<h2><SPAN name="chap12"></SPAN> CHAPTER XII</h2>
<p>Laying of ghosts is a public duty, and, as the mystery of the apparition that
had frightened little Clare was never solved on the stage of events at Raynham,
where dread walked the Abbey, let us go behind the scenes a moment. Morally
superstitious as the baronet was, the character of his mind was opposed to
anything like spiritual agency in the affairs of men, and, when the matter was
made clear to him, it shook off a weight of weakness and restored his mental
balance; so that from this time he went about more like the man he had once
been, grasping more thoroughly the great truth, that This World is well
designed. Nay, he could laugh on hearing Adrian, in reminiscence of the ill
luck of one of the family members at its first manifestation, call the uneasy
spirit, Algernon’s Leg.</p>
<p>Mrs. Doria was outraged. She maintained that her child had seen ——.
Not to believe in it was almost to rob her of her personal property. After
satisfactorily studying his old state of mind in her, Sir Austin, moved by
pity, took her aside one day and showed her that her Ghost could write words in
the flesh. It was a letter from the unhappy lady who had given Richard
birth,—brief cold lines, simply telling him his house would be disturbed
by her no more. Cold lines, but penned by what heart-broken abnegation, and
underlying them with what anguish of soul! Like most who dealt with him, Lady
Feverel thought her husband a man fatally stern and implacable, and she acted
as silly creatures will act when they fancy they see a fate against them: she
neither petitioned for her right nor claimed it: she tried to ease her
heart’s yearning by stealth, and, now she renounced all. Mrs. Doria, not
wanting in the family tenderness and softness, shuddered at him for accepting
the sacrifice so composedly: but he bade her to think how distracting to this
boy would be the sight of such relations between mother and father. A few
years, and as man he should know, and judge, and love her. “Let this be
her penance, not inflicted by me!” Mrs. Doria bowed to the System for
another, not opining when it would be her turn to bow for herself.</p>
<p>Further behind the scenes we observe Rizzio and Mary grown older, much
disenchanted: she discrowned, dishevelled,—he with gouty fingers on a
greasy guitar. The Diaper Sandoe of promise lends his pen for small hires. His
fame has sunk; his bodily girth has sensibly increased. What he can do, and
will do, is still his theme; meantime the juice of the juniper is in
requisition, and it seems that those small hires cannot be performed without
it. Returning from her wretched journey to her wretcheder home, the lady had to
listen to a mild reproof from easy-going Diaper,—a reproof so mild that
he couched it in blank verse: for, seldom writing metrically now, he took to
talking it. With a fluent sympathetic tear, he explained to her that she was
damaging her interests by these proceedings; nor did he shrink from undertaking
to elucidate wherefore. Pluming a smile upon his succulent mouth, he told her
that the poverty she lived in was utterly unbefitting her gentle nurture, and
that he had reason to believe—could assure her—that an annuity was
on the point of being granted her by her husband. And Diaper broke his bud of a
smile into full flower as he delivered this information. She learnt that he had
applied to her husband for money. It is hard to have one’s prop of
self-respect cut away just when we are suffering a martyr’s agony at the
stake. There was a five minutes’ tragic colloquy in the recesses behind
the scenes,—totally tragic to Diaper, who had fondly hoped to bask in the
warm sun of that annuity, and re-emerge from his state of grub. The lady then
wrote the letter Sir Austin held open to his sister. The atmosphere behind the
scenes is not wholesome, so, having laid the Ghost, we will return and face the
curtain.</p>
<p>That infinitesimal dose of The World which Master Ripton Thompson had furnished
to the System with such instantaneous and surprising effect was considered by
Sir Austin to have worked well, and to be for the time quite sufficient, so
that Ripton did not receive a second invitation to Raynham, and Richard had no
special intimate of his own age to rub his excessive vitality against, and
wanted none. His hands were full enough with Tom Bakewell. Moreover, his father
and he were heart in heart. The boy’s mind was opening, and turned to his
father affectionately reverent. At this period, when the young savage grows
into higher influences, the faculty of worship is foremost in him. At this
period Jesuits will stamp the future of their chargeling flocks; and all who
bring up youth by a System, and watch it, know that it is the malleable moment.
Boys possessing any mental or moral force to give them a tendency, then
predestinate their careers; or, if under supervision, take the impress that is
given them: not often to cast it off, and seldom to cast it off altogether.</p>
<p>In Sir Austin’s Note-book was written: “Between Simple Boyhood and
Adolescence—The Blossoming Season—on the threshold of Puberty,
there is one Unselfish Hour—say, Spiritual Seed-time.”</p>
<p>He took care that good seed should be planted in Richard, and that the most
fruitful seed for a youth, namely, Example, should be of a kind to germinate in
him the love of every form of nobleness.</p>
<p>“I am only striving to make my son a Christian,” he said, answering
them who persisted in expostulating with the System. And to these instructions
he gave an aim: “First be virtuous,” he told his son, “and
then serve your country with heart and soul.” The youth was instructed to
cherish an ambition for statesmanship, and he and his father read history and
the speeches of British orators to some purpose; for one day Sir Austin found
him leaning cross-legged, and with his hand to his chin, against a pedestal
supporting the bust of Chatham, contemplating the hero of our Parliament, his
eyes streaming with tears.</p>
<p>People said the baronet carried the principle of Example so far that he only
retained his boozing dyspeptic brother Hippias at Raynham in order to exhibit
to his son the woeful retribution nature wreaked upon a life of indulgence;
poor Hippias having now become a walking complaint. This was unjust, but there
is no doubt he made use of every illustration to disgust or encourage his son
that his neighbourhood afforded him, and did not spare his brother, for whom
Richard entertained a contempt in proportion to his admiration of his father,
and was for flying into penitential extremes which Sir Austin had to soften.</p>
<p>The boy prayed with his father morning and night.</p>
<p>“How is it, sir,” he said one night, “I can’t get Tom
Bakewell to pray?”</p>
<p>“Does he refuse?” Sir Austin asked.</p>
<p>“He seems to be ashamed to,” Richard replied. “He wants to
know what is the good? and I don’t know what to tell him.”</p>
<p>“I’m afraid it has gone too far with him,” said Sir Austin,
“and until he has had some deep sorrows he will not find the divine want
of Prayer. Strive, my son, when you represent the people, to provide for their
education. He feels everything now through a dull impenetrable rind. Culture is
half-way to heaven. Tell him, my son, should he ever be brought to ask how he
may know the efficacy of Prayer, and that his prayer will be answered, tell him
(he quoted The Pilgrim’s Scrip):</p>
<p>“‘Who rises from Prayer a better man, his prayer is
answered.’”</p>
<p>“I will, sir,” said Richard, and went to sleep happy.</p>
<p>Happy in his father and in himself, the youth now lived. Conscience was
beginning to inhabit him, and he carried some of the freightage known to men;
though in so crude a form that it overweighed him, now on this side, now on
that.</p>
<p>The wise youth Adrian observed these further progressionary developments in his
pupil, soberly cynical. He was under Sir Austin’s interdict not to banter
him, and eased his acrid humours inspired by the sight of a felonious young
rick-burner turning saint, by grave affectations of sympathy and extreme
accuracy in marking the not widely-distant dates of his various changes. The
Bread-and-water phase lasted a fortnight: the Vegetarian (an imitation of his
cousin Austin), little better than a month: the religious, somewhat longer: the
religious-propagandist (when he was for converting the heathen of Lobourne and
Burnley, and the domestics of the Abbey, including Tom Bakewell), longer still,
and hard to bear;—he tried to convert Adrian! All the while Tom was being
exercised like a raw recruit. Richard had a drill-sergeant from the nearest
barracks down for him, to give him a proper pride in himself, and marched him
to and fro with immense satisfaction, and nearly broke his heart trying to get
the round-shouldered rustic to take in the rudiments of letters: for the boy
had unbounded hopes for Tom, as a hero in grain.</p>
<p>Richard’s pride also was cast aside. He affected to be, and really
thought he was, humble. Whereupon Adrian, as by accident, imparted to him the
fact that men were animals, and he an animal with the rest of them.</p>
<p>“I an animal!” cries Richard in scorn, and for weeks he was as
troubled by this rudiment of self-knowledge as Tom by his letters. Sir Austin
had him instructed in the wonders of anatomy, to restore his self-respect.</p>
<p>Seed-Time passed thus smoothly, and adolescence came on, and his cousin Clare
felt what it was to be of an opposite sex to him. She too was growing, but
nobody cared how she grew. Outwardly even her mother seemed absorbed in the
sprouting of the green off-shoot of the Feverel tree, and Clare was his
handmaiden, little marked by him.</p>
<p>Lady Blandish honestly loved the boy. She would tell him: “If I had been
a girl, I would have had you for my husband.” And he with the frankness
of his years would reply: “And how do you know I would have had
you?” causing her to laugh and call him a silly boy, for had he not heard
her say she would have had him? Terrible words, he knew not then the meaning
of!</p>
<p>“You don’t read your father’s Book,” she said. Her own
copy was bound in purple velvet, gilt-edged, as decorative ladies like to have
holier books, and she carried it about with her, and quoted it, and (Adrian
remarked to Mrs. Doria) hunted a noble quarry, and deliberately aimed at him
therewith, which Mrs. Doria chose to believe, and regretted her brother would
not be on his guard.</p>
<p>“See here,” said Lady Blandish, pressing an almondy finger-nail to
one of the Aphorisms, which instanced how age and adversity must clay-enclose
us ere we can effectually resist the magnetism of any human creature in our
path. “Can you understand it, child?”</p>
<p>Richard informed her that when she read he could.</p>
<p>“Well, then, my squire,” she touched his cheek and ran her fingers
through his hair, “learn as quick as you can not to be all hither and yon
with a hundred different attractions, as I was before I met a wise man to guide
me.”</p>
<p>“Is my father very wise?” Richard asked.</p>
<p>“I think so,” the lady emphasized her individual judgment.</p>
<p>“Do you—” Richard broke forth, and was stopped by a beating
of his heart.</p>
<p>“Do I—what?” she calmly queried.</p>
<p>“I was going to say, do you—I mean, I love him so much.”</p>
<p>Lady Blandish smiled and slightly coloured.</p>
<p>They frequently approached this theme, and always retreated from it; always
with the same beating of heart to Richard, accompanied by the sense of a
growing mystery, which, however, did not as yet generally disturb him.</p>
<p>Life was made very pleasant to him at Raynham, as it was part of Sir
Austin’s principle of education that his boy should be thoroughly joyous
and happy; and whenever Adrian sent in a satisfactory report of his
pupil’s advancement, which he did pretty liberally, diversions were
planned, just as prizes are given to diligent school-boys, and Richard was
supposed to have all his desires gratified while he attended to his studies.
The System flourished. Tall, strong, bloomingly healthy, he took the lead of
his companions on land and water, and had more than one bondsman in his service
besides Ripton Thompson—the boy without a Destiny! Perhaps the boy with a
Destiny was growing up a trifle too conscious of it. His generosity to his
occasional companions was princely, but was exercised something too much in the
manner of a prince; and, notwithstanding his contempt for baseness, he would
overlook that more easily than an offence to his pride, which demanded an utter
servility when it had once been rendered susceptible. If Richard had his
followers he had also his feuds. The Papworths were as subservient as Ripton,
but young Ralph Morton, the nephew of Mr. Morton, and a match for Richard in
numerous promising qualities, comprising the noble science of fisticuffs, this
youth spoke his mind too openly, and moreover would not be snubbed. There was
no middle course for Richard’s comrades between high friendship or
absolute slavery. He was deficient in those cosmopolite habits and feelings
which enable boys and men to hold together without caring much for each other;
and, like every insulated mortal, he attributed the deficiency, of which he was
quite aware, to the fact of his possessing a superior nature. Young Ralph was a
lively talker: therefore, argued Richard’s vanity, he had no intellect.
He was affable: therefore he was frivolous. The women liked him: therefore he
was a butterfly. In fine, young Ralph was popular, and our superb prince,
denied the privilege of despising, ended by detesting him.</p>
<p>Early in the days of their contention for leadership, Richard saw the absurdity
of affecting to scorn his rival. Ralph was an Eton boy, and hence, being
robust, a swimmer and a cricketer. A swimmer and a cricketer is nowhere to be
scorned in youth’s republic. Finding that manoeuvre would not do, Richard
was prompted once or twice to entrench himself behind his greater wealth and
his position; but he soon abandoned that also, partly because his chilliness to
ridicule told him he was exposing himself, and chiefly that his heart was too
chivalrous. And so he was dragged into the lists by Ralph, and experienced the
luck of champions. For cricket, and for diving, Ralph bore away the belt:
Richard’s middle-stump tottered before his ball, and he could seldom pick
up more than three eggs underwater to Ralph’s half-dozen. He was beaten,
too, in jumping and running. Why will silly mortals strive to the painful
pinnacles of championship? Or why, once having reached them, not have the
magnanimity and circumspection to retire into private life immediately? Stung
by his defeats, Richard sent one of his dependent Papworths to Poer Hall, with
a challenge to Ralph Barthrop Morton; matching himself to swim across the
Thames and back, once, twice, or thrice, within a less time than he, Ralph
Barthrop Morton, would require for the undertaking. It was accepted, and a
reply returned, equally formal in the trumpeting of Christian names, wherein
Ralph Barthrop Morton acknowledged the challenge of Richard Doria Feverel, and
was his man. The match came off on a midsummer morning, under the direction of
Captain Algernon. Sir Austin was a spectator from the cover of a plantation by
the river-side, unknown to his son, and, to the scandal of her sex, Lady
Blandish accompanied the baronet. He had invited her attendance, and she,
obeying her frank nature, and knowing what The Pilgrim’s Scrip said about
prudes, at once agreed to view the match, pleasing him mightily. For was not
here a woman worthy the Golden Ages of the world? one who could look upon man
as a creature divinely made, and look with a mind neither tempted, nor taunted,
by the Serpent! Such a woman was rare. Sir Austin did not discompose her by
uttering his praises. She was conscious of his approval only in an increased
gentleness of manner, and something in his voice and communications, as if he
were speaking to a familiar, a very high compliment from him. While the lads
were standing ready for the signal to plunge from the steep decline of
greensward into the shining waters, Sir Austin called upon her to admire their
beauty, and she did, and even advanced her head above his shoulder delicately.
In so doing, and just as the start was given, a bonnet became visible to
Richard. Young Ralph was heels in air before he moved, and then he dropped like
lead. He was beaten by several lengths.</p>
<p>The result of the match was unaccountable to all present, and Richard’s
friends unanimously pressed him to plead a false start. But though the youth,
with full confidence in his better style and equal strength, had backed himself
heavily against his rival, and had lost his little river-yacht to Ralph, he
would do nothing of the sort. It was the Bonnet had beaten him, not Ralph. The
Bonnet, typical of the mystery that caused his heart those violent
palpitations, was his dear, detestable enemy.</p>
<p>And now, as he progressed from mood to mood, his ambition turned towards a
field where Ralph could not rival him, and where the Bonnet was etherealized,
and reigned glorious mistress. A check to the pride of a boy will frequently
divert him to the path where lie his subtlest powers. Richard gave up his
companions, servile or antagonistic: he relinquished the material world to
young Ralph, and retired into himself, where he was growing to be lord of
kingdoms where Beauty was his handmaid, and History his minister and Time his
ancient harper, and sweet Romance his bride; where he walked in a realm vaster
and more gorgeous than the great Orient, peopled with the heroes that have
been. For there is no princely wealth, and no loftiest heritage, to equal this
early one that is made bountifully common to so many, when the ripening blood
has put a spark to the imagination, and the earth is seen through rosy mists of
a thousand fresh-awakened nameless and aimless desires; panting for bliss and
taking it as it comes; making of any sight or sound, perforce of the
enchantment they carry with them, a key to infinite, because innocent,
pleasure. The passions then are gambolling cubs; not the ravaging gluttons they
grow to. They have their teeth and their talons, but they neither tear nor
bite. They are in counsel and fellowship with the quickened heart and brain.
The whole sweet system moves to music.</p>
<p>Something akin to the indications of a change in the spirit of his son, which
were now seen, Sir Austin had marked down to be expected, as due to his plan.
The blushes of the youth, his long vigils, his clinging to solitude, his
abstraction, and downcast but not melancholy air, were matters for rejoicing to
the prescient gentleman. “For it comes,” said he to Dr. Clifford of
Lobourne, after consulting him medically on the youth’s behalf and being
assured of his soundness, “it comes of a thoroughly sane condition. The
blood is healthy, the mind virtuous: neither instigates the other to evil, and
both are perfecting toward the flower of manhood. If he reach that
pure—in the untainted fulness and perfection of his natural
powers—I am indeed a happy father! But one thing he will owe to me: that
at one period of his life he knew paradise, and could read God’s
handwriting on the earth! Now those abominations whom you call precocious
boys—your little pet monsters, doctor!—and who can wonder that the
world is what it is? when it is full of them—as they will have no divine
time to look back upon in their own lives, how can they believe in innocence
and goodness, or be other than sons of selfishness and the Devil? But my
boy,” and the baronet dropped his voice to a key that was touching to
hear, “my boy, if he fall, will fall from an actual region of purity. He
dare not be a sceptic as to that. Whatever his darkness, he will have the
guiding light of a memory behind him. So much is secure.”</p>
<p>To talk nonsense, or poetry, or the dash between the two, in a tone of profound
sincerity, and to enunciate solemn discordances with received opinion so
seriously as to convey the impression of a spiritual insight, is the peculiar
gift by which monomaniacs, having first persuaded themselves, contrive to
influence their neighbours, and through them to make conquest of a good half of
the world, for good or for ill. Sir Austin had this gift. He spoke as if he saw
the truth, and, persisting in it so long, he was accredited by those who did
not understand him, and silenced them that did.</p>
<p>“We shall see,” was all the argument left to Dr. Clifford, and
other unbelievers.</p>
<p>So far certainly the experiment had succeeded. A comelier, bracer, better boy
was nowhere to be met. His promise was undeniable. The vessel, too, though it
lay now in harbour and had not yet been proved by the buffets of the elements
on the great ocean, had made a good trial trip, and got well through stormy
weather, as the records of the Bakewell Comedy witnessed to at Raynham. No
augury could be hopefuller. The Fates must indeed be hard, the Ordeal severe,
the Destiny dark, that could destroy so bright a Spring! But, bright as it was,
the baronet relaxed nothing of his vigilant supervision. He said to his
intimates: “Every act, every fostered inclination, almost every thought,
in this Blossoming Season, bears its seed for the Future. The living Tree now
requires incessant watchfulness.” And, acting up to his light, Sir Austin
did watch. The youth submitted to an examination every night before he sought
his bed; professedly to give an account of his studies, but really to
recapitulate his moral experiences of the day. He could do so, for he was pure.
Any wildness in him that his father noted, any remoteness or richness of fancy
in his expressions, was set down as incidental to the Blossoming Season. There
is nothing like a theory for binding the wise. Sir Austin, despite his rigid
watch and ward, knew less of his son than the servant of his household. And he
was deaf, as well as blind. Adrian thought it his duty to tell him that the
youth was consuming paper. Lady Blandish likewise hinted at his mooning
propensities. Sir Austin from his lofty watch-tower of the System had foreseen
it, he said. But when he came to hear that the youth was writing poetry, his
wounded heart had its reasons for being much disturbed.</p>
<p>“Surely,” said Lady Blandish, “you knew he scribbled?”</p>
<p>“A very different thing from writing poetry,” said the baronet.
“No Feverel has ever written poetry.”</p>
<p>“I don’t think it’s a sign of degeneracy,” the lady
remarked. “He rhymes very prettily to me.”</p>
<p>A London phrenologist, and a friendly Oxford Professor of poetry, quieted Sir
Austin’s fears.</p>
<p>The phrenologist said he was totally deficient in the imitative faculty; and
the Professor, that he was equally so in the rhythmic, and instanced several
consoling false quantities in the few effusions submitted to him. Added to
this, Sir Austin told Lady Blandish that Richard had, at his best, done what no
poet had ever been known to be capable of doing: he had, with his own hands,
and in cold blood, committed his virgin manuscript to the flames: which made
Lady Blandish sigh forth, “Poor boy!”</p>
<p>Killing one’s darling child is a painful imposition. For a youth in his
Blossoming Season, who fancies himself a poet, to be requested to destroy his
first-born, without a reason (though to pretend a reason cogent enough to
justify the request were a mockery), is a piece of abhorrent despotism, and
Richard’s blossoms withered under it. A strange man had been introduced
to him, who traversed and bisected his skull with sagacious stiff fingers, and
crushed his soul while, in an infallible voice, declaring him the animal he
was: making him feel such an animal! Not only his blossoms withered, his being
seemed to draw in its shoots and twigs. And when, coupled thereunto (the
strange man having departed, his work done), his father, in his tenderest
manner, stated that it would give him pleasure to see those same precocious,
utterly valueless, scribblings among the cinders, the last remaining mental
blossoms spontaneously fell away. Richard’s spirit stood bare. He
protested not. Enough that it could be wished! He would not delay a minute in
doing it. Desiring his father to follow him, he went to a drawer in his room,
and from a clean-linen recess, never suspected by Sir Austin, the secretive
youth drew out bundle after bundle: each neatly tied, named, and numbered: and
pitched them into flames. And so Farewell my young Ambition! and with it
farewell all true confidence between Father and Son.</p>
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