‘Can I be otherwise, with your love? And you do
love me, Helen?’ said I, not doubting the fact, but wishing
to hear it confirmed by her own acknowledgment. ‘If
you loved as I do,’ she earnestly replied, ‘you would
not have so nearly lost me—these scruples of false delicacy
and pride would never thus have troubled you—you would have
seen that the greatest worldly distinctions and discrepancies of
rank, birth, and fortune are as dust in the balance compared with
the unity of accordant thoughts and feelings, and truly loving,
sympathising hearts and souls.’</p>
<p>‘But this is too much happiness,’ said I,
embracing her again; ‘I have not deserved it, Helen—I
dare not believe in such felicity: and the longer I have to wait,
the greater will be my dread that something will intervene to
snatch you from me—and think, a thousand things may happen
in a year!—I shall be in one long fever of restless terror
and impatience all the time. And besides, winter is such a
dreary season.’</p>
<p>‘I thought so too,’ replied she gravely: ‘I
would not be married in winter—in December, at
least,’ she added, with a shudder—for in that month
had occurred both the ill-starred marriage that had bound her to
her former husband, and the terrible death that released
her—‘and therefore I said another year, in
spring.’</p>
<p>‘Next spring?’</p>
<p>‘No, no—next autumn, perhaps.’</p>
<p>‘Summer, then?’</p>
<p>‘Well, the close of summer. There now! be
satisfied.’</p>
<p>While she was speaking Arthur re-entered the room—good
boy for keeping out so long.</p>
<p>‘Mamma, I couldn’t find the book in either of the
places you told me to look for it’ (there was a conscious
something in mamma’s smile that seemed to say, ‘No,
dear, I knew you could not’), ‘but Rachel got it for
me at last. Look, Mr. Markham, a natural history, with all
kinds of birds and beasts in it, and the reading as nice as the
pictures!’</p>
<p>In great good humour I sat down to examine the book, and drew
the little fellow between my knees. Had he come a minute
before I should have received him less graciously, but now I
affectionately stroked his curling looks, and even kissed his
ivory forehead: he was my own Helen’s son, and therefore
mine; and as such I have ever since regarded him. That
pretty child is now a fine young man: he has realised his
mother’s brightest expectations, and is at present residing
in Grassdale Manor with his young wife—the merry little
Helen Hattersley of yore.</p>
<p>I had not looked through half the book before Mrs. Maxwell
appeared to invite me into the other room to lunch. That
lady’s cool, distant manners rather chilled me at first;
but I did my best to propitiate her, and not entirely without
success, I think, even in that first short visit; for when I
talked cheerfully to her, she gradually became more kind and
cordial, and when I departed she bade me a gracious adieu, hoping
ere long to have the pleasure of seeing me again.</p>
<p>‘But you must not go till you have seen the
conservatory, my aunt’s winter garden,’ said Helen,
as I advanced to take leave of her, with as much philosophy and
self-command as I could summon to my aid.</p>
<p>I gladly availed myself of such a respite, and followed her
into a large and beautiful conservatory, plentifully furnished
with flowers, considering the season—but, of course, I had
little attention to spare for them. It was not, however,
for any tender colloquy that my companion had brought me
there:—</p>
<p>‘My aunt is particularly fond of flowers,’ she
observed, ‘and she is fond of Staningley too: I brought you
here to offer a petition in her behalf, that this may be her home
as long as she lives, and—if it be not our home
likewise—that I may often see her and be with her; for I
fear she will be sorry to lose me; and though she leads a retired
and contemplative life, she is apt to get low-spirited if left
too much alone.’</p>
<p>‘By all means, dearest Helen!—do what you will
with your own. I should not dream of wishing your aunt to
leave the place under any circumstances; and we will live either
here or elsewhere as you and she may determine, and you shall see
her as often as you like. I know she must be pained to part
with you, and I am willing to make any reparation in my
power. I love her for your sake, and her happiness shall be
as dear to me as that of my own mother.’</p>
<p>‘Thank you, darling! you shall have a kiss for
that. Good-by. There now—there,
Gilbert—let me go—here’s Arthur; don’t
astonish his infantile brain with your madness.’</p>
<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
<p>But it is time to bring my narrative to a close. Any one
but you would say I had made it too long already. But for
your satisfaction I will add a few words more; because I know you
will have a fellow-feeling for the old lady, and will wish to
know the last of her history. I did come again in spring,
and, agreeably to Helen’s injunctions, did my best to
cultivate her acquaintance. She received me very kindly,
having been, doubtless, already prepared to think highly of my
character by her niece’s too favourable report. I
turned my best side out, of course, and we got along marvellously
well together. When my ambitious intentions were made known
to her, she took it more sensibly than I had ventured to
hope. Her only remark on the subject, in my hearing,
was—</p>
<p>‘And so, Mr. Markham, you are going to rob me of my
niece, I understand. Well! I hope God will prosper
your union, and make my dear girl happy at last. Could she
have been contented to remain single, I own I should have been
better satisfied; but if she must marry again, I know of no one,
now living and of a suitable age, to whom I would more willingly
resign her than yourself, or who would be more likely to
appreciate her worth and make, her truly happy, as far as I can
tell.’</p>
<p>Of course I was delighted with the compliment, and hoped to
show her that she was not mistaken in her favourable
judgment.</p>
<p>‘I have, however, one request to offer,’ continued
she. ‘It seems I am still to look on Staningley as my
home: I wish you to make it yours likewise, for Helen is attached
to the place and to me—as I am to her. There are
painful associations connected with Grassdale, which she cannot
easily overcome; and I shall not molest you with my company or
interference here: I am a very quiet person, and shall keep my
own apartments, and attend to my own concerns, and only see you
now and then.’</p>
<p>Of course I most readily consented to this; and we lived in
the greatest harmony with our dear aunt until the day of her
death, which melancholy event took place a few years
after—melancholy, not to herself (for it came quietly upon
her, and she was glad to reach her journey’s end), but only
to the few loving friends and grateful dependents she left
behind.</p>
<p>To return, however, to my own affairs: I was married in
summer, on a glorious August morning. It took the whole
eight months, and all Helen’s kindness and goodness to
boot, to overcome my mother’s prejudices against my
bride-elect, and to reconcile her to the idea of my leaving
Linden Grange and living so far away. Yet she was gratified
at her son’s good fortune after all, and proudly attributed
it all to his own superior merits and endowments. I
bequeathed the farm to Fergus, with better hopes of its
prosperity than I should have had a year ago under similar
circumstances; for he had lately fallen in love with the Vicar of
L—’s eldest daughter—a lady whose superiority
had roused his latent virtues, and stimulated him to the most
surprising exertions, not only to gain her affection and esteem,
and to obtain a fortune sufficient to aspire to her hand, but to
render himself worthy of her, in his own eyes, as well as in
those of her parents; and in the end he was successful, as you
already know. As for myself, I need not tell you how
happily my Helen and I have lived together, and how blessed we
still are in each other’s society, and in the promising
young scions that are growing up about us. We are just now
looking forward to the advent of you and Rose, for the time of
your annual visit draws nigh, when you must leave your dusty,
smoky, noisy, toiling, striving city for a season of invigorating
relaxation and social retirement with us.</p>
<p style="text-align: right">Till then, farewell,<br/>
<span class="smcap">Gilbert Markham</span>.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Staningley</span>: <i>June</i>
10<i>th</i>, 1847.</p>
<div class="gapspace"> </div>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">the
end</span></p>
<div class="gapspace"> </div>
<p style="text-align: center">Printed by <span class="smcap">Spottiswoode</span>, <span class="smcap">Ballentyne
& Co. Ltd.</span><br/>
Colchester, London & Eton, England.</p>
<h2>Footnotes:</h2>
<p><SPAN name="footnote0"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation0" class="footnote">[0]</SPAN> Introduction to <i>Wuthering
Heights</i>, p. xl. ‘Still, as I mused the naked
room,’ &c.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation1" class="footnote">[1]</SPAN> This Preface is now printed here
for the first time in a collected edition of the works of the
Brontë sisters.</p>
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