<h3>XIV</h3>
<p>The laboured resistance which Lady Constantine’s
judgment had offered to her rebellious affection ere she learnt
that she was a widow, now passed into a bashfulness that rendered
her almost as unstable of mood as before. But she was one
of that mettle—fervid, cordial, and spontaneous—who
had not the heart to spoil a passion; and her affairs having gone
to rack and ruin by no fault of her own she was left to a
painfully narrowed existence which lent even something of
rationality to her attachment. Thus it was that her tender
and unambitious soul found comfort in her reverses.</p>
<p>As for St. Cleeve, the tardiness of his awakening was the
natural result of inexperience combined with devotion to a
hobby. But, like a spring bud hard in bursting, the delay
was compensated by after speed. At once breathlessly
recognizing in this fellow-watcher of the skies a woman who loved
him, in addition to the patroness and friend, he truly translated
the nearly forgotten kiss she had given him in her moment of
despair.</p>
<p>Lady Constantine, in being eight or nine years his senior, was
an object even better calculated to nourish a youth’s first
passion than a girl of his own age, superiority of experience and
ripeness of emotion exercising the same peculiar fascination over
him as over other young men in their first ventures in this
kind.</p>
<p>The alchemy which thus transmuted an abstracted astronomer
into an eager lover—and, must it be said, spoilt a
promising young physicist to produce a common-place
inamorato—may be almost described as working its change in
one short night. Next morning he was so fascinated with the
novel sensation that he wanted to rush off at once to Lady
Constantine, and say, ‘I love you true!’ in the
intensest tones of his mental condition, to register his
assertion in her heart before any of those accidents which
’creep in ’twixt vows, and change decrees of
kings,’ should occur to hinder him. But his
embarrassment at standing in a new position towards her would not
allow him to present himself at her door in any such hurry.
He waited on, as helplessly as a girl, for a chance of
encountering her.</p>
<p>But though she had tacitly agreed to see him on any reasonable
occasion, Lady Constantine did not put herself in his way.
She even kept herself out of his way. Now that for the
first time he had learnt to feel a strong impatience for their
meeting, her shyness for the first time led her to delay
it. But given two people living in one parish, who long
from the depths of their hearts to be in each other’s
company, what resolves of modesty, policy, pride, or apprehension
will keep them for any length of time apart?</p>
<p>One afternoon he was watching the sun from his tower, half
echoing the Greek astronomer’s wish that he might be set
close to that luminary for the wonder of beholding it in all its
glory, under the slight penalty of being consumed the next
instant. He glanced over the high-road between the field
and the park (which sublunary features now too often distracted
his attention from his telescope), and saw her passing along that
way.</p>
<p>She was seated in the donkey-carriage that had now taken the
place of her landau, the white animal looking no larger than a
cat at that distance. The buttoned boy, who represented
both coachman and footman, walked alongside the animal’s
head at a solemn pace; the dog stalked at the distance of a yard
behind the vehicle, without indulging in a single gambol; and the
whole turn-out resembled in dignity a dwarfed state
procession.</p>
<p>Here was an opportunity but for two obstructions: the boy, who
might be curious; and the dog, who might bark and attract the
attention of any labourers or servants near. Yet the risk
was to be run, and, knowing that she would soon turn up a certain
shady lane at right angles to the road she had followed, he ran
hastily down the staircase, crossed the barley (which now covered
the field) by the path not more than a foot wide that he had
trodden for himself, and got into the lane at the other
end. By slowly walking along in the direction of the
turnpike-road he soon had the satisfaction of seeing her
coming. To his surprise he also had the satisfaction of
perceiving that neither boy nor dog was in her company.</p>
<p>They both blushed as they approached, she from sex, he from
inexperience. One thing she seemed to see in a moment, that
in the interval of her absence St. Cleeve had become a man; and
as he greeted her with this new and maturer light in his eyes she
could not hide her embarrassment, or meet their fire.</p>
<p>‘I have just sent my page across to the column with your
book on Cometary Nuclei,’ she said softly; ‘that you
might not have to come to the house for it. I did not know
I should meet you here.’</p>
<p>‘Didn’t you wish me to come to the house for
it?’</p>
<p>‘I did not, frankly. You know why, do you
not?’</p>
<p>‘Yes, I know. Well, my longing is at rest. I
have met you again. But are you unwell, that you drive out
in this chair?’</p>
<p>‘No; I walked out this morning, and am a little
tired.’</p>
<p>‘I have been looking for you night and day. Why do
you turn your face aside? You used not to be
so.’ Her hand rested on the side of the chair, and he
took it. ‘Do you know that since we last met, I have
been thinking of you—daring to think of you—as I
never thought of you before?’</p>
<p>‘Yes, I know it.’</p>
<p>‘How did you know?’</p>
<p>‘I saw it in your face when you came up.’</p>
<p>‘Well, I suppose I ought not to think of you so.
And yet, had I not learned to, I should never fully have felt how
gentle and sweet you are. Only think of my loss if I had
lived and died without seeing more in you than in
astronomy! But I shall never leave off doing so now.
When you talk I shall love your understanding; when you are
silent I shall love your face. But how shall I know that
you care to be so much to me?’</p>
<p>Her manner was disturbed as she recognized the impending
self-surrender, which she knew not how to resist, and was not
altogether at ease in welcoming.</p>
<p>‘O, Lady Constantine,’ he continued, bending over
her, ‘give me some proof more than mere seeming and
inference, which are all I have at present, that you don’t
think this I tell you of presumption in me! I have been
unable to do anything since I last saw you for pondering
uncertainly on this. Some proof, or little sign, that we
are one in heart!’</p>
<p>A blush settled again on her face; and half in effort, half in
spontaneity, she put her finger on her cheek. He almost
devotionally kissed the spot.</p>
<p>‘Does that suffice?’ she asked, scarcely giving
her words voice.</p>
<p>‘Yes; I am convinced.’</p>
<p>‘Then that must be the end. Let me drive on; the
boy will be back again soon.’ She spoke hastily, and
looked askance to hide the heat of her cheek.</p>
<p>‘No; the tower door is open, and he will go to the top,
and waste his time in looking through the telescope.’</p>
<p>‘Then you should rush back, for he will do some
damage.’</p>
<p>‘No; he may do what he likes, tinker and spoil the
instrument, destroy my papers,—anything, so that he will
stay there and leave us alone.’</p>
<p>She glanced up with a species of pained pleasure.</p>
<p>‘You never used to feel like that!’ she said, and
there was keen self-reproach in her voice. ‘You were
once so devoted to your science that the thought of an intruder
into your temple would have driven you wild. Now you
don’t care; and who is to blame? Ah, not you, not
you!’</p>
<p>The animal ambled on with her, and he, leaning on the side of
the little vehicle, kept her company.</p>
<p>‘Well, don’t let us think of that,’ he
said. ‘I offer myself and all my energies, frankly
and entirely, to you, my dear, dear lady, whose I shall be
always! But my words in telling you this will only injure
my meaning instead of emphasize it. In expressing, even to
myself, my thoughts of you, I find that I fall into phrases
which, as a critic, I should hitherto have heartily despised for
their commonness. What’s the use of saying, for
instance, as I have just said, that I give myself entirely to
you, and shall be yours always,—that you have my devotion,
my highest homage? Those words have been used so frequently
in a flippant manner that honest use of them is not
distinguishable from the unreal.’ He turned to her,
and added, smiling, ‘Your eyes are to be my stars for the
future.’</p>
<p>‘Yes, I know it,—I know it, and all you would
say! I dreaded even while I hoped for this, my dear young
friend,’ she replied, her eyes being full of tears.
‘I am injuring you; who knows that I am not ruining your
future,—I who ought to know better? Nothing can come
of this, nothing must,—and I am only wasting your
time. Why have I drawn you off from a grand celestial study
to study poor lonely me? Say you will never despise me,
when you get older, for this episode in our lives. But you
will,—I know you will! All men do, when they have
been attracted in their unsuspecting youth, as I have attracted
you. I ought to have kept my resolve.’</p>
<p>‘What was that?’</p>
<p>‘To bear anything rather than draw you from your high
purpose; to be like the noble citizen of old Greece, who,
attending a sacrifice, let himself be burnt to the bone by a coal
that jumped into his sleeve rather than disturb the sacred
ceremony.’</p>
<p>‘But can I not study and love both?’</p>
<p>‘I hope so,—I earnestly hope so. But
you’ll be the first if you do, and I am the responsible one
if you do not.’</p>
<p>‘You speak as if I were quite a child, and you immensely
older. Why, how old do you think I am? I am
twenty.’</p>
<p>‘You seem younger. Well, that’s so much the
better. Twenty sounds strong and firm. How old do you
think I am?’</p>
<p>‘I have never thought of considering.’ He
innocently turned to scrutinize her face. She winced a
little. But the instinct was premature. Time had
taken no liberties with her features as yet; nor had trouble very
roughly handled her.</p>
<p>‘I will tell you,’ she replied, speaking almost
with physical pain, yet as if determination should carry her
through. ‘I am eight-and-twenty—nearly—I
mean a little more, a few months more. Am I not a fearful
deal older than you?’</p>
<p>‘At first it seems a great deal,’ he answered,
musing. ‘But it doesn’t seem much when one gets
used to it.’</p>
<p>‘Nonsense!’ she exclaimed. ‘It
<i>is</i> a good deal.’</p>
<p>‘Very well, then, sweetest Lady Constantine, let it
be,’ he said gently.</p>
<p>‘You should not let it be! A polite man would have
flatly contradicted me. . . . O I am ashamed of
this!’ she added a moment after, with a subdued, sad look
upon the ground. ‘I am speaking by the card of the
outer world, which I have left behind utterly; no such lip
service is known in your sphere. I care nothing for those
things, really; but that which is called the Eve in us will out
sometimes. Well, we will forget that now, as we must, at no
very distant date, forget all the rest of this.’</p>
<p>He walked beside her thoughtfully awhile, with his eyes also
bent on the road. ‘Why must we forget it all?’
he inquired.</p>
<p>‘It is only an interlude.’</p>
<p>‘An interlude! It is no interlude to me. O
how can you talk so lightly of this, Lady Constantine? And
yet, if I were to go away from here, I might, perhaps, soon
reduce it to an interlude! Yes,’ he resumed
impulsively, ‘I will go away. Love dies, and it is
just as well to strangle it in its birth; it can only die
once! I’ll go.’</p>
<p>‘No, no!’ she said, looking up
apprehensively. ‘I misled you. It is no
interlude to me,—it is tragical. I only meant that
from a worldly point of view it is an interlude, which we should
try to forget. But the world is not all. You will not
go away?’</p>
<p>But he continued drearily, ‘Yes, yes, I see it all; you
have enlightened me. It will be hurting your prospects even
more than mine, if I stay. Now Sir Blount is dead, you are
free again,—may marry where you will, but for this fancy of
ours. I’ll leave Welland before harm comes of my
staying.’</p>
<p>‘Don’t decide to do a thing so rash!’ she
begged, seizing his hand, and looking miserable at the effect of
her words. ‘I shall have nobody left in the world to
care for! And now I have given you the great telescope, and
lent you the column, it would be ungrateful to go away! I
was wrong; believe me that I did not mean that it was a mere
interlude to <i>me</i>. O if you only knew how very, very
far it is from that! It is my doubt of the result to you
that makes me speak so slightingly.’</p>
<p>They were now approaching cross-roads, and casually looking up
they beheld, thirty or forty yards beyond the crossing, Mr.
Torkingham, who was leaning over a gate, his back being towards
them. As yet he had not recognized their approach.</p>
<p>The master-passion had already supplanted St. Cleeve’s
natural ingenuousness by subtlety.</p>
<p>‘Would it be well for us to meet Mr. Torkingham just
now?’ he began.</p>
<p>‘Certainly not,’ she said hastily, and pulling the
rein she instantly drove down the right-hand road. ‘I
cannot meet anybody!’ she murmured. ‘Would it
not be better that you leave me now?—not for my pleasure,
but that there may arise no distressing tales about us before we
know—how to act in this—this’—(she smiled
faintly at him) ‘heartaching extremity!’</p>
<p>They were passing under a huge oak-tree, whose limbs,
irregular with shoulders, knuckles, and elbows, stretched
horizontally over the lane in a manner recalling Absalom’s
death. A slight rustling was perceptible amid the leafage
as they drew out from beneath it, and turning up his eyes Swithin
saw that very buttoned page whose advent they had dreaded,
looking down with interest at them from a perch not much higher
than a yard above their heads. He had a bunch of oak-apples
in one hand, plainly the object of his climb, and was furtively
watching Lady Constantine with the hope that she might not see
him. But that she had already done, though she did not
reveal it, and, fearing that the latter words of their
conversation had been overheard, they spoke not till they had
passed the next turning.</p>
<p>She stretched out her hand to his. ‘This must not
go on,’ she said imploringly. ‘My anxiety as to
what may be said of such methods of meeting makes me too
unhappy. See what has happened!’ She could not
help smiling. ‘Out of the frying-pan into the
fire! After meanly turning to avoid the parson we have
rushed into a worse publicity. It is too humiliating to
have to avoid people, and lowers both you and me. The only
remedy is not to meet.’</p>
<p>‘Very well,’ said Swithin, with a sigh.
‘So it shall be.’</p>
<p>And with smiles that might more truly have been tears they
parted there and then.</p>
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