<h2><SPAN name="chap22"></SPAN> CHAPTER XXII</h2>
<p>For three weeks Richard had to remain in town and endure the teachings of the
System in a new atmosphere. He had to sit and listen to men of science who came
to renew their intimacy with his father, and whom of all men his father wished
him to respect and study; practically scientific men being, in the
baronet’s estimation, the only minds thoroughly mated and enviable. He
had to endure an introduction to the Grandisons, and meet the eyes of his kind,
haunted as he was by the Foolish Young Fellow. The idea that he might by any
chance be identified with him held the poor youth in silent subjection. And it
was horrible. For it was a continued outrage on the fair image he had in his
heart. The notion of the world laughing at him because he loved sweet Lucy
stung him to momentary frenzies, and developed premature misanthropy in his
spirit. Also the System desired to show him whither young women of the parish
lead us, and he was dragged about at nighttime to see the sons and daughters of
darkness, after the fashion prescribed to Mr. Thompson; how they danced and
ogled down the high road to perdition. But from this sight possibly the teacher
learnt more than his pupil, since we find him seriously asking his meditative
hours, in the Note-book: “Wherefore Wild Oats are only of one
gender?” a question certainly not suggested to him at Raynham; and
again—“Whether men might not be attaching too rigid an
importance?”...to a subject with a dotted tail apparently, for he gives
it no other in the Note-book. But, as I apprehend, he had come to plead in
behalf of women here, and had deduced something from positive observation. To
Richard the scenes he witnessed were strange wild pictures, likely if anything
to have increased his misanthropy, but for his love.</p>
<p>Certain sweet little notes from Lucy sustained the lover during the first two
weeks of exile. They ceased; and now Richard fell into such despondency that
his father in alarm had to take measures to hasten their return to Raynham. At
the close of the third week Berry laid a pair of letters, bearing the Raynham
post-mark, on the breakfast-table, and, after reading one attentively, the
baronet asked his son if he was inclined to quit the metropolis.</p>
<p>“For Raynham, air?” cried Richard, and relapsed, saying, “As
you will!” aware that he had given a glimpse of the Foolish Young Fellow.</p>
<p>Berry accordingly received orders to make arrangements for their instant return
to Raynham.</p>
<p>The letter Sir Austin lifted his head from to bespeak his son’s wishes
was a composition of the wise youth Adrian’s, and ran thus:</p>
<p class="p2">
“Benson is doggedly recovering. He requires great indemnities. Happy when
a faithful fool is the main sufferer in a household! I quite agree with you
that our faithful fool is the best servant of great schemes. Benson is now a
piece of history. I tell him that this is indemnity enough, and that the sweet
Muse usually insists upon gentlemen being half-flayed before she will
condescend to notice them; but Benson, I regret to say, rejects the comfort so
fine a reflection should offer, and had rather keep his skin and live opaque.
Heroism seems partly a matter of training. Faithful folly is Benson’s
nature: the rest has been thrust upon.</p>
<p>“The young person has resigned the neighbourhood. I had an interview with
the fair Papist myself, and also with the man Blaize. They were both sensible,
though one swore and the other sighed. She is pretty. I hope she does not
paint. I can affirm that her legs are strong, for she walks to Bellingham twice
a week to take her Scarlet bath, when, having confessed and been made clean by
the Romish unction, she walks back the brisker, of which my Protestant muscular
system is yet aware. It was on the road to Bellingham I engaged her. She is
well in the matter of hair. Madam Godiva might challenge her, it would be a
fair match. Has it never struck you that Woman is nearer the vegetable than
Man?—Mr. Blaize intends her for his son a junction that every lover of
fairy mythology must desire to see consummated. Young Tom is heir to all the
agremens of the Beast. The maids of Lobourne say (I hear) that he is a very
Proculus among them. Possibly the envious men say it for the maids. Beauty does
not speak bad grammar—and altogether she is better out of the way.”</p>
<p class="p2">
The other letter was from Lady Blandish, a lady’s letter, and said:</p>
<p class="p2">
“I have fulfilled your commission to the best of my ability, and heartily
sad it has made me. She is indeed very much above her station—pity that
it is so! She is almost beautiful—quite beautiful at times, and not in
any way what you have been led to fancy. The poor child had no story to tell. I
have again seen her, and talked with her for an hour as kindly as I could. I
could gather nothing more than we know. It is just a woman’s history as
it invariably commences. Richard is the god of her idolatry. She will renounce
him, and sacrifice herself for his sake. Are we so bad? She asked me what she
was to do. She would do whatever was imposed upon her—all but pretend to
love another, and that she never would, and, I believe, never will. You know I
am sentimental, and I confess we dropped a few tears together. Her uncle has
sent her for the Winter to the institution where it appears she was educated,
and where they are very fond of her and want to keep her, which it would be a
good thing if they were to do. The man is a good sort of man. She was entrusted
to him by her father, and he never interferes with her religion, and is very
scrupulous about all that pertains to it, though, as he says, he is a Christian
himself. In the Spring (but the poor child does not know this) she is to come
back, and be married to his lout of a son. I am determined to prevent that. May
I not reckon on your promise to aid me? When you see her, I am sure you will.
It would be sacrilege to look on and permit such a thing. You know, they are
cousins. She asked me, where in the world there was one like Richard? What
could I answer? They were your own words, and spoken with a depth of
conviction! I hope he is really calm. I shudder to think of him when he comes,
and discovers what I have been doing. I hope I have been really doing right! A
good deed, you say, never dies; but we cannot always know—I must rely on
you. Yes, it is; I should think, easy to suffer martyrdom when one is sure of
one’s cause! but then one must be sure of it. I have done nothing lately
but to repeat to myself that saying of yours, No. 54, C. 7, P.S.; and it has
consoled me, I cannot say why, except that all wisdom consoles, whether it
applies directly or not:</p>
<p class="letter">
“‘For this reason so many fall from God, who have attained to Him;
that they cling to Him with their Weakness, not with their Strength.’</p>
<p>“I like to know of what you are thinking when you composed this or that
saying—what suggested it. May not one be admitted to inspect the
machinery of wisdom? I feel curious to know how thoughts—real
thoughts—are born. Not that I hope to win the secret. Here is the
beginning of one (but we poor women can never put together even two of the
three ideas which you say go to form a thought): ‘When a wise man makes a
false step, will he not go farther than a fool?’ It has just flitted
through me.</p>
<p>“I cannot get on with Gibbon, so wait your return to recommence the
readings. I dislike the sneering essence of his writings. I keep referring to
his face, until the dislike seems to become personal. How different is it with
Wordsworth! And yet I cannot escape from the thought that he is always solemnly
thinking of himself (but I do reverence him). But this is curious; Byron was a
greater egoist, and yet I do not feel the same with him. He reminds me of a
beast of the desert, savage and beautiful; and the former is what one would
imagine a superior donkey reclaimed from the heathen to be—a very
superior donkey, I mean, with great power of speech and great natural
complacency, and whose stubbornness you must admire as part of his mission. The
worst is that no one will imagine anything sublime in a superior donkey, so my
simile is unfair and false. Is it not strange? I love Wordsworth best, and yet
Byron has the greater power over me. How is that?”</p>
<p class="p2">
(“Because,” Sir Austin wrote beside the query in pencil,
“women are cowards, and succumb to Irony and Passion, rather than yield
their hearts to Excellence and Nature’s Inspiration.”)</p>
<p>The letter pursued:</p>
<p class="letter">
“I have finished Boiardo and have taken up Berni. The latter offends me.
I suppose we women do not really care for humour. You are right in saying we
have none ourselves, and ‘cackle’ instead of laugh. It is true (of
me, at least) that ‘Falstaff is only to us an incorrigible fat
man.’ I want to know what he illustrates. And Don Quixote—what end
can be served in making a noble mind ridiculous?—I hear you
say—practical. So it is. We are very narrow, I know. But we like
wit—practical again! Or in your words (when I really think they generally
come to my aid—perhaps it is that it is often all your thought); we
‘prefer the rapier thrust, to the broad embrace, of
Intelligence.’”</p>
<p class="p2">
He trifled with the letter for some time, re-reading chosen passages as he
walked about the room, and considering he scarce knew what. There are ideas
language is too gross for, and shape too arbitrary, which come to us and have a
definite influence upon us, and yet we cannot fasten on the filmy things and
make them visible and distinct to ourselves, much less to others. Why did he
twice throw a look into the glass in the act of passing it? He stood for a
moment with head erect facing it. His eyes for the nonce seemed little to
peruse his outer features; the grey gathered brows, and the wrinkles much
action of them had traced over the circles half up his high straight forehead;
the iron-grey hair that rose over his forehead and fell away in the fashion of
Richard’s plume. His general appearance showed the tints of years; but
none of their weight, and nothing of the dignity of his youth, was gone. It was
so far satisfactory, but his eyes were wide, as one who looks at his essential
self through the mask we wear.</p>
<p>Perhaps he was speculating as he looked on the sort of aspect he presented to
the lady’s discriminative regard. Of her feelings he had not a suspicion.
But he knew with what extraordinary lucidity women can, when it pleases them,
and when their feelings are not quite boiling under the noonday sun, seize all
the sides of a character, and put their fingers on its weak point. He was
cognizant of the total absence of the humorous in himself (the want that most
shut him out from his fellows), and perhaps the clear-thoughted, intensely
self-examining gentleman filmily conceived, Me also, in common with the poet,
she gazes on as one of the superior—grey beasts!</p>
<p>He may have so conceived the case; he was capable of that great-mindedness, and
could snatch at times very luminous glances at the broad reflector which the
world of fact lying outside our narrow compass holds up for us to see ourselves
in when we will. Unhappily, the faculty of laughter, which is due to this gift,
was denied him; and having seen, he, like the companion of friend Balsam, could
go no farther. For a good wind of laughter had relieved him of much of the
blight of self-deception, and oddness, and extravagance; had given a healthier
view of our atmosphere of life; but he had it not.</p>
<p>Journeying back to Bellingham in the train, with the heated brain and brilliant
eye of his son beside him, Sir Austin tried hard to feel infallible, as a man
with a System should feel; and because he could not do so, after much mental
conflict, he descended to entertain a personal antagonism to the young woman
who had stepped in between his experiment and success. He did not think kindly
of her. Lady Blandish’s encomiums of her behaviour and her beauty annoyed
him. Forgetful that he had in a measure forfeited his rights to it, he took the
common ground of fathers, and demanded, “Why he was not justified in
doing all that lay in his power to prevent his son from casting himself away
upon the first creature with a pretty face he encountered?” Deliberating
thus, he lost the tenderness he should have had for his experiment—the
living, burning youth at his elbow, and his excessive love for him took a
rigorous tone. It appeared to him politic, reasonable, and just, that the uncle
of this young woman, who had so long nursed the prudent scheme of marrying her
to his son, should not only not be thwarted in his object but encouraged and
even assisted. At least, not thwarted. Sir Austin had no glass before him while
these ideas hardened in his mind, and he had rather forgotten the letter of
Lady Blandish.</p>
<p>Father and son were alone in the railway carriage. Both were too preoccupied to
speak. As they neared Bellingham the dark was filling the hollows of the
country. Over the pine-hills beyond the station a last rosy streak lingered
across a green sky. Richard eyed it while they flew along. It caught him
forward: it seemed full of the spirit of his love, and brought tears of
mournful longing to his eyelids. The sad beauty of that one spot in the heavens
seemed to call out to his soul to swear to his Lucy’s truth to him: was
like the sorrowful visage of his fleur-de-luce as he called her, appealing to
him for faith. That tremulous tender way she had of half-closing and catching
light on the nether-lids, when sometimes she looked up in her lover’s
face—a look so mystic-sweet that it had grown to be the fountain of his
dreams: he saw it yonder, and his blood thrilled.</p>
<p>Know you those wand-like touches of I know not what, before which our grosser
being melts; and we, much as we hope to be in the Awaking, stand etherealized,
trembling with new joy? They come but rarely; rarely even in love, when we
fondly think them revelations. Mere sensations they are, doubtless: and we rank
for them no higher in the spiritual scale than so many translucent glorious
polypi that quiver on the shores, the hues of heaven running through them. Yet
in the harvest of our days it is something for the animal to have had such mere
fleshly polypian experiences to look back upon, and they give him an
horizon—pale seas of luring splendour. One who has had them (when they do
not bound him) may find the Isles of Bliss sooner than another. Sensual faith
in the upper glories is something. “Let us remember,” says The
Pilgrim’s Scrip, “that Nature, though heathenish, reaches at her
best to the footstool of the Highest. She is not all dust, but a living portion
of the spheres. In aspiration it is our error to despise her, forgetting that
through Nature only can we ascend. Cherished, trained, and purified, she is
then partly worthy the divine mate who is to make her wholly so. St. Simeon saw
the Hog in Nature, and took Nature for the Hog.”</p>
<p>It was one of these strange bodily exaltations which thrilled the young man, he
knew not how it was, for sadness and his forebodings vanished. The soft wand
touched him. At that moment, had Sir Austin spoken openly, Richard might have
fallen upon his heart. He could not.</p>
<p>He chose to feel injured on the common ground of fathers, and to pursue his
System by plotting. Lady Blandish had revived his jealousy of the creature who
menaced it, and jealousy of a System is unreflecting and vindictive as jealousy
of woman.</p>
<p>Heath-roots and pines breathed sharp in the cool autumn evening about the
Bellingham station. Richard stood a moment as he stepped from the train, and
drew the country air into his lungs with large heaves of the chest. Leaving his
father to the felicitations of the station-master, he went into the Lobourne
road to look for his faithful Tom, who had received private orders through
Berry to be in attendance with his young master’s mare, Cassandra, and
was lurking in a plantation of firs unenclosed on the borders of the road,
where Richard, knowing his retainer’s zest for conspiracy too well to
seek him anywhere but in the part most favoured with shelter and concealment,
found him furtively whiffing tobacco.</p>
<p>“What news, Tom? Is there an illness?”</p>
<p>Tom sent his undress cap on one side to scratch at dilemma, an old agricultural
habit to which he was still a slave in moments of abstract thought or sudden
difficulty.</p>
<p>“No, I don’t want the rake, Mr. Richard,” he whinnied with a
false grin, as he beheld his master’s eye vacantly following the action.</p>
<p>“Speak out!” he was commanded. “I haven’t had a letter
for a week!”</p>
<p>Richard learnt the news. He took it with surprising outward calm, only getting
a little closer to Cassandra’s neck, and looking very hard at Tom without
seeing a speck of him, which had the effect on Tom of making him sincerely wish
his master would punch his head at once rather than fix him in that owl-like
way.</p>
<p>“Go on!” said Richard, huskily. “Yes? She’s gone!
Well?”</p>
<p>Tom was brought to understand he must make the most of trifles, and recited how
he had heard from a female domestic at Belthorpe of the name of Davenport,
formerly known to him, that the young lady never slept a wink from the hour she
knew she was going, but sat up in her bed till morning crying most pitifully,
though she never complained. Hereat the tears unconsciously streamed down
Richard’s cheeks. Tom said he had tried to see her, but Mr. Adrian kept
him at work, ciphering at a terrible sum—that and nothing else all day!
saying, it was to please his young master on his return. “Likewise
something in Lat’n,” added Tom. “Nom’tive
Mouser!—’nough to make ye mad, sir!” he exclaimed with
pathos. The wretch had been put to acquire a Latin declension.</p>
<p>Tom saw her on the morning she went away, he said: she was very
sorrowful-looking, and nodded kindly to him as she passed in the fly along with
young Tom Blaize. “She have got uncommon kind eyes, sir,” said Tom,
“and cryin’ don’t spoil them.” For which his hand was
wrenched.</p>
<p>Tom had no more to tell, save that, in rounding the road, the young lady had
hung out her hand, and seemed to move it forward and back, as much as to say,
Good-bye, Tom! “And though she couldn’t see me,” said Tom,
“I took off my hat. I did take it so kind of her to think of a chap like
me.” He was at high-pressure sentiment—what with his education for
a hero and his master’s love-stricken state.</p>
<p>“You saw no more of her, Tom?”</p>
<p>“No, sir. That was the last!”</p>
<p>“That was the last you saw of her, Tom?”</p>
<p>“Well, sir, I saw nothin’ more.”</p>
<p>“And so she went out of sight!”</p>
<p>“Clean gone, that she were, sir.”</p>
<p>“Why did they take her away? what have they done with her? where have
they taken her to?”</p>
<p>These red-hot questionings were addressed to the universal heaven rather than
to Tom.</p>
<p>“Why didn’t she write?” they were resumed. “Why did she
leave? She’s mine. She belongs to me! Who dared take her away? Why did
she leave without writing?—Tom!”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” said the well-drilled recruit, dressing himself up to
the word of command. He expected a variation of the theme from the change of
tone with which his name had been pronounced, but it was again, “Where
have they taken her to?” and this was even more perplexing to Tom than
his hard sum in arithmetic had been. He could only draw down the corners of his
mouth hard, and glance up queerly.</p>
<p>“She had been crying—you saw that, Tom?”</p>
<p>“No mistake about that, Mr. Richard. Cryin’ all night and all day,
I sh’d say.”</p>
<p>“And she was crying when you saw her?”</p>
<p>“She look’d as if she’d just done for a moment, sir.”</p>
<p>“But her face was white?”</p>
<p>“White as a sheet.”</p>
<p>Richard paused to discover whether his instinct had caught a new view from
these facts. He was in a cage, always knocking against the same bars, fly as he
might. Her tears were the stars in his black night. He clung to them as golden
orbs. Inexplicable as they were, they were at least pledges of love.</p>
<p>The hues of sunset had left the West. No light was there but the steadfast pale
eye of twilight. Thither he was drawn. He mounted Cassandra, saying:
“Tell them something, Tom. I shan’t be home to dinner,” and
rode off toward the forsaken home of light over Belthorpe, whereat he saw the
wan hand of his Lucy, waving farewell, receding as he advanced. His jewel was
stolen,—he must gaze upon the empty box.</p>
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