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<h3>CHAPTER II. The Carbury Family</h3>
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<br/>Something of herself and condition Lady Carbury has told the
reader in the letters given in the former chapter, but more must be
added. She has declared she had been cruelly slandered; but she
has also shown that she was not a woman whose words about herself
could be taken with much confidence. If the reader does not
understand so much from her letters to the three editors they have
been written in vain. She has been made to say that her object
in work was to provide for the need of her children, and that with
that noble purpose before her she was struggling to make for herself
a career in literature. Detestably false as had been her
letters to the editors, absolutely and abominably foul as was the
entire system by which she was endeavouring to achieve success, far
away from honour and honesty as she had been carried by her ready
subserviency to the dirty things among which she had lately fallen,
nevertheless her statements about herself were substantially
true. She had been ill-treated. She had been
slandered. She was true to her children,—especially devoted to
one of them—and was ready to work her nails off if by doing so she
could advance their interests.
<br/>She was the widow of one Sir Patrick Carbury, who many years since
had done great things as a soldier in India, and had been thereupon
created a baronet. He had married a young wife late in life
and, having found out when too late that he had made a mistake, had
occasionally spoilt his darling and occasionally ill-used her.
In doing each he had done it abundantly. Among Lady Carbury's
faults had never been that of even incipient,—not even of
sentimental—infidelity to her husband. When as a lovely and
penniless girl of eighteen she had consented to marry a man of
forty-four who had the spending of a large income, she had made up
her mind to abandon all hope of that sort of love which poets
describe and which young people generally desire to experience.
Sir Patrick at the time of his marriage was red-faced, stout, bald,
very choleric, generous in money, suspicious in temper, and
intelligent. He knew how to govern men. He could read and
understand a book. There was nothing mean about him. He
had his attractive qualities. He was a man who might be
loved,—but he was hardly a man for love. The young Lady
Carbury had understood her position and had determined to do her
duty. She had resolved before she went to the altar that she
would never allow herself to flirt and she had never flirted.
For fifteen years things had gone tolerably well with her,—by which
it is intended that the reader should understand that they had so
gone that she had been able to tolerate them. They had been
home in England for three or four years, and then Sir Patrick had
returned with some new and higher appointment. For fifteen
years, though he had been passionate, imperious, and often cruel, he
had never been jealous. A boy and a girl had been born to them,
to whom both father and mother had been over indulgent,—but the
mother, according to her lights, had endeavoured to do her duty by
them. But from the commencement of her life she had been
educated in deceit, and her married life had seemed to make the
practice of deceit necessary to her. Her mother had run away
from her father, and she had been tossed to and fro between this and
that protector, sometimes being in danger of wanting any one to care
for her, till she had been made sharp, incredulous, and untrustworthy
by the difficulties of her position. But she was clever, and
had picked up an education and good manners amidst the difficulties
of her childhood,—and had been beautiful to look at.
<br/>To marry and have the command of money, to do her duty correctly,
to live in a big house and be respected, had been her ambition,—and
during the first fifteen years of her married life she was successful
amidst great difficulties. She would smile within five minutes
of violent ill-usage. Her husband would even strike her,—and
the first effort of her mind would be given to conceal the fact from
all the world. In latter years he drank too much, and she
struggled hard first to prevent the evil, and then to prevent and to
hide the ill effects of the evil. But in doing all this she
schemed, and lied, and lived a life of manoeuvres. Then, at
last, when she felt that she was no longer quite a young woman, she
allowed herself to attempt to form friendships for herself, and among
her friends was one of the other sex. If fidelity in a wife be
compatible with such friendship, if the married state does not exact
from a woman the necessity of debarring herself from all friendly
intercourse with any man except her lord, Lady Carbury was not
faithless. But Sir Carbury became jealous, spoke words which
even she could not endure, did things which drove even her beyond the
calculations of her prudence,—and she left him. But even this
she did in so guarded a way that, as to every step she took, she
could prove her innocence. Her life at that period is of little
moment to our story, except that it is essential that the reader
should know in what she had been slandered. For a month or two
all hard words had been said against her by her husband's friends,
and even by Sir Patrick himself. But gradually the truth was
known, and after a year's separation they came again together and she
remained the mistress of his house till he died. She brought
him home to England, but during the short period left to him of life
in his old country he had been a worn-out, dying invalid. But
the scandal of her great misfortune had followed her, and some people
were never tired of reminding others that in the course of her
married life Lady Carbury had run away from her husband, and had been
taken back again by the kind-hearted old gentleman.
<br/>Sir Patrick had left behind him a moderate fortune, though by no
means great wealth. To his son, who was now Sir Felix Carbury,
he had left £1,000 a year; and to his widow as much, with a provision
that after her death the latter sum should be divided between his son
and daughter. It therefore came to pass that the young man, who
had already entered the army when his father died, and upon whom
devolved no necessity of keeping a house, and who in fact not
unfrequently lived in his mother's house, had an income equal to that
with which his mother and sister were obliged to maintain a roof over
their head. Now Lady Carbury, when she was released from her
thraldom at the age of forty, had no idea at all of passing her
future life amidst the ordinary penances of widowhood. She had
hitherto endeavoured to do her duty, knowing that in accepting her
position she was bound to take the good and the bad together.
She had certainly encountered hitherto much that was bad. To be
scolded, watched, beaten, and sworn at by a choleric old man till she
was at last driven out of her house by the violence of his ill-usage;
to be taken back as a favour with the assurance that her name would
for the remainder of her life be unjustly tarnished; to have her
flight constantly thrown in her face; and then at last to become for
a year or two the nurse of a dying debauchee, was a high price to pay
for such good things as she had hitherto enjoyed. Now at length
had come to her a period of relaxation—her reward, her freedom, her
chance of happiness. She thought much about herself, and
resolved on one or two things. The time for love had gone by,
and she would have nothing to do with it. Nor would she marry
again for convenience. But she would have friends,—real friends;
friends who could help her,—and whom possibly she might help.
She would, too, make some career for herself, so that life might not
be without an interest to her. She would live in London, and
would become somebody at any rate in some circle. Accident at
first rather than choice had thrown her among literary people, but
that accident had, during the last two years, been supported and
corroborated by the desire which had fallen upon her of earning
money. She had known from the first that economy would be
necessary to her,—not chiefly or perhaps not at all from a feeling
that she and her daughter could not live comfortably together on a
thousand a year,—but on behalf of her son. She wanted no luxury
but a house so placed that people might conceive of her that she
lived in a proper part of the town. Of her daughter's prudence
she was as well convinced as of her own. She could trust
Henrietta in everything. But her son, Sir Felix, was not very
trustworthy. And yet Sir Felix was the darling of her heart.
<br/>At the time of the writing of the three letters, at which our
story is supposed to begin, she was driven very hard for money.
Sir Felix was then twenty-five, had been in a fashionable regiment
for four years, had already sold out, and, to own the truth at once,
had altogether wasted the property which his father had left
him. So much the mother knew,—and knew, therefore, that with
her limited income she must maintain not only herself and daughter,
but also the baronet. She did not know, however, the amount of
the baronet's obligations;—nor, indeed, did he, or any one
else. A baronet, holding a commission in the Guards, and known
to have had a fortune left him by his father, may go very far in
getting into debt; and Sir Felix had made full use of all his
privileges. His life had been in every way bad. He had
become a burden on his mother so heavy,—and on his sister
also,—that their life had become one of unavoidable
embarrassments. But not for a moment, had either of them ever
quarrelled with him. Henrietta had been taught by the conduct
of both father and mother that every vice might be forgiven in a man
and in a son, though every virtue was expected from a woman, and
especially from a daughter. The lesson had come to her so early
in life that she had learned it without the feeling of any
grievance. She lamented her brother's evil conduct as it
affected him, but she pardoned it altogether as it affected
herself. That all her interests in life should be made
subservient to him was natural to her; and when she found that her
little comforts were discontinued, and her moderate expenses
curtailed, because he, having eaten up all that was his own, was now
eating up also all that was his mother's, she never complained.
Henrietta had been taught to think that men in that rank of life in
which she had been born always did eat up everything.
<br/>The mother's feeling was less noble,—or perhaps, it might better
be said, more open to censure. The boy, who had been beautiful
as a star, had ever been the cynosure of her eyes, the one thing on
which her heart had riveted itself. Even during the career of
his folly she had hardly ventured to say a word to him with the
purport of stopping him on his road to ruin. In everything she
had spoilt him as a boy, and in everything she still spoilt him as a
man. She was almost proud of his vices, and had taken delight
in hearing of doings which if not vicious of themselves had been
ruinous from their extravagance. She had so indulged him that
even in her own presence he was never ashamed of his own selfishness
or apparently conscious of the injustice which he did to others.
<br/>From all this it had come to pass that that dabbling in literature
which had been commenced partly perhaps from a sense of pleasure in
the work, partly as a passport into society, had been converted into
hard work by which money if possible might be earned. So that
Lady Carbury when she wrote to her friends, the editors, of her
struggles was speaking the truth. Tidings had reached her of
this and the other man's success, and,—coming near to her still,—of
this and that other woman's earnings in literature. And it had
seemed to her that, within moderate limits, she might give a wide
field to her hopes. Why should she not add a thousand a year to
her income, so that Felix might again live like a gentleman and marry
that heiress who, in Lady Carbury's look-out into the future, was
destined to make all things straight! Who was so handsome as
her son? Who could make himself more agreeable? Who had
more of that audacity which is the chief thing necessary to the
winning of heiresses?
<br/>And then he could make his wife Lady Carbury. If only enough
money might be earned to tide over the present evil day, all might be
well.
<br/>The one most essential obstacle to the chance of success in all
this was probably Lady Carbury's conviction that her end was to be
obtained not by producing good books, but by inducing certain people
to say that her books were good. She did work hard at what she
wrote,—hard enough at any rate to cover her pages quickly; and was,
by nature, a clever woman. She could write after a glib,
commonplace, sprightly fashion, and had already acquired the knack of
spreading all she knew very thin, so that it might cover a vast
surface. She had no ambition to write a good book, but was
painfully anxious to write a book that the critics should say was
good. Had Mr Broune, in his closet, told her that her book was
absolutely trash, but had undertaken at the same time to have it
violently praised in the "Breakfast Table", it may be doubted whether
the critic's own opinion would have even wounded her vanity.
The woman was false from head to foot, but there was much of good in
her, false though she was.
<br/>Whether Sir Felix, her son, had become what he was solely by bad
training, or whether he had been born bad, who shall say? It is
hardly possible that he should not have been better had he been taken
away as an infant and subjected to moral training by moral
teachers. And yet again it is hardly possible that any training
or want of training should have produced a heart so utterly incapable
of feeling for others as was his. He could not even feel his
own misfortunes unless they touched the outward comforts of the
moment. It seemed that he lacked sufficient imagination to
realise future misery though the futurity to be considered was
divided from the present but by a single month, a single week,—but by
a single night. He liked to be kindly treated, to be praised
and petted, to be well fed and caressed; and they who so treated him
were his chosen friends. He had in this the instincts of a horse, not
approaching the higher sympathies of a dog. But it cannot be
said of him that he had ever loved any one to the extent of denying
himself a moment's gratification on that loved one's behalf.
His heart was a stone. But he was beautiful to lock at,
ready-witted, and intelligent. He was very dark, with that soft
olive complexion which so generally gives to young men an appearance
of aristocratic breeding. His hair, which was never allowed to
become long, was nearly black, and was soft and silky without that
taint of grease which is so common with silken-headed darlings.
His eyes were long, brown in colour, and were made beautiful by the
perfect arch of the perfect eyebrow. But perhaps the glory of
the face was due more to the finished moulding and fine symmetry of
the nose and mouth than to his other features. On his short
upper lip he had a moustache as well formed as his eyebrows, but he
wore no other beard. The form of his chin too was perfect, but
it lacked that sweetness and softness of expression, indicative of
softness of heart, which a dimple conveys. He was about five
feet nine in height, and was as excellent in figure as in face.
It was admitted by men and clamorously asserted by women that no man
had ever been more handsome than Felix Carbury, and it was admitted
also that he never showed consciousness of his beauty. He had
given himself airs on many scores;—on the score of his money, poor
fool, while it lasted; on the score of his title; on the score of his
army standing till he lost it; and especially on the score of
superiority in fashionable intellect. But he had been clever
enough to dress himself always with simplicity and to avoid the
appearance of thought about his outward man. As yet the little
world of his associates had hardly found out how callous were his
affections,—or rather how devoid he was of affection. His airs
and his appearance, joined with some cleverness, had carried him
through even the viciousness of his life. In one matter he had
marred his name, and by a moment's weakness had injured his character
among his friends more than he had done by the folly of three
years. There had been a quarrel between him and a brother
officer, in which he had been the aggressor; and, when the moment
came in which a man's heart should have produced manly conduct, he
had first threatened and had then shown the white feather. That
was now a year since, and he had partly outlived the evil;—but some
men still remembered that Felix Carbury had been cowed, and had
cowered.
<br/>It was now his business to marry an heiress. He was well
aware that it was so, and was quite prepared to face his
destiny. But he lacked something in the art of making
love. He was beautiful, had the manners of a gentleman, could
talk well, lacked nothing of audacity, and had no feeling of
repugnance at declaring a passion which he did not feel. But he
knew so little of the passion, that he could hardly make even a young
girl believe that he felt it. When he talked of love, he not
only thought that he was talking nonsense, but showed that he thought
so. From this fault he had already failed with one young lady
reputed to have £40,000, who had refused him because, as she naively
said, she knew "he did not really care." "How can I show that I
care more than by wishing to make you my wife?" he had asked.
"I don't know that you can, but all the same you don't care," she
said. And so that young lady escaped the pitfall. Now
there was another young lady, to whom the reader shall be introduced
in time, whom Sir Felix was instigated to pursue with unremitting
diligence. Her wealth was not defined, as had been the £40,000
of her predecessor, but was known to be very much greater than
that. It was, indeed, generally supposed to be fathomless,
bottomless, endless. It was said that in regard to money for
ordinary expenditure, money for houses, servants, horses, jewels, and
the like, one sum was the same as another to the father of this young
lady. He had great concerns;—concerns so great that the payment
of ten or twenty thousand pounds upon any trifle was the same thing
to him,—as to men who are comfortable in their circumstances it
matters little whether they pay sixpence or ninepence for their
mutton chops. Such a man may be ruined at any time; but there
was no doubt that to anyone marrying his daughter during the present
season of his outrageous prosperity he could give a very large
fortune indeed. Lady Carbury, who had known the rock on which
her son had been once wrecked, was very anxious that Sir Felix should
at once make a proper use of the intimacy which he had effected in
the house of this topping Croesus of the day.
<br/>And now there must be a few words said about Henrietta
Carbury. Of course she was of infinitely less importance than
her brother, who was a baronet, the head of that branch of the
Carburys, and her mother's darling; and, therefore, a few words
should suffice. She also was very lovely, being like her
brother; but somewhat less dark and with features less absolutely
regular. But she had in her countenance a full measure of that
sweetness of expression which seems to imply that consideration of
self is subordinated to consideration for others. This
sweetness was altogether lacking to her brother. And her face
was a true index of her character. Again, who shall say why the
brother and sister had become so opposite to each other; whether they
would have been thus different had both been taken away as infants
from their father's and mother's training, or whether the girl's
virtues were owing altogether to the lower place which she had held
in her parent's heart? She, at any rate, had not been spoilt by
a title, by the command of money, and by the temptations of too early
acquaintance with the world. At the present time she was barely
twenty-one years old, and had not seen much of London society.
Her mother did not frequent balls, and during the last two years
there had grown upon them a necessity for economy which was inimical
to many gloves and costly dresses. Sir Felix went out of
course, but Hetta Carbury spent most of her time at home with her
mother in Welbeck Street. Occasionally the world saw her, and
when the world did see her the world declared that she was a charming
girl. The world was so far right.
<br/>But for Henrietta Carbury the romance of life had already
commenced in real earnest. There was another branch of the
Carburys, the head branch, which was now represented by one Roger
Carbury, of Carbury Hall. Roger Carbury was a gentleman of whom
much will have to be said, but here, at this moment, it need only be
told that he was passionately in love with his cousin
Henrietta. He was, however, nearly forty years old, and there
was one Paul Montague whom Henrietta had seen.
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