<h2>CHAPTER XXX</h2>
<p>The more I knew of the inmates of Moor House, the better I
liked them. In a few days I had so far recovered my health
that I could sit up all day, and walk out sometimes. I
could join with Diana and Mary in all their occupations; converse
with them as much as they wished, and aid them when and where
they would allow me. There was a reviving pleasure in this
intercourse, of a kind now tasted by me for the first
time—the pleasure arising from perfect congeniality of
tastes, sentiments, and principles.</p>
<p>I liked to read what they liked to read: what they enjoyed,
delighted me; what they approved, I reverenced. They loved
their sequestered home. I, too, in the grey, small, antique
structure, with its low roof, its latticed casements, its
mouldering walls, its avenue of aged firs—all grown aslant
under the stress of mountain winds; its garden, dark with yew and
holly—and where no flowers but of the hardiest species
would bloom—found a charm both potent and permanent.
They clung to the purple moors behind and around their
dwelling—to the hollow vale into which the pebbly
bridle-path leading from their gate descended, and which wound
between fern-banks first, and then amongst a few of the wildest
little pasture-fields that ever bordered a wilderness of heath,
or gave sustenance to a flock of grey moorland sheep, with their
little mossy-faced lambs:—they clung to this scene, I say,
with a perfect enthusiasm of attachment. I could comprehend
the feeling, and share both its strength and truth. I saw
the fascination of the locality. I felt the consecration of
its loneliness: my eye feasted on the outline of swell and
sweep—on the wild colouring communicated to ridge and dell
by moss, by heath-bell, by flower-sprinkled turf, by brilliant
bracken, and mellow granite crag. These details were just
to me what they were to them—so many pure and sweet sources
of pleasure. The strong blast and the soft breeze; the
rough and the halcyon day; the hours of sunrise and sunset; the
moonlight and the clouded night, developed for me, in these
regions, the same attraction as for them—wound round my
faculties the same spell that entranced theirs.</p>
<p>Indoors we agreed equally well. They were both more
accomplished and better read than I was; but with eagerness I
followed in the path of knowledge they had trodden before
me. I devoured the books they lent me: then it was full
satisfaction to discuss with them in the evening what I had
perused during the day. Thought fitted thought; opinion met
opinion: we coincided, in short, perfectly.</p>
<p>If in our trio there was a superior and a leader, it was
Diana. Physically, she far excelled me: she was handsome;
she was vigorous. In her animal spirits there was an
affluence of life and certainty of flow, such as excited my
wonder, while it baffled my comprehension. I could talk a
while when the evening commenced, but the first gush of vivacity
and fluency gone, I was fain to sit on a stool at Diana’s
feet, to rest my head on her knee, and listen alternately to her
and Mary, while they sounded thoroughly the topic on which I had
but touched. Diana offered to teach me German. I
liked to learn of her: I saw the part of instructress pleased and
suited her; that of scholar pleased and suited me no less.
Our natures dovetailed: mutual affection—of the strongest
kind—was the result. They discovered I could draw:
their pencils and colour-boxes were immediately at my
service. My skill, greater in this one point than theirs,
surprised and charmed them. Mary would sit and watch me by
the hour together: then she would take lessons; and a docile,
intelligent, assiduous pupil she made. Thus occupied, and
mutually entertained, days passed like hours, and weeks like
days.</p>
<p>As to Mr. St John, the intimacy which had arisen so naturally
and rapidly between me and his sisters did not extend to
him. One reason of the distance yet observed between us
was, that he was comparatively seldom at home: a large proportion
of his time appeared devoted to visiting the sick and poor among
the scattered population of his parish.</p>
<p>No weather seemed to hinder him in these pastoral excursions:
rain or fair, he would, when his hours of morning study were
over, take his hat, and, followed by his father’s old
pointer, Carlo, go out on his mission of love or duty—I
scarcely know in which light he regarded it. Sometimes,
when the day was very unfavourable, his sisters would
expostulate. He would then say, with a peculiar smile, more
solemn than cheerful—</p>
<p>“And if I let a gust of wind or a sprinkling of rain
turn me aside from these easy tasks, what preparation would such
sloth be for the future I propose to myself?”</p>
<p>Diana and Mary’s general answer to this question was a
sigh, and some minutes of apparently mournful meditation.</p>
<p>But besides his frequent absences, there was another barrier
to friendship with him: he seemed of a reserved, an abstracted,
and even of a brooding nature. Zealous in his ministerial
labours, blameless in his life and habits, he yet did not appear
to enjoy that mental serenity, that inward content, which should
be the reward of every sincere Christian and practical
philanthropist. Often, of an evening, when he sat at the
window, his desk and papers before him, he would cease reading or
writing, rest his chin on his hand, and deliver himself up to I
know not what course of thought; but that it was perturbed and
exciting might be seen in the frequent flash and changeful
dilation of his eye.</p>
<p>I think, moreover, that Nature was not to him that treasury of
delight it was to his sisters. He expressed once, and but
once in my hearing, a strong sense of the rugged charm of the
hills, and an inborn affection for the dark roof and hoary walls
he called his home; but there was more of gloom than pleasure in
the tone and words in which the sentiment was manifested; and
never did he seem to roam the moors for the sake of their
soothing silence—never seek out or dwell upon the thousand
peaceful delights they could yield.</p>
<p>Incommunicative as he was, some time elapsed before I had an
opportunity of gauging his mind. I first got an idea of its
calibre when I heard him preach in his own church at
Morton. I wish I could describe that sermon: but it is past
my power. I cannot even render faithfully the effect it
produced on me.</p>
<p>It began calm—and indeed, as far as delivery and pitch
of voice went, it was calm to the end: an earnestly felt, yet
strictly restrained zeal breathed soon in the distinct accents,
and prompted the nervous language. This grew to
force—compressed, condensed, controlled. The heart
was thrilled, the mind astonished, by the power of the preacher:
neither were softened. Throughout there was a strange
bitterness; an absence of consolatory gentleness; stern allusions
to Calvinistic doctrines—election, predestination,
reprobation—were frequent; and each reference to these
points sounded like a sentence pronounced for doom. When he
had done, instead of feeling better, calmer, more enlightened by
his discourse, I experienced an inexpressible sadness; for it
seemed to me—I know not whether equally so to
others—that the eloquence to which I had been listening had
sprung from a depth where lay turbid dregs of
disappointment—where moved troubling impulses of insatiate
yearnings and disquieting aspirations. I was sure St. John
Rivers—pure-lived, conscientious, zealous as he
was—had not yet found that peace of God which passeth all
understanding: he had no more found it, I thought, than had I
with my concealed and racking regrets for my broken idol and lost
elysium—regrets to which I have latterly avoided referring,
but which possessed me and tyrannised over me ruthlessly.</p>
<p>Meantime a month was gone. Diana and Mary were soon to
leave Moor House, and return to the far different life and scene
which awaited them, as governesses in a large, fashionable,
south-of-England city, where each held a situation in families by
whose wealthy and haughty members they were regarded only as
humble dependants, and who neither knew nor sought out their
innate excellences, and appreciated only their acquired
accomplishments as they appreciated the skill of their cook or
the taste of their waiting-woman. Mr. St. John had said
nothing to me yet about the employment he had promised to obtain
for me; yet it became urgent that I should have a vocation of
some kind. One morning, being left alone with him a few
minutes in the parlour, I ventured to approach the
window-recess—which his table, chair, and desk consecrated
as a kind of study—and I was going to speak, though not
very well knowing in what words to frame my inquiry—for it
is at all times difficult to break the ice of reserve glassing
over such natures as his—when he saved me the trouble by
being the first to commence a dialogue.</p>
<p>Looking up as I drew near—“You have a question to
ask of me?” he said.</p>
<p>“Yes; I wish to know whether you have heard of any
service I can offer myself to undertake?”</p>
<p>“I found or devised something for you three weeks ago;
but as you seemed both useful and happy here—as my sisters
had evidently become attached to you, and your society gave them
unusual pleasure—I deemed it inexpedient to break in on
your mutual comfort till their approaching departure from Marsh
End should render yours necessary.”</p>
<p>“And they will go in three days now?” I said.</p>
<p>“Yes; and when they go, I shall return to the parsonage
at Morton: Hannah will accompany me; and this old house will be
shut up.”</p>
<p>I waited a few moments, expecting he would go on with the
subject first broached: but he seemed to have entered another
train of reflection: his look denoted abstraction from me and my
business. I was obliged to recall him to a theme which was
of necessity one of close and anxious interest to me.</p>
<p>“What is the employment you had in view, Mr.
Rivers? I hope this delay will not have increased the
difficulty of securing it.”</p>
<p>“Oh, no; since it is an employment which depends only on
me to give, and you to accept.”</p>
<p>He again paused: there seemed a reluctance to continue.
I grew impatient: a restless movement or two, and an eager and
exacting glance fastened on his face, conveyed the feeling to him
as effectually as words could have done, and with less
trouble.</p>
<p>“You need be in no hurry to hear,” he said:
“let me frankly tell you, I have nothing eligible or
profitable to suggest. Before I explain, recall, if you
please, my notice, clearly given, that if I helped you, it must
be as the blind man would help the lame. I am poor; for I
find that, when I have paid my father’s debts, all the
patrimony remaining to me will be this crumbling grange, the row
of scathed firs behind, and the patch of moorish soil, with the
yew-trees and holly-bushes in front. I am obscure: Rivers
is an old name; but of the three sole descendants of the race,
two earn the dependant’s crust among strangers, and the
third considers himself an alien from his native
country—not only for life, but in death. Yes, and
deems, and is bound to deem, himself honoured by the lot, and
aspires but after the day when the cross of separation from
fleshly ties shall be laid on his shoulders, and when the Head of
that church-militant of whose humblest members he is one, shall
give the word, ‘Rise, follow Me!’”</p>
<p>St. John said these words as he pronounced his sermons, with a
quiet, deep voice; with an unflushed cheek, and a coruscating
radiance of glance. He resumed—</p>
<p>“And since I am myself poor and obscure, I can offer you
but a service of poverty and obscurity. <i>You</i> may even
think it degrading—for I see now your habits have been what
the world calls refined: your tastes lean to the ideal, and your
society has at least been amongst the educated; but <i>I</i>
consider that no service degrades which can better our
race. I hold that the more arid and unreclaimed the soil
where the Christian labourer’s task of tillage is appointed
him—the scantier the meed his toil brings—the higher
the honour. His, under such circumstances, is the destiny
of the pioneer; and the first pioneers of the Gospel were the
Apostles—their captain was Jesus, the Redeemer,
Himself.”</p>
<p>“Well?” I said, as he again
paused—“proceed.”</p>
<p>He looked at me before he proceeded: indeed, he seemed
leisurely to read my face, as if its features and lines were
characters on a page. The conclusions drawn from this
scrutiny he partially expressed in his succeeding
observations.</p>
<p>“I believe you will accept the post I offer you,”
said he, “and hold it for a while: not permanently, though:
any more than I could permanently keep the narrow and
narrowing—the tranquil, hidden office of English country
incumbent; for in your nature is an alloy as detrimental to
repose as that in mine, though of a different kind.”</p>
<p>“Do explain,” I urged, when he halted once
more.</p>
<p>“I will; and you shall hear how poor the proposal
is,—how trivial—how cramping. I shall not stay
long at Morton, now that my father is dead, and that I am my own
master. I shall leave the place probably in the course of a
twelve-month; but while I do stay, I will exert myself to the
utmost for its improvement. Morton, when I came to it two
years ago, had no school: the children of the poor were excluded
from every hope of progress. I established one for boys: I
mean now to open a second school for girls. I have hired a
building for the purpose, with a cottage of two rooms attached to
it for the mistress’s house. Her salary will be
thirty pounds a year: her house is already furnished, very
simply, but sufficiently, by the kindness of a lady, Miss Oliver;
the only daughter of the sole rich man in my parish—Mr.
Oliver, the proprietor of a needle-factory and iron-foundry in
the valley. The same lady pays for the education and
clothing of an orphan from the workhouse, on condition that she
shall aid the mistress in such menial offices connected with her
own house and the school as her occupation of teaching will
prevent her having time to discharge in person. Will you be
this mistress?”</p>
<p>He put the question rather hurriedly; he seemed half to expect
an indignant, or at least a disdainful rejection of the offer:
not knowing all my thoughts and feelings, though guessing some,
he could not tell in what light the lot would appear to me.
In truth it was humble—but then it was sheltered, and I
wanted a safe asylum: it was plodding—but then, compared
with that of a governess in a rich house, it was independent; and
the fear of servitude with strangers entered my soul like iron:
it was not ignoble—not unworthy—not mentally
degrading, I made my decision.</p>
<p>“I thank you for the proposal, Mr. Rivers, and I accept
it with all my heart.”</p>
<p>“But you comprehend me?” he said. “It
is a village school: your scholars will be only poor
girls—cottagers’ children—at the best,
farmers’ daughters. Knitting, sewing, reading,
writing, ciphering, will be all you will have to teach.
What will you do with your accomplishments? What, with the
largest portion of your
mind—sentiments—tastes?”</p>
<p>“Save them till they are wanted. They will
keep.”</p>
<p>“You know what you undertake, then?”</p>
<p>“I do.”</p>
<p>He now smiled: and not a bitter or a sad smile, but one well
pleased and deeply gratified.</p>
<p>“And when will you commence the exercise of your
function?”</p>
<p>“I will go to my house to-morrow, and open the school,
if you like, next week.”</p>
<p>“Very well: so be it.”</p>
<p>He rose and walked through the room. Standing still, he
again looked at me. He shook his head.</p>
<p>“What do you disapprove of, Mr. Rivers?” I
asked.</p>
<p>“You will not stay at Morton long: no, no!”</p>
<p>“Why? What is your reason for saying
so?”</p>
<p>“I read it in your eye; it is not of that description
which promises the maintenance of an even tenor in
life.”</p>
<p>“I am not ambitious.”</p>
<p>He started at the word “ambitious.” He
repeated, “No. What made you think of ambition?
Who is ambitious? I know I am: but how did you find it
out?”</p>
<p>“I was speaking of myself.”</p>
<p>“Well, if you are not ambitious, you
are—” He paused.</p>
<p>“What?”</p>
<p>“I was going to say, impassioned: but perhaps you would
have misunderstood the word, and been displeased. I mean,
that human affections and sympathies have a most powerful hold on
you. I am sure you cannot long be content to pass your
leisure in solitude, and to devote your working hours to a
monotonous labour wholly void of stimulus: any more than I can be
content,” he added, with emphasis, “to live here
buried in morass, pent in with mountains—my nature, that
God gave me, contravened; my faculties, heaven-bestowed,
paralysed—made useless. You hear now how I contradict
myself. I, who preached contentment with a humble lot, and
justified the vocation even of hewers of wood and drawers of
water in God’s service—I, His ordained minister,
almost rave in my restlessness. Well, propensities and
principles must be reconciled by some means.”</p>
<p>He left the room. In this brief hour I had learnt more
of him than in the whole previous month: yet still he puzzled
me.</p>
<p>Diana and Mary Rivers became more sad and silent as the day
approached for leaving their brother and their home. They
both tried to appear as usual; but the sorrow they had to
struggle against was one that could not be entirely conquered or
concealed. Diana intimated that this would be a different
parting from any they had ever yet known. It would
probably, as far as St. John was concerned, be a parting for
years: it might be a parting for life.</p>
<p>“He will sacrifice all to his long-framed
resolves,” she said: “natural affection and feelings
more potent still. St. John looks quiet, Jane; but he hides
a fever in his vitals. You would think him gentle, yet in
some things he is inexorable as death; and the worst of it is, my
conscience will hardly permit me to dissuade him from his severe
decision: certainly, I cannot for a moment blame him for
it. It is right, noble, Christian: yet it breaks my
heart!” And the tears gushed to her fine eyes.
Mary bent her head low over her work.</p>
<p>“We are now without father: we shall soon be without
home and brother,” she murmured.</p>
<p>At that moment a little accident supervened, which seemed
decreed by fate purposely to prove the truth of the adage, that
“misfortunes never come singly,” and to add to their
distresses the vexing one of the slip between the cup and the
lip. St. John passed the window reading a letter. He
entered.</p>
<p>“Our uncle John is dead,” said he.</p>
<p>Both the sisters seemed struck: not shocked or appalled; the
tidings appeared in their eyes rather momentous than
afflicting.</p>
<p>“Dead?” repeated Diana.</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>She riveted a searching gaze on her brother’s
face. “And what then?” she demanded, in a low
voice.</p>
<p>“What then, Die?” he replied, maintaining a marble
immobility of feature. “What then?
Why—nothing. Read.”</p>
<p>He threw the letter into her lap. She glanced over it,
and handed it to Mary. Mary perused it in silence, and
returned it to her brother. All three looked at each other,
and all three smiled—a dreary, pensive smile enough.</p>
<p>“Amen! We can yet live,” said Diana at
last.</p>
<p>“At any rate, it makes us no worse off than we were
before,” remarked Mary.</p>
<p>“Only it forces rather strongly on the mind the picture
of what <i>might have been</i>,” said Mr. Rivers,
“and contrasts it somewhat too vividly with what
<i>is</i>.”</p>
<p>He folded the letter, locked it in his desk, and again went
out.</p>
<p>For some minutes no one spoke. Diana then turned to
me.</p>
<p>“Jane, you will wonder at us and our mysteries,”
she said, “and think us hard-hearted beings not to be more
moved at the death of so near a relation as an uncle; but we have
never seen him or known him. He was my mother’s
brother. My father and he quarrelled long ago. It was
by his advice that my father risked most of his property in the
speculation that ruined him. Mutual recrimination passed
between them: they parted in anger, and were never
reconciled. My uncle engaged afterwards in more prosperous
undertakings: it appears he realised a fortune of twenty thousand
pounds. He was never married, and had no near kindred but
ourselves and one other person, not more closely related than
we. My father always cherished the idea that he would atone
for his error by leaving his possessions to us; that letter
informs us that he has bequeathed every penny to the other
relation, with the exception of thirty guineas, to be divided
between St. John, Diana, and Mary Rivers, for the purchase of
three mourning rings. He had a right, of course, to do as
he pleased: and yet a momentary damp is cast on the spirits by
the receipt of such news. Mary and I would have esteemed
ourselves rich with a thousand pounds each; and to St. John such
a sum would have been valuable, for the good it would have
enabled him to do.”</p>
<p>This explanation given, the subject was dropped, and no
further reference made to it by either Mr. Rivers or his
sisters. The next day I left Marsh End for Morton.
The day after, Diana and Mary quitted it for distant B-. In
a week, Mr. Rivers and Hannah repaired to the parsonage: and so
the old grange was abandoned.</p>
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