<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</SPAN></h2>
<h3>MOTHER AND DAUGHTER.</h3>
<p>Mrs. John had a long time to wait. The old
captain prolonged his walk, as he was too apt to do,
beyond his strength, and came home very slowly,
leaning on Hester's arm; and then as every hindrance,
when people are anxious, has a way of
doubling itself, Mrs. Morgan sent a polite message
to say that she hoped Mrs. John Vernon would not
object if she kept Hester to supper. Mrs. John
objected greatly, but she was weak, and had never
set up her own will in the face of any one else who
made a stand for theirs. She said "Oh yes, with
pleasure," with a pitiful little smile to Mrs. Morgan's
maid. To deny Hester anything (except the power of
making a governess of herself and losing caste) was
what she had never done in her life. It always gave
her a little pang when her child left her to eat her
solitary meal in the dark little parlour which nothing
would light up, but she had trained herself to feel
that this was very wrong, and that young people need<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</SPAN></span>
change. Hester was entirely unacquainted with the
series of little sacrifices which her mother thus made
for her. If she thought of them at all, she thought
that the poor lady "did not mind." Her old friends
next door were not gay, but they talked as Mrs. John
was quite incapable of talking, and lived, though
they saw nobody, in a wider atmosphere, a bigger
world than any of the others. The old captain's
stories, the people he had seen, the experiences both
these old people had gone through, were like another
world to Hester. Her mother was small and straitened,
had seen without seeing, and lived without
living. In the days when Hester had guided her
about by the arm, taking her whither she pleased,
making new eyes for her in the vividness of her own,
it was enough for the girl to have that echo of all
her sentiments, that little objection generally ending
with agreement, that broken little stream of faint
recollections which her mother would give forth.
But Hester had long ceased to form part of that
sort of dual being which is so often made by a
mother and her only daughter. To feel your parent
smaller and sillier than yourself is sad. A great
many young people do it without any adequate
reason, strong in their sense of being the reigning
monarchs of the present, while their progenitors
belong to the past. Perhaps indeed it is the nature
of youth to take a pleasure in such superiority.
But that is very different from the fact of actual
incapacity on the mother's part to follow her child's
thoughts or even to know what she meant. Mrs.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</SPAN></span>
John was very well aware of it herself, and declared
with a smiling countenance that young people liked
change, and that she was never so happy as when
her child was enjoying herself. And Hester, though
she was so much more clever, accepted all this, and
believed and thought her mother was quite contented
with the evening paper, or a book from the
circulating library, and never missed her when she
was away. She misunderstood her silly mother, far
more than that silly mother did her. The lesser
comprehended the bigger, not the bigger the lesser,
as in the ordinary course of affairs. Mrs. John
had a great many sacrifices to make, of which her
daughter was quite unconscious. And to-night the
poor lady felt it, as with her mind so full she sat
down at her little solitary table, which she had made
pretty for Hester. There was nothing on it more
luxurious than cold meat and salad, but the crisp
greenness of the leaves, the little round loaf, the pat
of butter in a small silver dish which was one of her
relics, the creaming glass of milk, all set out upon a
white cloth and lighted up by the two candles, would,
she had flattered herself, call out an admiring
exclamation when the girl came in out of the dark,
a little dazzled for the first moment by the light.
After she had said "Oh, yes, with pleasure," Mrs.
John came in and sat down and cried. Such a pretty
table laid out, and oh, for once, so much to say! her
mind so overflowing, her news so all important!
There could not be anything so exciting to talk
about, that was certain, on the other side of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</SPAN></span>
partition, and this provoked and tantalised sense of
having herself far better entertainment for Hester
than she could be having, gave an insufferableness
to the position. At one moment Mrs. John thought
she must send for the girl, that she could not put up
with the disappointment, but she was much more
used to putting up with things, than to asserting
herself. She sat down very cheerlessly and ate a
mouthful of bread and salad. To eat alone is always
miserable. Hester was making the table, where the
old Morgans sat, very lively and cheerful, talking as
she never talked with her mother. They sat and
talked quite late into the night. What with the
captain's stories, and Mrs. Morgan's elucidations
and Hester's questionings, the evening was full of
interest. It flew away so quickly that when the clock
struck eleven the girl sprang up with a great sense
of guilt. "Eleven o'clock! what will mother say?
I have never been so late before," she cried. They
were all half proud of it, of having been so mutually
entertaining. "The poor little mother must have
felt lonely," Mrs. Morgan said, with a passing
compunction when Hester flew round the corner,
watched from the door to see that all was safe by
the maid; but the captain took no notice. "It is
delightful to see how that child enjoys herself,"
he said, flattered in spite of himself, "though it's
no very intoxicating amusement we furnish her."
Captain Morgan was very soft-hearted, and understood
by his affections as well as with his understanding,
but in this case something beguiled him,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</SPAN></span>
perhaps a little complacency, perhaps want of
thought.</p>
<p>When Hester ran in, in the dark, locking the
door of the verandah behind her, Mrs. John had
gone up stairs and was going to bed. She was
chilly and "cross" her daughter thought, who ran
quickly up to her full of apologies. "We got
talking," she said; "you must forgive me, mother.
The captain's stories run on so, one into another—one
forgets how the time runs on too."</p>
<p>"I wish," said Mrs. John, with the tears very
near the surface, "that your mother was sometimes
as amusing as the captain." It was the greatest reproach
she had addressed to her daughter for years.</p>
<p>"Oh, mother! If I had thought you minded,"
cried Hester, with wondering eyes.</p>
<p>Mrs. John was penitent at once, and did her best
to make things up. "I ought not to speak," she
said, "after all—for I was not so very lonely. Harry
stayed a long time and kept me company. It is
only when you have him to yourself that you see
how nice he is."</p>
<p>"Is he so nice?" said Hester, indifferently.
"How lucky for him to find you alone," she added,
with a little laugh.</p>
<p>"Oh, Hester, how can you say so. As if it was
me he came for! Whatever you may try to make
yourself believe you can't think that."</p>
<p>Hester made no reply. She slept in a small room
within her mother's, the door of which always stood
open. She had taken off her out-door things and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</SPAN></span>
let down her hair to brush it. It hung about her in
a cloud, running up into curls as soon as she let it
free. Mrs. John, seated in the easiest chair, sat
contemplating this operation with a mixture of
pleasure and pain. The mass of curls was pretty,
but it was not the fashion. It was quite unlike the
smooth brown glossy locks that had adorned her own
head when she was young. But she said to herself
that it suited Hester, and gazed at her child
admiringly, yet anxiously, conscious of many things
in which she might be improved: her hair for one
thing: and her waist, which was not so small as
Mrs. John's had been in her youth: and her nose,
which was a little too short. And yet with all these
defects she was pretty. When she was Harry's wife
everybody would admire her. Perhaps it was only
because she was not sufficiently seen that she had no
more admirers now.</p>
<p>"I had a great deal to say to you, dear," she said.
"I don't grudge you being away when you are
enjoying yourself, but I had many things to say.
It is not likely that Harry Vernon would sit with
me for hours for nothing."</p>
<p>"I suppose," said Hester, from the midst of her
curls, "that he finds it dull now without Ellen at
the White House?"</p>
<p>"I could tell you a great deal about that," said
her mother quickly, eager to seize an opening. But
Hester yawned with discouraging demonstrations of
fatigue.</p>
<p>"Don't you think it will keep till to-morrow,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</SPAN></span>
mother? We had a long walk, and I am sleepy.
I think Harry can't be very urgent. To-morrow
will be time enough."</p>
<p>"Oh, Hester, how strange you are," cried Mrs.
John, "so pleased with those old people, ready to
listen to all their old stories; but when I begin to
talk to you of a thing that is of the greatest
importance——"</p>
<p>"Nothing concerning Harry Vernon can be of
great importance to me," cried the perverse girl;
and then she tried to turn off her wilfulness with a
laugh. "The beauty of the captain's stories is that
they are of no importance, mother. You can have
them when you please. It is like going to a theatre,
or reading a book."</p>
<p>"I am not so clever as the captain to interest
you," Mrs. John said.</p>
<p>There was a plaintive tone in her voice with which
Hester was very well acquainted, and which betokened
an inclination to tears. She came and
kissed her mother, and gave her a few of those
half-impatient caresses which generally soothed the
poor lady. The girl did not in the least know that
any consciousness was in Mrs. John's mind of the
superficial character of those kindnesses. She was
not without love for the tender domestic creature
who had been hers to use at her pleasure since ever
she could recollect, but she bestowed these kisses
upon her, as she would have given sweetmeats to
a child.</p>
<p>"Go to bed, mother. Don't mind me. I will<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</SPAN></span>
shut the door; you shall not have the light in
your eyes to keep you from sleeping. Go to bed,
mammy darling."</p>
<p>Mrs. John had liked this caressing talk when
Hester was a child. She was soothed by it still,
though a faint sense that there was something like
contempt in it had got into her mind: and she could
not struggle against a will which was so much
stronger than her own. But she could not sleep,
though she allowed herself to be put to bed. She
could not help crying in the night, and wondering
what she could do to be more respected, to be more
important to her child; and then she prayed that
she might be able to put Harry before her in the
best light, and stopped and wondered whether it were
right to pray about a young man. Altogether Mrs.
John had not a tranquil night.</p>
<p>But next morning she made a great effort to dismiss
her anxiety, to present herself at breakfast with
a cheerful aspect, and to get rid of that plaintive
tone which she was herself aware of, which she had
so often tried to remedy. Instead of it she tried a
little jauntiness and gaiety, for extremes are always
easy. It is the <i>juste-milieu</i> which it is so difficult to
attain.</p>
<p>"I am afraid I scolded you last night, Hester. I
was cross when you came back. One can't help
being cross when one has a great many things to say
and no audience," she said with a laugh.</p>
<p>"I am very sorry, mamma. I did not mean to
stay so late."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Oh, it was nothing, my dear. I had Harry. He
sat with me a long time. He is—really—very—entertaining
when you have him to yourself."</p>
<p>"Is he?" said Hester demurely. "I should not
have expected that: but I am very glad, mother,
for your sake."</p>
<p>"Because I am likely to see a great deal of him
in the future? Oh yes, my dear. I hope so, at
least. He is very kind to me. Nobody has spoken
so nicely of me for many a year."</p>
<p>"I like him for that," said Hester honestly, yet
with a blush of self-consciousness; for perhaps
though she liked him for it, it did not improve
her opinion of Harry's intellect, that he should
find her mother's company so congenial.</p>
<p>"Oh, you would if you knew him better, Hester.
He feels for me in my changed circumstances. You
don't know how different things used to be, what a
great deal people used to think of me when I was
young. I don't complain, for perhaps it was silly of
them; but it is a great change. But living where
he does in my house, you know, Harry feels that: he
says it is there I ought to be—in the White House.
Even though nothing should ever come of it, it is
nice that somebody should think so."</p>
<p>"Unfortunately nothing can ever come of it," said
Hester. "However nice people may be they do not
give up their house to you, or their living; for you
would need his money as well, to be able to live in
the White House."</p>
<p>"You say unfortunately, dear," said her mother,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</SPAN></span>
with eagerness. Mrs. John blushed like a girl as
she began her attempt to hint out Harry's love-tale
to her daughter. She was innocent and modest,
though she was silly. No talk about lovers, no "petty
maxims" about marriage, had ever offended Hester's
ears. Her mother blushed and trembled when
she felt herself broaching the subject to her child.
"Oh, Hester, it would be easy, very easy, to cease to
be unfortunate—if you choose, dear. All that part
of our life might fly away like a cloud—if you
choose. We might be done with poverty and dependence
and thinking of what Catherine will say
and what people will think. The White House—might
be yours if you liked, everything might be
yours. You would only have to say the word."</p>
<p>Mrs. John's eyes filled with tears. She could not
get to the end of a long speech like this without
crying; and she was so anxious, that they found
their way also into her voice.</p>
<p>"Mother!" cried Hester, opening wide her eyes.
They were very bright and clear, and when they
opened widely looked almost unnatural in their size.
She was all the more startled that she had never
been subject to any such representation before. "I
don't know what you mean," she said. "What
should we do with the White House? I think it is
a vulgar, staring place, and far too big."</p>
<p>"Don't speak so, Hester. I can't bear it. My own
married home that your poor papa took me to!"</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon, mother. I had forgotten that.
Of course taste was different in those days."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Oh, taste! Your poor papa had beautiful taste.
There are some things there that just break my
heart—the ormolu set that everybody admired so,
and the picture of me over the mantel-piece in the
little parlour. It used to be in the drawing-room,
but you can't wonder at them changing it. The hair
was worn high then, on the top of your head, and
short sleeves. It was very becoming to me. And to
hear you call it vulgar and staring——"</p>
<p>"It was a mistake, mamma. I did not think
what I was saying. Forgive me, mother dear!"</p>
<p>"You know I would forgive you anything," cried
Mrs. John, now fairly launched, and forgetting all
prudential restraints. "But oh, Hester, my darling,
when he speaks to you don't be hasty; think of all
that is involved. I am not going to tell you what
he wants to say—oh no, he would never forgive me.
It is he himself that must tell you that. But Hester,
oh, don't speak hastily; don't answer all in a
moment, without thinking. Often, often a girl says
what she is sorry for, not being prepared. Think,
my darling, what it would be—not only to be rich,
but to be independent—to have your own house, all
your own, and no charity—to have as much money
as you want, to be able to help the poor, and do
everything you wish, and to make me happy, so
happy, to the end of my days!"</p>
<p>It was thus that Mrs. John treated Harry's secret.
She forgot all her precautions and her conviction
that from himself only the proposal ought to come.
The dialogues she had invented, the long conversations<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</SPAN></span>
with Hester which she had held in imagination,
delicately, diplomatically leading up to the main possibility,
had all disappeared when the moment came.
When she began to speak she had forgotten them
altogether, and gone off impromptu without recollecting
a syllable of all that had been so painfully prepared:
and her own eloquence, if it did not affect
her daughter, affected herself beyond description: her
mouth quivered, the tears flowed out of her eyes.
Hester, who could no more bear to see her mother
cry (though she had seen that sight often enough)
than to see the tears of a child, rose from her seat,
and coming round hurriedly behind Mrs. John's
chair put her arms caressingly round her, and laid
her cheek to that wet one. She was not so entirely
unprepared but that she understood well enough
what this emotion meant, but she tried to look
as if it had a different meaning altogether. She
drew her mother's head to her breast and kissed
her.</p>
<p>"Dear mother! Is it really so bitter to you to
be dependent? and you never let me know that
you felt it."</p>
<p>"What would have been the good," said the poor
lady, "when we could do nothing? The thing was
to put the best face upon it. But now when it is
all in your power——"</p>
<p>"It was always in my power," said Hester, with a
mixture of real earnestness and a desire to persuade
her mother that she put a different meaning
upon all that had been said; "if you had not stopped<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</SPAN></span>
me, mother; but I have not lost my accent, and if
you will only give your consent now—I am older,
and people will trust me with their children."</p>
<p>"Oh, Hester, do not vex me so," cried Mrs. John.
"Do you think that is what I mean? And besides,
if I were to give you leave to-morrow, Catherine, you
know, would never consent."</p>
<p>"If you will trust to me," said Hester, colouring
high, "what Catherine pleases shall not be the last
word."</p>
<p>Mrs. John wrung her hands, drawing herself out
of Hester's arms, to gaze into her face.</p>
<p>"Oh, why will you make such a mistake? It is
not <i>that</i>. I am not strong to stand out against you,
Hester, but for your own sake. And Catherine would
never let you do it. Oh, this is quite a different
thing, my dear love! Not to work like any poor
girl, but to be far above that, to have everything
that heart could desire. And all so right and so
nice, and so suitable, Hester. If your dear papa had
lived and all had gone well I could not have wished
for a better match."</p>
<p>"Match!" said the girl, colouring violently.</p>
<p>She had indeed understood well enough that
Harry was behind all her mother's anxious insinuations,
her promises and entreaties, but she had been
confident in her power to defeat Mrs. John by aid
of her own confused statements always capable of
bearing two meanings. This word "match," however,
was one upon which there could be no confusion,
and she was immediately driven to bay. She drew<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</SPAN></span>
herself away from the tender attitude in which she
had been standing.</p>
<p>"I never thought," she said, "that this was a thing
that could be discussed between us," with all the
unreasonable indignation of a high-handed girl, determined
to crush all attempts to influence her on
the spot.</p>
<p>But Mrs. John, though she was conscious she
could not stand against Hester, was too sure that she
was right, and too deeply convinced of the importance
of this great question to give in, as she usually
did.</p>
<p>"Oh why should it not be discussed between us?"
she said. "Is there any one so much interested as
I am? I have heard people say it was a mother's
duty. And Hester, abroad where we used to live, I
should have settled it altogether—you would never
have been consulted. I am sure I don't know that
it is not the best way."</p>
<p>"It is a way—that could never have been taken
with me," Hester said. She walked round to her
own side of the table with a very stately aspect and
sat down, and made a pretence of resuming her
breakfast, but her hand trembled with excitement
as she took up her cup. "It may be quite true what
you say, that you are interested, mother. I suppose
so. People consider a girl a piece of goods to be sold
and disposed of."</p>
<p>"Oh, Hester, have I ever thought so? I have
been wanting in my duty," cried Mrs. John. "I
have never tried to put you forward, to get you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</SPAN></span>
invitations, to have you seen and admired as other
people do. You are so proud and so fanciful that I
have never dared to do it. And when there comes
one, without ever being invited, or thought of, or
supposed possible——"</p>
<p>It seemed to Hester that the burning blush which
she felt go all over her was capable of bursting into
flame. It was not the shy shamefacedness with
which every girl contemplates this subject on its first
introduction, but bitter and scorching shame.</p>
<p>"Invited—thought of; mother!" she cried in a
voice of girlish thunder; "is it possible that you
could ever think of scheming—match-making—for
<span class="smcap">me</span>?"</p>
<p>No capitals could represent the fervour of her
indignation. She was entirely unconscious of the
arrogance of self-opinion that was in all she said.
For <span class="smcap">me</span>. That a man should be invited into her presence
with that thought, that she should be put
forward, taken into society in order to be seen with
that view. Heaven and Earth! was it possible that
a woman should avow such possibilities and yet live?</p>
<p>"When I tell you that I never did it, Hester!
though I know it was my duty," Mrs. John cried
with tears. Never was woman punished more
unjustly. She turned like the proverbial worm at
the supreme inappropriateness of this judgment
against her, and a sudden impulse of anger sustained
the gentle little woman. "I know it was my duty,"
she cried; "for who is to care for you, to see that
you are settled in life, but me? But I was afraid to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</SPAN></span>
do it. I was obliged to leave it—to Providence. I
just said to myself, it is no use. Hester would never
be guided by me. I must leave it—to Providence."</p>
<p>It did not appear that Mrs. John had much opinion
of Providence in such matters, for she announced this
with a voice of despair. Then taking courage a little,
she said with insinuating gentleness—</p>
<p>"I was just the same when I was a girl. I could
not endure to hear about settlements and things. It
was all love I thought of—my darling. I was like
you—all love."</p>
<p>"Oh, mother!" cried Hester, jumping to her feet.
This was more intolerable than the other. Her face
flamed anew with the suggestion that it was "all
love." "For Heaven's sake don't say any more about
it, unless you want to drive me out of my senses,"
she said.</p>
<p>Mrs. John stopped crying, she was so astonished,
and gazed with open mouth and eyes. She had
thought this last tender touch would be irresistible,
that the child would fall into her arms, and perhaps
breathe forth the sweetest secret aspiration of her
heart—perhaps own to her that dark eyes and a
moustache had been her dream instead of Harry's
fairness; or that a melting voice or a genius for
poetry were absolute requirements of her hero. With
all these fancies she would have so tenderly sympathised.
She would have liked to discuss everything,
to point out that after all a fair complexion was very
nice, and a genius for poetry not profitable. She
remembered what occupation and delight these same<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</SPAN></span>
subjects had afforded herself in the interval before
John Vernon had proposed to her. She herself had
dreamed of a troubadour, a lonely being with a
guitar, with long hair and misfortunes; and John
Vernon had none of these attractions. She was
talked over by her mother and sister and made to
see that the Bank and the White House were far
better. Hester, perhaps, would have been more
difficult, but yet she had felt that, confidence once
established, the sweetness of these discussions would
have been unspeakable. When she had got over
her astonishment, she sank back in a despair which
was not unmingled with resentment. Had it come to
that, that nothing a mother could say would please a
child nowadays—neither the attraction of a great
match nor the tenderness of love?</p>
<p>This was how the great question of a young woman's
life was first revealed to Hester. It was not, to be
sure, the last word. That would come when she was
placed face to face with the aspirant for her favour
and have to decide, so to speak, upon the future of
two lives. But to say "no" to Harry would not have
excited and confused her being, like this previous
encounter with all the other powers and influences
which were concerned—or which were considered to
be concerned, in her fate.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />