<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0043" id="link2HCH0043"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER 43. The Watches of the Night </h2>
<p>Florence, long since awakened from her dream, mournfully observed the
estrangement between her father and Edith, and saw it widen more and more,
and knew that there was greater bitterness between them every day. Each
day's added knowledge deepened the shade upon her love and hope, roused up
the old sorrow that had slumbered for a little time, and made it even
heavier to bear than it had been before.</p>
<p>It had been hard—how hard may none but Florence ever know!—to
have the natural affection of a true and earnest nature turned to agony;
and slight, or stern repulse, substituted for the tenderest protection and
the dearest care. It had been hard to feel in her deep heart what she had
felt, and never know the happiness of one touch of response. But it was
much more hard to be compelled to doubt either her father or Edith, so
affectionate and dear to her, and to think of her love for each of them,
by turns, with fear, distrust, and wonder.</p>
<p>Yet Florence now began to do so; and the doing of it was a task imposed
upon her by the very purity of her soul, as one she could not fly from.
She saw her father cold and obdurate to Edith, as to her; hard,
inflexible, unyielding. Could it be, she asked herself with starting
tears, that her own dear mother had been made unhappy by such treatment,
and had pined away and died? Then she would think how proud and stately
Edith was to everyone but her, with what disdain she treated him, how
distantly she kept apart from him, and what she had said on the night when
they came home; and quickly it would come on Florence, almost as a crime,
that she loved one who was set in opposition to her father, and that her
father knowing of it, must think of her in his solitary room as the
unnatural child who added this wrong to the old fault, so much wept for,
of never having won his fatherly affection from her birth. The next kind
word from Edith, the next kind glance, would shake these thoughts again,
and make them seem like black ingratitude; for who but she had cheered the
drooping heart of Florence, so lonely and so hurt, and been its best of
comforters! Thus, with her gentle nature yearning to them both, feeling
for the misery of both, and whispering doubts of her own duty to both,
Florence in her wider and expanded love, and by the side of Edith, endured
more than when she had hoarded up her undivided secret in the mournful
house, and her beautiful Mama had never dawned upon it.</p>
<p>One exquisite unhappiness that would have far outweighed this, Florence
was spared. She never had the least suspicion that Edith by her tenderness
for her widened the separation from her father, or gave him new cause of
dislike. If Florence had conceived the possibility of such an effect being
wrought by such a cause, what grief she would have felt, what sacrifice
she would have tried to make, poor loving girl, how fast and sure her
quiet passage might have been beneath it to the presence of that higher
Father who does not reject his children's love, or spurn their tried and
broken hearts, Heaven knows! But it was otherwise, and that was well.</p>
<p>No word was ever spoken between Florence and Edith now, on these subjects.
Edith had said there ought to be between them, in that wise, a division
and a silence like the grave itself: and Florence felt she was right.</p>
<p>In this state of affairs her father was brought home, suffering and
disabled; and gloomily retired to his own rooms, where he was tended by
servants, not approached by Edith, and had no friend or companion but Mr
Carker, who withdrew near midnight.</p>
<p>'And nice company he is, Miss Floy,' said Susan Nipper. 'Oh, he's a
precious piece of goods! If ever he wants a character don't let him come
to me whatever he does, that's all I tell him.'</p>
<p>'Dear Susan,' urged Florence, 'don't!'</p>
<p>'Oh, it's very well to say "don't" Miss Floy,' returned the Nipper, much
exasperated; 'but raly begging your pardon we're coming to such passes
that it turns all the blood in a person's body into pins and needles, with
their pints all ways. Don't mistake me, Miss Floy, I don't mean nothing
again your ma-in-law who has always treated me as a lady should though she
is rather high I must say not that I have any right to object to that
particular, but when we come to Mrs Pipchinses and having them put over us
and keeping guard at your Pa's door like crocodiles (only make us thankful
that they lay no eggs!) we are a growing too outrageous!'</p>
<p>'Papa thinks well of Mrs Pipchin, Susan,' returned Florence, 'and has a
right to choose his housekeeper, you know. Pray don't!'</p>
<p>'Well Miss Floy,' returned the Nipper, 'when you say don't, I never do I
hope but Mrs Pipchin acts like early gooseberries upon me Miss, and
nothing less.'</p>
<p>Susan was unusually emphatic and destitute of punctuation in her discourse
on this night, which was the night of Mr Dombey's being brought home,
because, having been sent downstairs by Florence to inquire after him, she
had been obliged to deliver her message to her mortal enemy Mrs Pipchin;
who, without carrying it in to Mr Dombey, had taken upon herself to return
what Miss Nipper called a huffish answer, on her own responsibility. This,
Susan Nipper construed into presumption on the part of that exemplary
sufferer by the Peruvian mines, and a deed of disparagement upon her young
lady, that was not to be forgiven; and so far her emphatic state was
special. But she had been in a condition of greatly increased suspicion
and distrust, ever since the marriage; for, like most persons of her
quality of mind, who form a strong and sincere attachment to one in the
different station which Florence occupied, Susan was very jealous, and her
jealousy naturally attached to Edith, who divided her old empire, and came
between them. Proud and glad as Susan Nipper truly was, that her young
mistress should be advanced towards her proper place in the scene of her
old neglect, and that she should have her father's handsome wife for her
companion and protectress, she could not relinquish any part of her own
dominion to the handsome wife, without a grudge and a vague feeling of
ill-will, for which she did not fail to find a disinterested justification
in her sharp perception of the pride and passion of the lady's character.
From the background to which she had necessarily retired somewhat, since
the marriage, Miss Nipper looked on, therefore, at domestic affairs in
general, with a resolute conviction that no good would come of Mrs Dombey:
always being very careful to publish on all possible occasions, that she
had nothing to say against her.</p>
<p>'Susan,' said Florence, who was sitting thoughtfully at her table, 'it is
very late. I shall want nothing more to-night.'</p>
<p>'Ah, Miss Floy!' returned the Nipper, 'I'm sure I often wish for them old
times when I sat up with you hours later than this and fell asleep through
being tired out when you was as broad awake as spectacles, but you've
ma's-in-law to come and sit with you now Miss Floy and I'm thankful for it
I'm sure. I've not a word to say against 'em.'</p>
<p>'I shall not forget who was my old companion when I had none, Susan,'
returned Florence, gently, 'never!' And looking up, she put her arm round
the neck of her humble friend, drew her face down to hers, and bidding her
good-night, kissed it; which so mollified Miss Nipper, that she fell a
sobbing.</p>
<p>'Now my dear Miss Floy, said Susan, 'let me go downstairs again and see
how your Pa is, I know you're wretched about him, do let me go downstairs
again and knock at his door my own self.'</p>
<p>'No,' said Florence, 'go to bed. We shall hear more in the morning. I will
inquire myself in the morning. Mama has been down, I daresay;' Florence
blushed, for she had no such hope; 'or is there now, perhaps. Good-night!'</p>
<p>Susan was too much softened to express her private opinion on the
probability of Mrs Dombey's being in attendance on her husband, and
silently withdrew. Florence left alone, soon hid her head upon her hands
as she had often done in other days, and did not restrain the tears from
coursing down her face. The misery of this domestic discord and
unhappiness; the withered hope she cherished now, if hope it could be
called, of ever being taken to her father's heart; her doubts and fears
between the two; the yearning of her innocent breast to both; the heavy
disappointment and regret of such an end as this, to what had been a
vision of bright hope and promise to her; all crowded on her mind and made
her tears flow fast. Her mother and her brother dead, her father unmoved
towards her, Edith opposed to him and casting him away, but loving her,
and loved by her, it seemed as if her affection could never prosper, rest
where it would. That weak thought was soon hushed, but the thoughts in
which it had arisen were too true and strong to be dismissed with it; and
they made the night desolate.</p>
<p>Among such reflections there rose up, as there had risen up all day, the
image of her father, wounded and in pain, alone in his own room, untended
by those who should be nearest to him, and passing the tardy hours in
lonely suffering. A frightened thought which made her start and clasp her
hands— though it was not a new one in her mind—that he might
die, and never see her or pronounce her name, thrilled her whole frame. In
her agitation she thought, and trembled while she thought, of once more
stealing downstairs, and venturing to his door.</p>
<p>She listened at her own. The house was quiet, and all the lights were out.
It was a long, long time, she thought, since she used to make her nightly
pilgrimages to his door! It was a long, long time, she tried to think,
since she had entered his room at midnight, and he had led her back to the
stair-foot!</p>
<p>With the same child's heart within her, as of old: even with the child's
sweet timid eyes and clustering hair: Florence, as strange to her father
in her early maiden bloom, as in her nursery time, crept down the
staircase listening as she went, and drew near to his room. No one was
stirring in the house. The door was partly open to admit air; and all was
so still within, that she could hear the burning of the fire, and count
the ticking of the clock that stood upon the chimney-piece.</p>
<p>She looked in. In that room, the housekeeper wrapped in a blanket was fast
asleep in an easy chair before the fire. The doors between it and the next
were partly closed, and a screen was drawn before them; but there was a
light there, and it shone upon the cornice of his bed. All was so very
still that she could hear from his breathing that he was asleep. This gave
her courage to pass round the screen, and look into his chamber.</p>
<p>It was as great a start to come upon his sleeping face as if she had not
expected to see it. Florence stood arrested on the spot, and if he had
awakened then, must have remained there.</p>
<p>There was a cut upon his forehead, and they had been wetting his hair,
which lay bedabbled and entangled on the pillow. One of his arms, resting
outside the bed, was bandaged up, and he was very white. But it was not
this, that after the first quick glance, and first assurance of his
sleeping quietly, held Florence rooted to the ground. It was something
very different from this, and more than this, that made him look so solemn
in her eye.</p>
<p>She had never seen his face in all her life, but there had been upon it—or
she fancied so—some disturbing consciousness of her. She had never
seen his face in all her life, but hope had sunk within her, and her timid
glance had dropped before its stern, unloving, and repelling harshness. As
she looked upon it now, she saw it, for the first time, free from the
cloud that had darkened her childhood. Calm, tranquil night was reigning
in its stead. He might have gone to sleep, for anything she saw there,
blessing her.</p>
<p>Awake, unkind father! Awake, now, sullen man! The time is flitting by; the
hour is coming with an angry tread. Awake!</p>
<p>There was no change upon his face; and as she watched it, awfully, its
motionless response recalled the faces that were gone. So they looked, so
would he; so she, his weeping child, who should say when! so all the world
of love and hatred and indifference around them! When that time should
come, it would not be the heavier to him, for this that she was going to
do; and it might fall something lighter upon her.</p>
<p>She stole close to the bed, and drawing in her breath, bent down, and
softly kissed him on the face, and laid her own for one brief moment by
its side, and put the arm, with which she dared not touch him, round about
him on the pillow.</p>
<p>Awake, doomed man, while she is near! The time is flitting by; the hour is
coming with an angry tread; its foot is in the house. Awake!</p>
<p>In her mind, she prayed to God to bless her father, and to soften him
towards her, if it might be so; and if not, to forgive him if he was
wrong, and pardon her the prayer which almost seemed impiety. And doing
so, and looking back at him with blinded eyes, and stealing timidly away,
passed out of his room, and crossed the other, and was gone.</p>
<p>He may sleep on now. He may sleep on while he may. But let him look for
that slight figure when he wakes, and find it near him when the hour is
come!</p>
<p>Sad and grieving was the heart of Florence, as she crept upstairs. The
quiet house had grown more dismal since she came down. The sleep she had
been looking on, in the dead of night, had the solemnity to her of death
and life in one. The secrecy and silence of her own proceeding made the
night secret, silent, and oppressive. She felt unwilling, almost unable,
to go on to her own chamber; and turning into the drawing-rooms, where the
clouded moon was shining through the blinds, looked out into the empty
streets.</p>
<p>The wind was blowing drearily. The lamps looked pale, and shook as if they
were cold. There was a distant glimmer of something that was not quite
darkness, rather than of light, in the sky; and foreboding night was
shivering and restless, as the dying are who make a troubled end. Florence
remembered how, as a watcher, by a sick-bed, she had noted this bleak
time, and felt its influence, as if in some hidden natural antipathy to
it; and now it was very, very gloomy.</p>
<p>Her Mama had not come to her room that night, which was one cause of her
having sat late out of her bed. In her general uneasiness, no less than in
her ardent longing to have somebody to speak to, and to break the spell of
gloom and silence, Florence directed her steps towards the chamber where
she slept.</p>
<p>The door was not fastened within, and yielded smoothly to her hesitating
hand. She was surprised to find a bright light burning; still more
surprised, on looking in, to see that her Mama, but partially undressed,
was sitting near the ashes of the fire, which had crumbled and dropped
away. Her eyes were intently bent upon the air; and in their light, and in
her face, and in her form, and in the grasp with which she held the elbows
of her chair as if about to start up, Florence saw such fierce emotion
that it terrified her.</p>
<p>'Mama!' she cried, 'what is the matter?'</p>
<p>Edith started; looking at her with such a strange dread in her face, that
Florence was more frightened than before.</p>
<p>'Mama!' said Florence, hurriedly advancing. 'Dear Mama! what is the
matter?'</p>
<p>'I have not been well,' said Edith, shaking, and still looking at her in
the same strange way. 'I have had had dreams, my love.'</p>
<p>'And not yet been to bed, Mama?'</p>
<p>'No,' she returned. 'Half-waking dreams.'</p>
<p>Her features gradually softened; and suffering Florence to come closer to
her, within her embrace, she said in a tender manner, 'But what does my
bird do here? What does my bird do here?'</p>
<p>'I have been uneasy, Mama, in not seeing you to-night, and in not knowing
how Papa was; and I—'</p>
<p>Florence stopped there, and said no more.</p>
<p>'Is it late?' asked Edith, fondly putting back the curls that mingled with
her own dark hair, and strayed upon her face.</p>
<p>'Very late. Near day.'</p>
<p>'Near day!' she repeated in surprise.</p>
<p>'Dear Mama, what have you done to your hand?' said Florence.</p>
<p>Edith drew it suddenly away, and, for a moment, looked at her with the
same strange dread (there was a sort of wild avoidance in it) as before;
but she presently said, 'Nothing, nothing. A blow.' And then she said, 'My
Florence!' and then her bosom heaved, and she was weeping passionately.</p>
<p>'Mama!' said Florence. 'Oh Mama, what can I do, what should I do, to make
us happier? Is there anything?'</p>
<p>'Nothing,' she replied.</p>
<p>'Are you sure of that? Can it never be? If I speak now of what is in my
thoughts, in spite of what we have agreed,' said Florence, 'you will not
blame me, will you?'</p>
<p>'It is useless,' she replied, 'useless. I have told you, dear, that I have
had bad dreams. Nothing can change them, or prevent them coming back.'</p>
<p>'I do not understand,' said Florence, gazing on her agitated face which
seemed to darken as she looked.</p>
<p>'I have dreamed,' said Edith in a low voice, 'of a pride that is all
powerless for good, all powerful for evil; of a pride that has been galled
and goaded, through many shameful years, and has never recoiled except
upon itself; a pride that has debased its owner with the consciousness of
deep humiliation, and never helped its owner boldly to resent it or avoid
it, or to say, "This shall not be!" a pride that, rightly guided, might
have led perhaps to better things, but which, misdirected and perverted,
like all else belonging to the same possessor, has been self-contempt,
mere hardihood and ruin.'</p>
<p>She neither looked nor spoke to Florence now, but went on as if she were
alone.</p>
<p>'I have dreamed,' she said, 'of such indifference and callousness, arising
from this self-contempt; this wretched, inefficient, miserable pride; that
it has gone on with listless steps even to the altar, yielding to the old,
familiar, beckoning finger,—oh mother, oh mother!—while it
spurned it; and willing to be hateful to itself for once and for all,
rather than to be stung daily in some new form. Mean, poor thing!'</p>
<p>And now with gathering and darkening emotion, she looked as she had looked
when Florence entered.</p>
<p>'And I have dreamed,' she said, 'that in a first late effort to achieve a
purpose, it has been trodden on, and trodden down by a base foot, but
turns and looks upon him. I have dreamed that it is wounded, hunted, set
upon by dogs, but that it stands at hay, and will not yield; no, that it
cannot if it would; but that it is urged on to hate.'</p>
<p>Her clenched hand tightened on the trembling arm she had in hers, and as
she looked down on the alarmed and wondering face, frown subsided. 'Oh
Florence!' she said, 'I think I have been nearly mad to-night!' and
humbled her proud head upon her neck and wept again.</p>
<p>'Don't leave me! be near me! I have no hope but in you! These words she
said a score of times.</p>
<p>Soon she grew calmer, and was full of pity for the tears of Florence, and
for her waking at such untimely hours. And the day now dawning, with
folded her in her arms and laid her down upon her bed, and, not lying down
herself, sat by her, and bade her try to sleep.</p>
<p>'For you are weary, dearest, and unhappy, and should rest.'</p>
<p>'I am indeed unhappy, dear Mama, tonight,' said Florence. 'But you are
weary and unhappy, too.'</p>
<p>'Not when you lie asleep so near me, sweet.'</p>
<p>They kissed each other, and Florence, worn out, gradually fell into a
gentle slumber; but as her eyes closed on the face beside her, it was so
sad to think upon the face downstairs, that her hand drew closer to Edith
for some comfort; yet, even in the act, it faltered, lest it should be
deserting him. So, in her sleep, she tried to reconcile the two together,
and to show them that she loved them both, but could not do it, and her
waking grief was part of her dreams.</p>
<p>Edith, sitting by, looked down at the dark eyelashes lying wet on the
flushed cheeks, and looked with gentleness and pity, for she knew the
truth. But no sleep hung upon her own eyes. As the day came on she still
sat watching and waking, with the placid hand in hers, and sometimes
whispered, as she looked at the hushed face, 'Be near me, Florence. I have
no hope but in you!'</p>
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