<h2 id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</h2>
<h3 id="A_New_Experience">A NEW EXPERIENCE.</h3>
<p>The next time that Georgie found herself
alone with Mr. Anstruthers, she read him a
very severe little lecture on the subject of his
shortcomings.</p>
<p>“I knew that you liked to be satirical, and
make fine, cutting speeches,” she said, with the
prettiest indignation; “but I did not think
you would have gone so far as to be openly
rude, and to Lisbeth, of all people! Lisbeth,
who is so good, and unselfish, and kind, and
who is my dearest friend.”</p>
<p>Hector Anstruthers looked at her sweet face
almost mournfully. “Is she good, and unselfish,
and kind?” he said. But the question was
not a satire. He only asked it in a tender
wonder at the girl’s innocent faith.</p>
<p>“There is no one like her. No one so good,
unless it is mamma herself,” exclaimed Miss
Georgie, with warmth.</p>
<p>“But Lisbeth’s is not a common surface
goodness, and I suppose that is the reason that
you cannot see it. You, too, who are so far-sighted
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span>
and clever. I, for one, am glad I am
not a genius, if to be a genius one must be
blind to everything but the failings of one’s
friends. Ah, Hector!” a sudden pity kindling
in her gentle breast, as she met his eyes,
“Ah, Hector, people often envy you, and call
you fortunate, but there are times when I am
sorry for you—sorry from my heart.”</p>
<p>“Georgie,” answered the young man, not
quite able to control a tremor in his voice,
“there are more times than you dream of,
when I am sorry for myself.”</p>
<p>“Sorry for yourself?” said Georgie, softening
at once. “Then you must be more unhappy
than I thought. To be sorry for one’s
self, one must be unhappy indeed. But why
is it? Why should you be unhappy, after all?
Why should you be cynical and unbelieving,
Hector? The world has been very good to
you, or, as I think we ought to say, God has
been very good to you. What have you not
got, that you can want? What is there that
you lack? Not money, not health, not friends.
Isn’t it a little ungrateful to insist on being
wretched, when you have so much?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” answered Anstruthers, gloomily. “It
is very ungrateful, indeed.”</p>
<p>“Ungrateful? I should think it was,” returned
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span>
Georgie, with her favorite dubious shake
of the head. “Ah, poor fellow! I am afraid
it is a little misfortune that you need, and I
am very sorry to see it.”</p>
<p>It was no marvel that Georgie Esmond was
popular. She was one of those charming girls
who invariably have a good effect upon people.
She was so good herself, so innocent, so honest,
so trustful, that she actually seemed to create
a sweeter atmosphere wherever she went. The
worst of men, while listening to her gentle,
bright speeches, felt that the world was not so
bad after all, and that there was still sweetness
and purity left, to render sin the more shameful
by their white contrast. “A fellow wants
to forget his worst side, when he is with her,”
said one. “She makes a man feel that he
would like to hide his shadinesses even from
himself.” Her effect upon Hector Anstruthers
was a curious, and rather a dangerous one. She
made him ashamed of himself, too, and she
filled his heart with a tender longing and regret.
Had it not been for his experience with
Lisbeth, he would have loved the girl passionately.
As it was, his affection for her would
never be more than a brotherly, though intensely
admiring one. He was constantly
wishing that Fate had given Georgie to him;
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span>
Georgie, who seemed to him the purest and
loveliest of young home goddesses; Georgie,
who would have made his life happy, and pure,
and peaceful. If it had only been Georgie
instead of Lisbeth. But it had been Lisbeth,
and his altar-fires had burned out, and left to
him nothing but a waste of cold, gray ashes.
And yet, knowing this, he could not quite give
Georgie up. The mere sight of her fresh,
bright-eyed face was a help to him, and the
sound of her voice a balm. He grew fonder
of her every day, in his way. Her kindly, little
girlish homilies touched and warmed him. As
Lisbeth had made him worse, so Georgie Esmond
made him better. But the danger! The
danger was not for himself, it was for Georgie.</p>
<p>The day was slowly dawning when the girl’s
innocent friendship and admiration for him
would become something else. When she began
to pity him, she began to tread on unsafe
ground. She had lived through no miserable
experience; she had felt no desolating passion;
her heart was all untried, and his evident affection
stirred it softly, even before she understood
her own feelings. She thought her
budding love was pity, and her tenderness
sympathy. He had gone wrong, poor fellow,
somehow, and she was sorry for him.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span></p>
<p>“I am sure he does not mean the hard things
he sometimes says,” she said to Lisbeth. “I
think that satirical way of speaking is more a
bad habit than anything else. Mamma thinks
so, too, but,” with a little guileless blush, “we
are both so fond of him, that we cannot help
being sorry that he has fallen into it.”</p>
<p>“It is a sort of fashion in these days,” returned
Lisbeth, and she longed to add a scorching
little sneer to the brief comment, but she
restrained it for Georgie’s sake.</p>
<p>Positively such a thing had become possible.
She, who had never restrained her impulses before,
had gradually learned to control them for
this simple girl’s sake. On the one or two occasions,
early in their acquaintance, when she
had let her evil spirit get the better of her, the
sudden pain and wonder in Georgie’s face had
stung her so quickly, that she had resolved to
hide her iniquities, at least in her presence.
Sometimes she had even wished that she had
been softer at heart and less selfish. It was so
unpleasant to see herself just as she was, when
she breathed that sweet atmosphere of which
I have spoken. Georgie Esmond caused her to
lose patience with Lisbeth Crespigny, upon
more than one occasion.</p>
<p>“I am a hypocrite,” she said to herself. “If
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span>
she knew me as I am, what would she think of
me? What would Mrs. Esmond say if she
knew how cavalierly her ‘dear Lisbeth’ had
treated those three loving old souls at Pen’yllan?
I am gaining everything on false pretenses.”
And one night, as she sat combing
her hair before her mirror, she added, fiercely,
“I am false and selfish all through; and I believe
they are teaching me to be ashamed of
myself.”</p>
<p>The fact was, these two sweet women, this
sweet mother and daughter, were teaching her
to be ashamed of herself. She quite writhed
under her conviction, for she felt herself convicted.
Her self-love was wounded, but the
day came when that perfect, obstinate self-confidence,
which was her chief characteristic, was
not a little shaken.</p>
<p>“I should like to be a better woman,” she
would say, in a kind of stubborn anger. “It
has actually come to this, that I would be a
better woman, if I could, but I cannot. It is
not in me. I was not born to be a good woman.”</p>
<p>The more she saw of the Esmonds, the more
she learned. The household was such a pleasant
one, and was so full of the grace of home
and kindly affection. How proud the good
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">76</span>
old colonel was of his pretty daughter. How
he enjoyed her triumphs, and approved of the
taste of her many admirers. How delighted
he was to escort her to evening parties, or to
the grandest of balls, and to spend the night
in watching her dance, and smile, and hold her
gay little court, entirely ignoring the fact that
his gout was apt to be troublesome, when he
wore tight boots instead of his huge slippers.
It was quite enough for him that his girl was
enjoying herself, and that people were admiring
her grace, and freshness, and bloom. How
fond the half-dozen small brothers and sisters
were of Georgie! and what a comfort and
pleasure the girl was to her mother! It was
an education to Lisbeth Crespigny to see them
all together. It even seemed that in time she
fell somewhat into Georgie’s own way of caring
for other people. How could she help caring
for the kind hearts that beat so warmly toward
her. Then, through acquiring, as it were, a
habit of graciousness, she remembered things
she had almost forgotten. If she was not born
to be a good woman, why not try and smooth
the fact over a little, was her cynical fancy.
Why not give the three good spinsters at
Pen’yllan the benefit of her new experience?
It would be so little trouble to gladden their
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span>
hearts. So, with an impatient pity for herself
and them, she took upon herself the task of
writing to them oftener, and at greater length;
and frequently. Before her letters were completed,
she found herself touched somewhat,
and even prompted to be a trifle more affectionate
than had been her wont. A poor little
effort to have made, but the dear, simple souls
at Pen’yllan greeted the change with tenderest
joy, and Aunt Millicent, and Aunt Clarissa, and
Aunt Hetty, each shed tears of ecstasy in secret—in
secret, because, to have shed them
openly, would have been to admit to one another
that they had each felt their dear Lisbeth’s
former letters to be cold, or at least not
absolutely all that could be desired.</p>
<p>“So like dear, dear Philip’s own child,” said
Miss Clarissa, who was generally the family
voice. “You know how often I have remarked,
sister Henrietta, that our dear Lisbeth was like
brother Philip in every respect, even though
at times she is, perhaps, a little more—a little
more reserved, as it were. Her nature, I am
sure, is most affectionate.”</p>
<p>That fortunate and much-caressed young
man, Mr. Hector Anstruthers, not only met
Miss Crespigny frequently, but heard much of
her. Imperfect as she may appear to us, who
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span>
sit in judgment upon her, the name of her admirers
was Legion. Her intimacy with the
Esmonds led her into very gay and distinguished
society, far more illustrious society
than Mrs. Despard’s patronage had been able
to afford her. And having this, her little peculiarities
did the rest. Her immense, dusky
eyes; her small, pale, piquant face; her self-possession;
her wit, and her numerous capabilities,
attracted people wondrously. Even
battered old beaux, who had outlived two or
three generations of beauties, and who were
fastidious accordingly, found an indescribable
charm in this caustic, clever young person who
was really not a beauty at all, if measured according
to the usual standard. She was too
small, too pale, too odd; but then where could
one find such great, changeable, dark eyes, such
artistic taste, such masses of fine hair, such a
voice?</p>
<p>“And, apart from that,” it was said of her,
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span>“there is something else. Hear her talk, by
Jove! See how she can manage a man, when
she chooses to take the trouble; see how little
she cares for the fine speeches that would influence
other women. See her dance, hear her
sing, and you will begin to understand her. A
fellow can never tire of her, for she is everything
she has the whim to be, and she is everything
equally well.”</p>
<p>“So she is, Heaven knows,” Hector Anstruthers
muttered, bitterly, looking across the
room at her, as she stood talking to Colonel
Esmond. Old Denbigh’s laudatory speech fell
upon his ears with a significance of its own.
She could be anything she chose so long as her
whim lasted; and there was the end of it. It
all meant nothing. She was as false when she
played her pretty part for the benefit of the
Esmonds, young and old, as when she encouraged
these dandies, and ensnared them. With
Georgie she took up the <i xml:lang="fr">rôle</i> of <i xml:lang="fr">ingénue</i>, that
was all. She was bad through and through.
He felt all this sincerely, this night, when he
heard the men praising her, and he was savage
accordingly.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span></p>
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