<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></SPAN>CHAPTER V.</h2>
<h3>THE ARISTOCRACY OF WREXHILL.</h3>
<p>There was no longer any thing to prevent Charles Mowbray's return to
Oxford, and the following day the time of his departure was canvassed,
and at length fixed for the early part of the following week. During the
few days that intervened, Mrs. Mowbray seemed quite to have forgotten
their painful conversation respecting the will; she resumed all her
former confiding tenderness of manner, and told him before they parted,
that henceforward his liberal allowance would be doubled.</p>
<p>The day preceding his departure was Sunday, and for the first time since
their heavy loss the whole family appeared at church. They had all
dreaded the moment of reappearing before the eyes of the little village
world, and of thus giving public notice, as it were, that they no longer
required to be left to mourn in secret: but this painful ceremony came,
and was endured, like those that had preceded it; and poor Helen, as she
laid her head upon her pillow, exclaimed, "What is there that we could
not bear, and live."</p>
<p>The sad parting of the next morning having also passed over them, they
at once, and by necessity, fell into the mode of life which they were
hereafter to pursue. But dreary and heavy was the change that had fallen
on them, and it was long ere the mere act of assembling for their daily
meals ceased to be a source of suffering—for fearful was the blank left
by the absence of the kind, the gentle, the beloved, the venerated
being, whose voice was used to speak a blessing and a welcome over every
repast. But our natures seize with avidity the healing balm which time
and occupation offer: much variety of disposition was, however,
manifested in the manner in which each one of the family sought the
consolation they needed.</p>
<p>Mrs. Mowbray became evidently, though perhaps unconsciously, better both
in health and spirits from the time that her neighbours, according to
their different ranks, resumed their visits of friendship, civility, and
respect. She had testified outwardly, excepting to such an eye as
Rosalind's, more intense suffering than any other member of the family.
Nor was this in the smallest degree the result of affectation: she felt
all, and more than all, that she had ever expressed, and would gladly,
for the sake of her poor children, have concealed a part of it, had the
fibre of her character permitted her doing so. But she was demonstrative
by nature: with great softness and sweetness of temper, was joined that
species of weakness which is often said to be the most attractive
feature in the female character;—a weakness that induced her to seize
gladly and gratefully any hand extended to lead her, and which, while it
made her distrust herself, gave most sovereign sway and masterdom to
any one ready and willing to supply the strength and decision of purpose
which she wanted.</p>
<p>Many female philippics have been penned, I believe, against that manly
passion for superiority which leads our masters to covet in a companion
chosen for life the temper of mind here described; but I am tempted to
think that this longing to possess a being that wants protection, far
from demonstrating a disposition prone to tyranny, shows a nature
disposed to love and to cherish, in a manner perfectly accordant to the
most perfect <i>beau id�al</i> of married life. But, on the other hand, there
may perhaps be more of fondness than judgment in those who make such
mallability of mind their first requisite in a choice so awfully
important.</p>
<p>Mrs. Mowbray, however, had a thousand good qualities to justify the
devoted affection of her husband. Generous, unsuspicious, and confiding,
she was almost as incapable of doubting the goodness of others, as of
deserving such doubts herself. Though heiress to immense property, no
feeling in the slightest degree approaching to pride had even for a
single instant swelled her heart; and though good, beautiful, and
accomplished, her estimate of herself was lower than that formed of her
by any other human being. Her heart was now more than ever opened to
every expression of sympathy and kindness, and she experienced the most
salutary effects from admitting those who uttered such, yet she was
still a mourner in her very heart and soul; and there were moments in
which she felt so bitterly that all her youthful affections were buried,
and every hope of earthly happiness past, that the fair young faces of
the three affectionate girls who were ready to devote themselves to her
seemed too bright and beautiful to be kept within the influence of her
melancholy, and she often sent them from her to their music-room, their
flower-gardens, or the Park, with a sort of feverish anxiety, lest their
youth and health should be sacrificed to their affection for her.</p>
<p>Helen had all the tenderness with none of the weakness of her mother's
character. She soon ceased to speak of her father, except occasionally,
when walking or sitting quite alone with Rosalind, when sheltering
boughs or thickening twilight might conceal the working features of her
face even from her. At such a moment, if some kind caress from her young
companion touched unawares the feelings over which she unceasingly kept
guard, as if they were a secret treasure too precious to be exposed to
vulgar eyes, she would from time to time give way to the sacred pleasure
of discoursing on the character of the father she had lost.</p>
<p>But she had resumed all her former occupations, and added to them the
far from unpleasing task of imparting to Rosalind much that had either
been ill taught or altogether neglected in her early education. This, as
well as their daily-increasing affection for each other, kept them much
together, without any blameable desertion either of Mrs. Mowbray or
Fanny: for the former was really wretched if she thought they confined
themselves too much to her drawing-room and herself; and the latter was
hourly becoming more devoted to solitary study, and to speculations too
poetical and sublime to be shared by any one less romantic and
imaginative than herself.</p>
<p>The neighbourhood was not a large one: Mowbray Park, and the estate
attached to it, stretched itself so far in all directions, that Oakley,
the residence of Sir Gilbert Harrington, the nearest landed proprietor,
was at the distance of more than a mile. The little village of Wrexhill,
however, had one or two pretty houses in it, inhabited by ladies and
gentlemen of moderate but independent fortune, with whom the family at
the Park associated on terms of intimacy.</p>
<p>Among these, the late Vicar and his family had been the decided
favourites of the whole race of Mowbrays,—and most deservedly so; for
the father was a man of piety, learning, and most amiable deportment;
his wife, a being whose temper, to say nothing of sundry other good
qualities, had made her the idol of the whole parish; and his two sons
and two daughters, just such sons and daughters as such parents deserved
to have. But, as Gregory Dobbs, the old parish clerk, observed, after
officiating at the funeral of Mr. Mowbray, "Death seemed to have taken a
spite against the village of Wrexhill, for within one short month he had
mowed down and swept away the two best and <i>most powerful</i> men in the
parish, and 'twas no easy matter to say how long the inhabitants might
be likely to wear mourning."</p>
<p>The dispersion and departure of the good Vicar's family was an
additional misfortune that his parishioners had not looked for. The
living, more valuable for its pleasant house and pretty glebe than for
its revenue, was in the gift of one who through life had been, not in
appearance or profession only, but in most true sincerity, the attached
friend of the late incumbent; and Edward Wallace, his eldest son, was
bred to the church with the express understanding that the next
presentation should be his. With this persuasion, the young man's first
act on the death of his father was to tell his mother and sisters that
they should continue to inhabit the home they had so long loved. But
this arrangement was speedily overthrown; for in reply to the letter
which announced the death of his father to Sir J. C. Blackhouse, the
patron of the living, he received the following answer:</p>
<blockquote><p>"My dear Fellow,</p>
<p>"As the devil would have it, I am now a cabinet minister, and I
no more dare give the living to your Tory father's son, than I
dare blow up Westminster Hall, or pull the Lord Chancellor's
nose in public. I do assure you I am very sorry for this, for I
believe you are likely to be as good a man as your excellent
father, who, when he was my tutor, had certainly no notion that
I should turn out such a first-rate Radical. However, there is
no resisting destiny; and so here I am, just going to give my
pretty little living to some Reverend Mr. Somebody that I don't
care a straw about, because my Lord M—— says, that though a
bit of a saint, he is a <i>capital clerical Whig</i>. I wish,
Edward, you'd try to forget all the fusty old nonsense about
Church and State,—upon my life I do. By-gones are by-gones, my
dear fellow; and if you could get up a clever pamphlet on the
Tithe Laws, or on the Protestant affinities to the Church of
Rome, or anything else with a good rich vein of whiggery
running through it, I really think I might still be able to do
something for you. Do think of this, and believe me,</p>
<p>"My dear fellow,</p>
<p>"Very affectionately,</p>
<p>"Your friend,</p>
<p>"<span class="smcap">J. C. Blackhouse</span>."</p>
</blockquote>
<p>This most unlooked-for disappointment of course banished the Wallace
family from Wrexhill; and the regret their departure left was so
general, that it would be hardly saying too much to declare that no
interference of the Whig government, however personal or tyrannical,
ever produced a stronger sensation of disgust in the circle to which its
influence extended than this.</p>
<p>It was greatly owing to the influence of Mr. Mowbray, that Mr.
Cartwright, his son and daughter, were visited by the neighbourhood on
their arrival; but the obvious injustice and impropriety of treating
with indignity and disrespect the clergyman who was placed among them,
solely because they would have preferred one of their own choosing, had
led the benevolent owner of "the great house" to banish the painful
feelings to which this unpopular appointment had given rise, and before
he died, he had the satisfaction of knowing that those who looked up to
him as authority had followed his example, and that the new Vicar had
been called upon by all the visiting families of Wrexhill.</p>
<p>The handsomest house in the village was inhabited by a widow lady still
young enough to be called handsome, and living with sufficient show to
be supposed rich. She played a little, sang a little, sketched a little,
and talked and dressed a great deal. Some people declared that when she
was young, her complexion must have been as beautiful as that of Miss
Fanny Mowbray: but these were only the young farmers, who did not know
rouge when they saw it. This lady, whose name was Simpson, had one
little girl, a pretty little creature of eight years old, who was
sometimes petted and played with till she was completely spoiled, and
sometimes left in the nursery for days together, while her mamma was
absorbed in the perusal of a new novel or the fabrication of a new
dress.</p>
<p>At the next turn of the village street was the entrance to a little
place of much less pretension, but infinitely prettier, and in better
taste: this also was tenanted by a fair widow, who, had she not been
surrounded by three daughters, all taller than herself, might have
passed for being as young and as handsome as Mrs. Simpson. She was,
however, as little like her as possible in every other respect, being
subject to no caprice, remarkably simple in her dress, and her hair and
her cheeks always remaining of the colour that pleased God. This lady
had been early left a widow by the gallant and unfortunate Colonel
Richards, who lost a life in a skirmish with the native troops of India
which might have done honour to his country in a nobler field. What his
young widow endured in returning from a remote part of the country to
Madras, with her three infants and very little means, had doubtless
contributed, with the good gifts born with her, to make her what she
was; for there was a firmness and strength of mind enveloped in her
miniature frame, which seemed as if her brave husband had bequeathed to
her the legacy of his dauntless spirit to sustain her under all the
privations and misery his early death left her to encounter alone.</p>
<p>The character of her three girls will be easily understood hereafter.</p>
<p>Mrs. Richards's cottage was the only residence in Wrexhill except the
Vicar's that did not open upon the village street, so that she had no
immediate neighbour; but close to the corner of the pretty field that
fronted her dwelling and fed her cow, lived a bachelor half-pay officer,
who among many other excellent qualities possessed one which made him
pre-eminently interesting in her eyes:—he had known Colonel Richards
well, and less than half the reverence he felt for his memory has often
sufficed to enrich the church of Rome with a saint. It was not Major
Dalrymple's fault if the widow of his umqwhile commanding officer had
not long ago exchanged her comparative poverty for his very comfortable
independence; and considering that he was five years younger than the
lady, was the presumptive heir to a noble Scotch cousin who was thought
consumptive, played the flute exquisitely, and was moreover a tall and
gentlemanly figure, with no other fault imputed to him than a somewhat
obstinate pertinacity of attachment to herself, many people both in and
out of Wrexhill wondered at her obduracy, especially as she had never
been heard to say, even by her most intimate friends, "that her heart
was buried in the grave of her dear Richards."</p>
<p>The remaining aristocracy of Wrexhill need hardly be enumerated, as they
will not make any very considerable figure in the following pages. But
there was an attorney, an apothecary, and a schoolmaster. The latter,
indeed, was an excellent person, of whom we may hear more in the sequel;
but a <i>catalogue raisonn�</i> of names makes but a dull chapter.</p>
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