<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
<p class="p2">Autumn in the Forest now, once again the
autumn. All things turning to their rest, bird,
and beast, and vegetable. Solemn and most
noble season, speaking to the soul of man, as
spring speaks to his body. The harvest of the
ample woods spreading every tint of ripeness,
waiting for the Makerʼs sickle, when His breath
is frost. Trees beyond trees, in depth and
height, roundings and massive juttings, some admitting
flaws of light to enhance their mellowness,
some very bright of their own accord, when the
sun thought well of them, others scarcely bronzed
with age, and meaning to abide the spring. It
was the same in Epping Forest, Richmond Park,
and the woods round London, only on a smaller
scale, and with less variety. And so upon his
northern road, every coppice, near or far, even<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</SPAN></span>
“Knockholt Beeches” (which reminded him of the
“beechen hats”), every little winding wood of
Sussex or of Surrey brought before Cradock
Nowellʼs eyes the prospect of his boyhood. He
had begged to be put ashore at Newhaven, from
the American trader, which had rescued him from
Pomona Island, and his lonely but healthful sojourn,
and then borne him to New York. Now,
with his little store of dollars, earned from the
noble Yankee skipper by the service he had rendered
him, freely given and freely taken, as
behoves two gentlemen, and with his great store
of health recovered, and recovered mind, he must
walk all the way to London, forty miles or more;
so great a desire entered into him of his native
land, that stable versatility, those free and ever–changing
skies, which all her sons abuse and love.</p>
<p>Cradock looked, I do assure you, as well, and
strong, and stout, and lusty, as may consist with
elegance at the age of two–and–twenty. And his
dress, though smacking of Broadway, “could not
conceal,” as our best writers say, “his symmetrical
proportions.” His pantaloons were of a fine bright
tan colour, with pockets fit for a thousand dollars,
and his boots full of eyelets, like big lampreys, and
his coat was a thing to be proud of, and a pleasing
surprise for Regent–street. His hat, moreover, was
umbratile, as of the Pilgrim Fathers, with a measure
of liquid capacity (betwixt the cone and the
turned–up rim) superior to that of the ordinary
cisterns of the London water–companies. Nevertheless<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</SPAN></span>
he had not acquired the delightful hydropultic
art, distinctive of the mighty nation which
had been so kind to him. And, in spite of little
external stuff (only worthy of two glances—one to
note, and the other to smile at it), the youth was
improved in every point worth a manʼs observation.
Three months in New York had done him an
enormous deal of good; not that the place is by
any means heavenly (perhaps there are few more
hellish), only that he fell in with men of extraordinary
energy and of marvellous decision, the
very two hinges of life whereupon he (being rather
too “philosophical”) had several screws loose, and
some rust in the joints.</p>
<p>As for Wena, she (the beauty) had cocked her
tail with great arrogance at smelling English
ground again. To her straight came several dogs,
who had never travelled far (except when they
were tail–piped), and one and all cried, “Hail, my
dear! Have you seen any dogs to compare with
us? Set of mongrel parley–woos, canʼt bark or
bite like a Christian. Just look round the corner,
pretty, while we kill that poodle.”</p>
<p>To whom Wena—<i>leniter atterens caudam</i>—”Cordially
I thank you. So much now I have seen of
the world that my faith is gone in tail–wags. If
you wish to benefit by my society, bring me a bit
from the hock of bacon, or a very young marrowbone.
Then will I tell you something.” They
could not comply with her requisitions, because
they had eaten all that themselves. And so she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</SPAN></span>
trotted along the beach, like the dog of Polyphemus,
or the terrier of Hercules, who tinged his
nose with murex.</p>
<p>‘Tis a very easy thing to talk of walking fifty
miles, but quite another pair of shoes to do it;
especially with pack on back, and feet that have
lost habitual sense of Macadamʼs tender mercies.
Moreover, the day had been very warm for the
beginning of October—the dying glance of Summer,
in the year 1860, at her hitherto foregone and
forgotten England. The highest temperature of
the year had been 72° (in the month of May); in
June and July, 66° and 68° were the maxima, and
in August things were no better. Persistent rain,
perpetual chill, and ever–present sense of icebergs,
and longing for logs of dry wood. But towards
the end of September some glorious weather set in;
and people left off fires at the time when they
generally begin them. Therefore, Cradock Nowell
was hot, footsore, and slightly jaded, as he came to
the foot of Sydenham Hill, on the second day of
his journey. The Crystal Palace, which long had
been his landmark through country crossroads,
shone with blue and airy light, as the sun was
sinking. Cradock admired more and more, as
the shadows sloped along it, the fleeting gleams,
the pellucid depth, the brightness of reflection
framed by the softness of refraction.</p>
<p>He had always loved that building, and now, at
the top of the hill, he resolved (weary as he was)
to enter and take his food there. Accordingly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</SPAN></span>
Wena was left to sup and rest at the stables; he
paid the shilling that turns the wheel, and went
first to the refreshment court. After doing his
duty there, he felt a great deal better; then buttoned
his coat like a Briton, and sauntered into the
transept. It had been a high and mighty day, for
the Ancient Order of Mountaineers (who had
never seen a mountain) were come to look for one
at Penge, with sweethearts, wives, contingencies,
and continuations. It boots not now to tell their
games; enough that they had been very happy,
and were gathering back in nave and transept for
a last parade. To Cradock, so long accustomed
to sadness, solitude, and bad luck, the scene, instead
of being ludicrous (as a youth of fashion would
have found it), was interesting and impressive,
and even took a solemn aspect as the red rays of
the sun retired, and the mellow shades were deepening.
He leaned against the iron rail in front of
the grand orchestra, and seeing many pretty faces,
thought about his Amy, and wondered what she
now was like, and whether she were true to him.
From Pomona Island he could not write; from
New York he had never written; not knowing the
loss of the <i>Taprobane</i>, and fearing lest he should
seem once more to be trying the depth of John
Rosedewʼs purse. But now he was come to England,
with letters from Captain Recklesome Young,
to his London correspondents, which ensured him
a good situation, and the power to earn his own
bread, and perhaps in a little while Amyʼs.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>As he leaned and watched the crowd go by, like
a dream of faces, the events of the bygone year
passed also in dark parade before him. Sad, mysterious,
undeserved—at least so far as he knew—how
had they told upon him? Had they left him
in better, or had they left him in bitter, case with
his God and his fellow–man? That question might
be solved at once, to any but himself, by the glistening
of his eyes, the gentleness of his gaze
around, the smile with which he drew back his
foot when a knickerbocked child trod on it. He
loved his fellow–creatures still; and love is law and
gospel.</p>
<p>While he thought these heavy things, feeling
weary of the road, of his life half weary, shrinking
from the bustling world again to be encountered,
suddenly a grand vibration thrilled his heart, and
mind, and soul. From the great concave above
him, melody was spreading wide, with shadowy
resistless power, like the wings of angels. The
noble organ was pealing forth, rolling to every
nook of the building, sweeping over the heads of
the people and into their hearts (with one soft
passport), “Home, sweet home!” The men who
had come because tired of home, the wives to give
them a change of it, the maidens perhaps to get
homes of their own, the children to cry to go home
again;—all with one accord stood still, all listened
very quietly, and said nothing at all about it.
Only they were the better for it, with many a kind
old memory rising, at least among the elder ones,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</SPAN></span>
and many a large unselfish hope making the young
people look, with trust, at one another.</p>
<p>And what did Cradock Nowell feel? His home
was not a sweet one; bitter things had been done
against him; bitter things he himself had done.
None the less, he turned away and wept beneath
a music–stand, as if his heart would never give
remission to his eyes. None could see him in the
dark there, only the God whose will it was, and
whose will it often is, that tears should bring us
home to Him.</p>
<p>“I will arise, and go home to my father. I
will cry, ‘Father, I have sinned against heaven,
and against thee.’”</p>
<p>And so he had. Not heavily, not wilfully, not wittingly,
not a hundredth part so badly as that father
had sinned against him. Yet it was wrong in him
not to allow the old man to recover himself, but,
forgetting a sonʼs love–duty, so to leave him—hotly,
hastily, with a proud defiance. Till now he had
never felt, or at least confessed to himself, that
wrong. Now, as generous natures do, he summed
up sternly against himself, leniently against others.
And then he asked, with yearning and bitter self–reproach,
“Is the old man yet alive?”</p>
<table id="t02" summary="t02">
<tr>
<td class="tdc">✸</td>
<td class="tdc">✸</td>
<td class="tdc">✸</td>
<td class="tdc">✸</td>
<td class="tdc">✸</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p class="p1">The woods were still as rich and sweet, and the
grass as soft as in May month; the windings of
the pleasant dells were looped with shining waters;
but she who used to love them so and brighten at
their freshness, to follow the steps of each wandering<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</SPAN></span>
breeze, and call to the sun as a flower does—now
she came through her favourite places, and
hardly cared to look at them. Only three short
months ago she had returned to her woodland
home, and the folk that knew and loved her, in
the highest and brightest spirits of youth, conscious
beauty, and hopefulness. All her old
friends were rejoicing in her, and she in their
joy delighted, when her father thought it his sorrowful
duty, in this world of sorrow, to tell her
the bad news about her ever unlucky Cradock. At
first she received it with scorn—as the high manner
of her mind was—utter unbelief, because God
could not have done it. Being simple, and very
young, she had half as much faith in her heavenly
Father as she had in the earthly and fallible
parent; neither was she quite aware that we do
not buy, but accept from God.</p>
<p>But, as week upon back of week, and month
after tardy month, went by, Amyʼs faith began to
wane, and herself to languish. She watched the
arrival of every mail from the Cape, from India,
from anywhere; her heart leaped up as each
steamer came in, and sank at each empty letterbag.
Meanwhile her father was growing very
unhappy about her, and so was good Aunt Doxy.
At first John had said, when she took it so calmly,
“Thank God! How glad I am! But her mother
cared for me more than that.” Like many
another loving father, he had studied, but never
learned his child.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Now it was the fifth day of October, the weather
bright and beautiful, the English earth and trees
and herbage trying back for the summer of which
they had been so cheated. Poor pale Amy asked
leave to go out. She had long been under Rue
Huttonʼs care, not professionally, but paternally
(for Rufus would have his own way when he was
truly fond of any one), and she asked so quietly,
so submissively, without a bit of joke about it, that
when she was gone her father set to and shook his
head, till a heavy tear came and blotted out a reference
which had taken all the morning. As for
Aunt Doxy, she turned aside, and took off her
spectacles quickly, because the optician had told
her to keep them perfectly dry.</p>
<p>Where the footpath wanders to and fro, preferring
pleasure to duty, and meeting all remonstrance
by quoting the course of the brook, Amy
Rosedew slowly walked, or heavily stopped every
now and then, caring for nothing around her.
She had made up her mind to cry no more, only
to long for the time and place when and where no
crying is. Perhaps in a year or so, if she lived,
she might be able to see things again, and attend
to her work as usual. Till then she would try to
please her father, and keep up her spirits for his
sake. Every one had been so kind to her, especially
dear Eoa, who had really cried quite steadily;
and the least thing that girl Amy could do was to
try and deserve it. Thinking thus, and doing her
best to feel as well as think it, yet growing tired<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</SPAN></span>
already, she sat down in a chair as soft as weary
mortal may rest in. A noble beech, with a head
of glory overlooking the forest, had not neglected
to slipper his feet with the richest of natureʼs
velvet. From the dove–coloured columnʼs base,
two yards above the ground–spread, drifts of darker
bulk began, gnarled crooks of grapple, clutching
wide at mother earth, deeply fanged into her
breast, sureties against every wind. Ridged and
ramped with many a hummock, rift, and twisted
sinew, forth these mighty tendons stretched, some
fathoms from the bole itself. Betwixt them nestled,
all in moss, corniced with the golden, and cushioned
with the greenest, nooks of cool, delicious rest,
wherein to forget the world, and dream upon the
breezes. “As You Like It,” in your lap, Theocritus
tossed over the elbow, because he is too
foreign,—what sweet depth of enjoyment for a
hard–working man who has earned it!</p>
<p>But, in spite of all this voluptuousness, the
“moss more soft than slumber,” and the rippling
leafy murmur, there is little doubt that Miss Amy
Rosedew managed to have another cry ere ever
she fell asleep. To cry among those arms of moss,
fleecing, tufting, pillowing, an absorbent even for
Niobe! Can the worn–out human nature find no
comfort in the vegetable, though it does in the
mineral, kingdom?</p>
<p>Back, and back, and further back into the old
relapse of sleep, the falling thither whence we
came, the interest on the debt of death. Yet as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</SPAN></span>
the old Stagyrite hints, some of dayʼs emotions
filter through the strain of sleep; it is not true
that good and bad are, for half of life, the same.
Alike their wits go roving haply after the true
Owner, but some may find Him, others fail—Father,
who shall limit thus Thine infinite
amnesty?</p>
<p>It would not be an easy thing to find a fairer
sight. Her white arms on the twisted plumage
of the deep green moss, the snowy arch of her
neck revealed as the clustering hair fell from it,
and the frank and playful forehead resting on the
soft grey bark. She smiled in her sleep every now
and then, for her pleasant young humour must
have its own way when the schoolmaster, sorrow,
was dozing; and then the sad dreaming of trouble
returned, and the hands were put up to pray, and
the red lips opened, whispering, “Come home!
Only come to Amy!”</p>
<p>And then, in her dream, he was come—raining
tears upon her cheek, holding her from all the
world, fearing to thank God yet. She was smiling
up at him; oh, it was so delicious! Suddenly
she opened her eyes. What made her face so
wet? Why, Wena!</p>
<p>Wena, as sure as dogs are dogs; mounted on
the mossy arm, lick–lick–licking, mewing like a cat
almost, even offering taste of her tongue, while
every bit of the Wena dog shook with ecstatic
rapture.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Oh, Wena, Wena! what are you come to tell
me, Wena? Oh that you could speak!”</p>
<p>Wena immediately proved that she could. She
galloped round Amy, barking and yelling, until
the great wood echoed again; the rabbits, a mile
away, pricked their ears, and the yaffingales stopped
from tapping. Then off set the little dog down
the footpath. Oh, could it be to fetch somebody?</p>
<p>The mere idea of such a thing made Amy shake
so, and feel so odd, she was forced to put one hand
against the tree, and the other upon her heart.
She could not look, she was in such a state; she
could not look down the footpath. It seemed, at
least, a century, and it may have been half a
minute, before she heard through the bushes a
voice—tush, she means <i>the</i> voice.</p>
<p>“Wena, you bad dog, come in to heel. Is this
all you have learned by travelling?”</p>
<p>But Wena broke fence and everything, set off
full gallop again to Amy, tugged at her dress, and
retrieved her.</p>
<p>What happened after that Amy knows not,
neither knows Cradock Nowell. So anything I
could tell would be a fond thing vainly invented.
All they remember is—looking back upon it, as
both of them may, to the zenith of their lives—that
neither of them could say a word except
“darling, darling, darling!” all pronounced as
superlatives, with “my own,” once or twice between,
and an exclusive sense of ownership, illiberal<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</SPAN></span>
and unphilosophical. What business have we
with such minor details? Who has sworn us
accountants of kisses? All we have any right to
say is, that after a long spell of inarticulate tautology,
Amy looked up when Cradock proposed to
add another cipher; very gravely, indeed, she
looked up; except in the deepest depth of her
eyes.</p>
<p>“Oh no, Cradock. You must not think of it.
Seriously now, you must <i>not</i>, love.”</p>
<p>“Why? I should like to know, indeed! After
all the time I have been away!”</p>
<p>“I have so little presence of mind. I forgot to
tell you in time, dear. Why, because Wena <i>has
licked my face all over</i>, darling. Darling, yes, she
<i>has</i>, I say. You are too bad not to care about it.
Now come to my own best father, dear. Offer
your arm like a gentleman.”</p>
<p>So they—as Milton concisely says. Homer
would have written “they two.” How sadly our
language wants a dual! We, the domestic race,
have we rejected it because the use would have
seemed a truism?</p>
<table id="t03" summary="t03">
<tr>
<td class="tdc">✸</td>
<td class="tdc">✸</td>
<td class="tdc">✸</td>
<td class="tdc">✸</td>
<td class="tdc">✸</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p class="p1">That same afternoon Bull Garnet lay dying,
calmly and peacefully going off, taking his accounts
to a larger world. He knew that there
were some heavy items underscored against him;
but he also knew that the mercy of God can even
outdo the hope He gives us for token and for
keepsake. A greater and a grander end, after a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</SPAN></span>
life of mark and power, might, to his early aspirations
and self–conscious strength, have seemed the
bourne intended. If it had befallen him—as but
for himself it would have done—to appear where
men are moved by passion, vigour, and bold decision,
his name would have been historical, and
better known to the devil. As it was, he lay
there dying, and was well content. The turbulence
of life was past, the torrent and the eddy,
the attempt at fore–reaching upon his age, and
sense of impossibility, the strain of his mental
muscles to stir the great dead trunks of “orthodoxy,”
and then the self–doubt, the chill, the
depression, which follow such attempts, as surely
as ague tracks the pioneer.</p>
<p>Thank God, all this was over now, and the
violence gone, and the dark despair. Of all the
good and evil things which so had branded him
distinct, two yet dwelled in his feeble heart, only
two still showed their presence in his dying eyes.
Each of those two was good, if two indeed they
were—faith in the heavenly Father, and love of
the earthly children.</p>
<p>Pearl was sitting on a white chair at the side of
the bed away from the window, with one hand in
his failing palm, and the other trying now and
then to enable her eyes to see things. She was
thinking, poor little thing, of what she should do
without him, and how he had been a good father
to her, though she never could understand him.
That was her own fault, no doubt. She had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</SPAN></span>
always fancied that he loved her as a bit of his
property, as a thing to be managed; now she
knew that it was not so; and he was going away
for ever, and who would love or manage her? And
the fault of all this was her own.</p>
<p>Rufus Hutton had been there lately, trying
still to keep up some little show of comfort, and a
large one of encouragement; for he was not the
man to say die till a patient came to the preterite.
Throughout the whole, and knowing all, he had
behaved in the noblest manner, partly from his
own quick kindness, partly from that protective
and fiduciary feeling which springs self–sown in
the hearts of women when showers of sorrow
descend, and crops up in the manly bosom at the
fee of golden sunshine. Not that he took any
fees; but that his professional habits revived,
with a generosity added, because he knew that he
would take nothing, though all were in his power.</p>
<p>Suddenly Mr. Pell came in, our old friend Octavius,
sent for in an urgent manner, and looking
as a man looks who feels but cannot open on the
hinge of his existence. Like a thorough gentleman,
he had been shy of the cottage, although
aware of their distress; eager at once and reluctant,
partly because it stood not in his but his
rectorʼs parish, partly for deeper reasons.</p>
<p>Though Pell came in so quietly, Bull Garnet
rose at his entry, or tried to rise on the pillow,
swept his daughter back by a little motion of his
thumb, which she quite understood, and cast his
eyes on the parsonʼs with a languid yet strong intelligence.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</SPAN></span>
He had made up his mind that the
man was good, and yet he could not help probing
him.</p>
<p>The last characteristic act of poor Bull Garnetʼs
life, a life which had been all character, all difference,
from other people.</p>
<p>“Will you take my daughterʼs hand, Pell?”</p>
<p>“Only too gladly,” answered Pell; but she
shrank away, and sobbed at him.</p>
<p>“Pearl, come forward this moment. It is no
time for shilly–shallying.”</p>
<p>The poor thing timidly gave her hand, standing
a long way back from Pell, and with her large eyes
streaming, yet fixed upon her father, and no chance
at all of wiping them.</p>
<p>“Now, Pell, do you love my daughter? I am
dying, and I ask you.”</p>
<p>“That I do, with all my heart,” said Pell, like a
downright Englishman. “I shall never love any
other.”</p>
<p>“Now, Pearl, do you love Mr. Pell?” Her
fatherʼs eyes were upon her in a way that commanded
truth. She remembered how she had
told a lie, at the age of seven or eight, and that
gaze had forced it out of her, and she had never
dared to tell one since, until no lie dared come
near her.</p>
<p>“Father, I like him very much. Very soon I
should love him, if—if he loved me.”</p>
<p>“Now, Pell, you hear that!”</p>
<p>“Beyond all doubt I do,” said Octave, whose<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</SPAN></span>
dryness never deserted him in the heaviest rain of
tears; “and it is the very best thing for me I have
heard in all my life.”</p>
<p>Bull Garnet looked from one to the other, with
the rally of his life come hot, and a depth of joyful
sadness. Yet must he go a little further, because
he had always been a tyrant till people understood
him.</p>
<p>“Do you want to know how much money, sir, I
intend to leave her, when I die to–night or to–morrow
morning?”</p>
<p>Cut–and–dry Pell was taken aback. A thoroughly
upright and noble fellow, but of wholly
different and less rugged road of thought. Meanwhile
Pearl had slipped away; it was more than
she could bear, and she was so sorry for Octavius.
Then Pell up and spake bravely:</p>
<p>“Sir, I would be loth to think of you, my dear
oneʼs father, as anything but a gentleman; a
strange one, perhaps, but a true one. And so I
trust you have only put such a question to me in
irony.”</p>
<p>“Pell, there is good stuff in you. I know a
man by this time. What would you think of
finding your dear oneʼs father a murderer?”</p>
<p>Octavius Pell was not altogether used to this
sort of thing. He turned away with some doubt
whether Pearl would be a desirable mother of
children (for he, after all, was a practical man),
and hereditary insanity—— Then he turned<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</SPAN></span>
back, remembering that all mankind are mad.
Meanwhile Bull Garnet watched him, with extraordinary
wrinkles, and a savage sort of pleasure.
He felt himself outside the world, and
looking at the stitches of it. But he would not
say a word. He had always been a bully, and he
meant to keep it up.</p>
<p>“Sir,” said Octave Pell, at last, “you are the
very oddest man I ever saw in all my life.”</p>
<p>“Ah, you think so, do you, Pell? Possibly you
are right; possibly you are right, Pell. I have no
time to think about it. It never struck me in
that light. If I am so very odd, perhaps you
would rather not have my daughter?”</p>
<p>“If you intend to refuse her to me, you had
better say so at once, sir. I donʼt understand all
this.”</p>
<p>“I wish you to understand nothing at all beyond
the simple fact. I shot Clayton Nowell, and did
it on purpose, because I found him insulting her.”</p>
<p>“Good God! You donʼt mean to say it?”</p>
<p>“I never yet said a thing, Pell, which I did not
mean to say.”</p>
<p>“You did it in haste? You have repented?
For Godʼs sake, tell me that.”</p>
<p>“Treat this as a question of business. Look at
the deed and nothing else. Do you still wish to
marry my daughter?”</p>
<p>Pell turned away from the great wild eyes now
solemnly fixed upon him. His manly heart was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</SPAN></span>
full of wonder, anguish, and giddy turbulence.
The promptest of us cannot always “come to time,”
like a prizefighter.</p>
<p>Pearl came in, with her chest well forward, and
then drew back very suddenly. She thought her
fate must be settled now, and would like to know
how they had settled it. Then, like a genuine
English lady, she gave a short sigh and went away.
Pride makes the difference between us and all
other nations.</p>
<p>But the dignified glance she had cast on Pell
settled his fate and hers for life. He saw her
noble self–respect, her stately reservation, her deep
sense of her own pure value (which never would
assert itself), and her passing contempt of his hesitation.</p>
<p>“At all risks I will have her,” he said to himself,
for his manly strength gloried in her strong womanhood;
“if she can be won I will have her. Oh,
how I am degrading her! What a fool–bound
fellow I am!”</p>
<p>Then he spoke to her father, who had fallen
back, and was faintly gazing, wondering what the
stoppage was.</p>
<p>“Sir, I am not worthy of her. God knows how
I love her. She is too good for me.”</p>
<p>Bull Garnet gathered his fleeting life, and looked
at Pell with a love so deep that it banished admiration.
Then his failing heart supplied, for the last,
last time of all, the woe–worn fountain of his eyes.
Strong and violent as he was, a little thing had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</SPAN></span>
often touched him to the turn of tears. What
impulse is there but has this end? Even comic
laughter.</p>
<p>Pell lifted from the counterpane the broad but
shrunken hand, which was on the way to be offered
to him, until sad memory stopped it. Then he
looked down at the poor grey face, where the forehead,
from the fall of the rest, appeared almost
a monstrosity, and the waning of strong emotions
left a quivering of hollowness. The young parson
looked down with noble pity. Much he knew of
his father–in–law! Bull Garnet would never be
pitied. He drew his hand back with a little jerk,
and placed it against his broad, square chin.</p>
<p>“I canʼt bear to die like this, Pell. <i>I wish to
God you could shave me.</i>”</p>
<p>Pell went suddenly down on his knees, put his
strong brown hands up, and said nothing except
the Lordʼs Prayer. Bull Garnet tried to raise his
palms, but the power of his wrists was gone, and
so he let them fall together. Then at every grand
petition he nodded at the ceiling, as if he saw it
going upward, and thought of the lath and plaster.</p>
<p>He had said he should die at four oʼclock, for
the paroxysms of heart–complaint returned at measured
intervals, and he felt that he could not outlast
another. So with his usual mastery and
economy of labour, he had sent a man to get the
keys and begin to toll the great church bell, as
soon as ever the clock struck four. “Not too long
apart,” he said, “steadily, and be done with it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</SPAN></span>.”
When the boom of the sluggish bell came in at the
open window, Bull Garnet smiled, because the man
was doing it as he had ordered him.</p>
<p>“Right,” he whispered, “yes, quite right. I
have always been before my time. Just let me
see my children.” And then he had no more
pain.</p>
<table id="t04" summary="t04">
<tr>
<td class="tdc">✸</td>
<td class="tdc">✸</td>
<td class="tdc">✸</td>
<td class="tdc">✸</td>
<td class="tdc">✸</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p class="p1">Amy came in very softly, to know if he was
dead. They had told her she ought to leave it
alone, but she could not see it so. Knowing all
and feeling all, she felt beyond her knowledge.
If it would—oh, if it would help him with a
spark of hope in his parting, help him in the judgment–day,
to have the glad forgiveness of the
brother with the deeper wrong—there it was, and
he was welcome.</p>
<p>A little whispering went on, pale lips into trembling
ears, and then Cradock, with his shoes off,
was brought to the side of the bed.</p>
<p>“He wonʼt know you,” Pearl sobbed softly;
“but how kind of you to come!” She was surprised
at nothing now.</p>
<p>Her father raised his languid eyes, until they
met Cradockʼs eager ones; there they dwelt with
doubt, and wonder, and a slow rejoicing, and a last
attempt at expression.</p>
<p>John Rosedew took the wan stiffening hand,
lying on the sheet like a cast–off glove, and placed it
in Cradockʼs sunburnt palm.</p>
<p>“He knows all,” the parson whispered; “he has<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</SPAN></span>
read the letter you left for him; and, knowing all,
he forgives you.”</p>
<p>“That I do, with all my heart,” Cradock answered
firmly. “May God forgive me as I do
you. Wholly, purely, for once and for all!”</p>
<p>“Kind—noble—Godlike——” the dying man
said very slowly, but with his old decision.</p>
<p>Bull Garnet could not speak again. The great
expansion of heart had been too much for its weakness.
Only now and then he looked at Cradock
with his Amy, and every look was a prayer for
them, and perhaps a recorded blessing.</p>
<p>Then they slipped away, in tears, and left him, as
he ought to be, with his children only. And the
telegraph of death was that God would never part
them.</p>
<p>Now, think you not this man was dying a great
deal better than he deserved? No doubt he was.
And, for that matter, so perhaps do most of us.
But does our Father think so?</p>
<hr class="chap" />
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