<h3>CHAPTER LXVII.</h3>
<h4>SIR GREGORY MARRABLE HAS A HEADACHE.<br/> </h4>
<p>Mary Lowther, in her letter to her aunt, had in one line told the
story of her rupture with Mr. Gilmore. This line had formed a
postscript, and the writer had hesitated much before she added it.
She had not intended to write to her aunt on this subject; but she
had remembered at the last moment how much easier it would be to tell
the remainder of her story on her arrival at Loring, if so much had
already been told beforehand. Therefore it was that she had added
these words. "Everything has been broken off between me and Mr.
Gilmore—for ever."</p>
<p>This was a terrible blow upon poor Miss Marrable, who, up to the
moment of her receiving that letter, thought that her niece was
disposed of in the manner that had seemed most desirable to all her
friends. Aunt Sarah loved her niece dearly, and by no means looked
forward to improved happiness in her own old age when she should be
left alone in the house at Uphill; but she entertained the view about
young women which is usual with old women who have young women under
their charge, and she thought it much best that this special young
woman should get herself married. The old women are right in their
views on this matter; and the young women, who on this point are not
often refractory, are right also. Miss Marrable, who entertained a
very strong opinion on the subject above-mentioned, was very unhappy
when she was thus abruptly told by her own peculiar young woman that
this second engagement had been broken off and sent to the winds. It
had become a theory on the part of Mary's friends that the Gilmore
match was the proper thing for her. At last, after many difficulties,
the Gilmore match had been arranged. The anxiety as to Mary's future
life was at an end, and the theory of the elders concerned with her
welfare was to be carried out. Then there came a short note,
proclaiming her return home, and simply telling as a fact almost
indifferent,—in a single line,—that all the trouble hitherto taken
as to her own disposition had entirely been thrown away. "Everything
has been broken off between me and Mr. Gilmore." It was a cruel and a
heartrending postscript!</p>
<p>Poor Miss Marrable knew very well that she was armed with no parental
authority. She could hold her theory, and could advise; but she could
do no more. She could not even scold. And there had been some qualm
of conscience on her part as to Walter Marrable, now that Walter
Marrable had been taken in hand and made much of by the baronet,—and
now, also, that poor Gregory had been removed from the path. No doubt
she, Aunt Sarah, had done all in her power to aid the difficulties
which had separated the two cousins;—and while she thought that the
Gilmore match had been the consequence of such aiding on her part,
she was happy enough in reflecting upon what she had done. Old Sir
Gregory would not have taken Walter by the hand unless Walter had
been free to marry Edith Brownlow; and though she could not quite
resolve that the death of the younger Gregory had been part of the
family arrangement due to the happy policy of the elder Marrables
generally, still she was quite sure that Walter's present position at
Dunripple had come entirely from the favour with which he had
regarded the baronet's wishes as to Edith. Mary was provided for with
the Squire, who was in immediate possession; and Walter with his
bride would become as it were the eldest son of Dunripple. It was all
as comfortable as could be till there came this unfortunate
postscript.</p>
<p>The letter reached her on Friday, and on Saturday Mary arrived. Miss
Marrable determined that she would not complain. As regarded her own
comfort it was doubtless all for the best. But old women are never
selfish in regard to the marriage of young women. That the young
women belonging to them should be settled,—and thus got rid of,—is
no doubt the great desire; but, whether the old woman be herself
married or a spinster, the desire is founded on an adamantine
confidence that marriage is the most proper and the happiest thing
for the young woman. The belief is so thorough that the woman would
cease to be a woman, would already have become a brute, who would
desire to keep any girl belonging to her out of matrimony for the
sake of companionship to herself. But no woman does so desire in
regard to those who are dear and near to her. A dependant, distant in
blood, or a paid assistant, may find here and there a want of the
true feminine sympathy; but in regard to a daughter, or one held as a
daughter, it is never wanting. "As the pelican loveth her young do I
love thee; and therefore will I give thee away in marriage to some
one strong enough to hold thee, even though my heartstrings be torn
asunder by the parting." Such is always the heart's declaration of
the mother respecting her daughter. The match-making of mothers is
the natural result of mother's love; for the ambition of one woman
for another is never other than this,—that the one loved by her
shall be given to a man to be loved more worthily. Poor Aunt Sarah,
considering of these things during those two lonely days, came to the
conclusion that if ever Mary were to be so loved again that she might
be given away, a long time might first elapse; and then she was aware
that such gifts given late lose much of their value, and have to be
given cheaply.</p>
<p>Mary herself, as she was driven slowly up the hill to her aunt's
door, did not share her aunt's melancholy. To be returned as a bad
shilling, which has been presented over the counter and found to be
bad, must be very disagreeable to a young woman's feelings. That was
not the case with Mary Lowther. She had, no doubt, a great sorrow at
heart. She had created a shipwreck which she did regret most
bitterly. But the sorrow and the regret were not humiliating, as they
would have been had they been caused by failure on her own part. And
then she had behind her the strong comfort of her own rock, of which
nothing should now rob her,—which should be a rock for rest and
safety, and not a rock for shipwreck, and as to the disposition of
which Aunt Sarah's present ideas were so very erroneous!</p>
<p>It was impossible that the first evening should pass without a word
or two about poor Gilmore. Mary knew well enough that she had told
her aunt nothing of her renewed engagement with her cousin; but she
could not bring herself at once to utter a song of triumph, as she
would have done had she blurted out all her story. Not a word was
said about either lover till they were seated together in the
evening. "What you tell me about Mr. Gilmore has made me so unhappy,"
said Miss Marrable, sadly.</p>
<p>"It could not be helped, Aunt Sarah. I tried my best, but it could
not be helped. Of course I have been very, very unhappy myself."</p>
<p>"I don't pretend to understand it."</p>
<p>"And yet it is so easily understood!" said Mary, pleading hard for
herself. "I did not love him,
<span class="nowrap">and—"</span></p>
<p>"But you had accepted him, Mary."</p>
<p>"I know I had. It is so natural that you should think that I have
behaved badly."</p>
<p>"I have not said so, my dear."</p>
<p>"I know that, Aunt Sarah; but if you think so,—and of course you
do,—write and ask Janet Fenwick. She will tell you everything. You
know how devoted she is to Mr. Gilmore. She would have done anything
for him. But even she will tell you that at last I could not help it.
When I was so very wretched I thought that I would do my best to
comply with other people's wishes. I got a feeling that nothing
signified for myself. If they had told me to go into a convent or to
be a nurse in a hospital I would have gone. I had nothing to care
for, and if I could do what I was told perhaps it might be best."</p>
<p>"But why did you not go on with it, my dear?"</p>
<p>"It was impossible—after Walter had written to me."</p>
<p>"But Walter is to marry Edith Brownlow."</p>
<p>"No, dear aunt; no. Walter is to marry me. Don't look like that, Aunt
Sarah. It is true;—it is, indeed." She had now dragged her chair
close to her aunt's seat upon the sofa, so that she could put her
hands upon her aunt's knees. "All that about Miss Brownlow has been a
fable."</p>
<p>"Parson John told me that it was fixed."</p>
<p>"It is not fixed. The other thing is fixed. Parson John tells many
fables. He is to come here."</p>
<p>"Who is to come here?"</p>
<p>"Walter,—of course. He is to be here,—I don't know how soon; but I
shall hear from him. Dear aunt, you must be good to him;—indeed you
must. He is your cousin just as much as mine."</p>
<p>"I'm not in love with him, Mary."</p>
<p>"But I am, Aunt Sarah. Oh dear, how much I am in love with him! It
never changed in the least, though I struggled, and struggled not to
think of him. I broke his picture and burned it;—and I would not
have a scrap of his handwriting;—I would not have near me anything
that he had even spoken of. But it was no good. I could not get away
from him for an hour. Now I shall never want to get away from him
again. As for Mr. Gilmore, it would have come to the same thing at
last, had I never heard another word from Walter Marrable. I could
not have done it."</p>
<p>"I suppose we must submit to it," said Aunt Sarah, after a pause.
This certainly was not the most exhilarating view which might have
been taken of the matter as far as Mary was concerned; but as it did
not suggest any open opposition to her scheme, and as there was no
refusal to see Walter when he should again appear at Uphill as her
lover, she made no complaint. Miss Marrable went on to inquire how
Sir Gregory would like these plans, which were so diametrically
opposed to his own. As to that, Mary could say nothing. No doubt
Walter would make a clean breast of it to Sir Gregory before he left
Dunripple, and would be able to tell them what had passed when he
came to Loring. Mary, however, did not forget to argue that the
ground on which Walter Marrable stood was his own ground. After the
death of two men, the youngest of whom was over seventy, the property
would be his property, and could not be taken from him. If Sir
Gregory chose to quarrel with him,—as to the probability of which,
Mary and her aunt professed very different opinions,—they must wait.
Waiting now would be very different from what it had been when their
prospects in life had not seemed to depend in any degree upon the
succession to the family property. "And I know myself better now than
I did then," said Mary. "Though it were to be for all my life, I
would wait."</p>
<p>On the Monday she got a letter from her cousin. It was very short,
and there was not a word in it about Sir Gregory or Edith Brownlow.
It only said that he was the happiest man in the world, and that he
would be at Loring on the following Saturday. He must return at once
to Birmingham, but would certainly be at Loring on Saturday. He had
written to his uncle to ask for hospitality. He did not suppose that
Parson John would refuse; but should this be the case, he would put
up at The Dragon. Mary might be quite sure that she would see him on
Saturday.</p>
<p>And on the Saturday he came. The parson had consented to receive him;
but, not thinking highly of the wisdom of the proposed visit, had
worded his letter rather coldly. But of that Walter in his present
circumstances thought but little. He was hardly within the house
before he had told his story. "You haven't heard, I suppose," he
said, "that Mary and I have made it up?"</p>
<p>"How made it up?"</p>
<p>"Well,—I mean that you shall make us man and wife some day."</p>
<p>"But I thought you were to marry Edith Brownlow."</p>
<p>"Who told you that, sir? I am sure Edith did not, nor yet her mother.
But I believe these sort of things are often settled without
consulting the principals."</p>
<p>"And what does my brother say?"</p>
<p>"Sir Gregory, you mean?"</p>
<p>"Of course I mean Sir Gregory. I don't suppose you'd ask your
father."</p>
<p>"I never had the slightest intention, sir, of asking either one or
the other. I don't suppose that I am to ask his leave to be married,
like a young girl; and it isn't likely that any objection on family
grounds could be made to such a woman as Mary Lowther."</p>
<p>"You needn't ask leave of any one, most noble Hector. That is a
matter of course. You can marry the cook-maid to-morrow, if you
please. But I thought you meant to live at Dunripple?"</p>
<p>"So I shall,—part of the year; if Sir Gregory likes it."</p>
<p>"And that you were to have an allowance and all that sort of thing.
Now, if you do marry the
<span class="nowrap">cook-maid—"</span></p>
<p>"I am not going to marry the cook-maid,—as you know very well."</p>
<p>"Or if you marry any one else in opposition to my brother's wishes, I
don't suppose it likely that he'll bestow that which he intended to
give as a reward to you for following his wishes."</p>
<p>"He can do as he pleases. The moment that it was settled I told him."</p>
<p>"And what did he say?"</p>
<p>"He complained of headache. Sir Gregory very often does complain of
headache. When I took leave of him, he said I should hear from him."</p>
<p>"Then it's all up with Dunripple for you,—as long as he lives. I've
no doubt that since poor Gregory's death your father's interest in
the property has been disposed of among the Jews to the last
farthing."</p>
<p>"I shouldn't wonder."</p>
<p>"And you are,—just where you were, my boy."</p>
<p>"That depends entirely upon Sir Gregory. You may be sure of this,
sir,—that I shall ask him for nothing. If the worst comes to the
worst, I can go to the Jews as well as my father. I won't, unless I
am driven."</p>
<p>He was with Mary, of course, that evening, walking again along the
banks of the Lurwell, as they had first done now nearly twelve months
since. Then the autumn had begun, and now the last of the summer
months was near its close. How very much had happened to her, or had
seemed to happen, during the interval. At that time she had thrice
declined Harry Gilmore's suit; but she had done so without any weight
on her own conscience. Her friends had wished her to marry the man,
and therefore she had been troubled; but the trouble had lain light
upon her, and as she looked back at it all, she felt that at that
time there had been something of triumph at her heart. A girl when
she is courted knows at any rate that she is thought worthy of
courtship, and in this instance she had been at least courted
worthily. Since then a whole world of trouble had come upon her from
that source. She had been driven hither and thither, first by love,
and then by a false idea of duty, till she had come almost to
shipwreck. And in her tossing she had gone against another barque
which, for aught she knew, might even yet go down from the effects of
the collision. She could not be all happy, even though she were again
leaning on Walter Marrable's arm, or again sitting with it round her
waist, beneath the shade of the trees on the banks of the Lurwell.</p>
<p>"Then we must wait, and this time we must be patient," she said, when
he told her of poor Sir Gregory's headache.</p>
<p>"I cannot ask him for anything," said Walter.</p>
<p>"Of course not. Do not ask anybody for anything,—but just wait. I
have quite made up my mind that forty-five for the gentleman, and
thirty-five for the lady, is quite time enough for marrying."</p>
<p>"The grapes are sour," said Walter.</p>
<p>"They are not sour at all, sir," said Mary.</p>
<p>"I was speaking of my own grapes, as I look at them when I use that
argument for my own comfort. The worst of it is that when we know
that the grapes are not sour,—that they are the sweetest grapes in
the world,—the argument is of no use. I won't tell any lies about
it, to myself or anybody else. I want my grapes at once."</p>
<p>"And so do I," said Mary, eagerly; "of course I do. I am not going to
make any pretence with you. Of course I want them at once. But I have
learned to know that they are precious enough to be worth the waiting
for. I made a fool of myself once; but I shall not do it again, let
Sir Gregory make himself ever so disagreeable."</p>
<p>This was all very pleasant for Captain Marrable. Ah, yes! what other
moment in a man's life is at all equal to that in which he is being
flattered to the top of his bent by the love of the woman he loves.
To be flattered by the love of a woman whom he does not love is
almost equally unpleasant,—if the man be anything of a man. But at
the present moment our Captain was supremely happy. His Thais was
telling him that he was indeed her king, and should he not take the
goods with which the gods provided him? To have been robbed of his
all by a father, and to have an uncle who would have a headache
instead of making settlements,—these indeed were drawbacks; but the
pleasure was so sweet that even such drawbacks as these could hardly
sully his bliss. "If you knew what your letter was to me!" she said,
as she leaned against his shoulder. His father and his uncle and all
the Marrables on the earth might do their worst, they could not rob
the present hour of its joy.</p>
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