<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
<h3>THE FIRST IMPRESSIONS MADE BY MR. CARTWRIGHT.—LETTER FROM LADY HARRINGTON.</h3>
<p>The three girls rallied round Mrs. Mowbray as soon as the guests had
departed, all kindly anxious to see how she bore this first step back
into a world so wholly changed for her.</p>
<p>She looked pale, and there was an air of languor and weariness about
her: nevertheless, to the great surprise of Helen, she expressed herself
much pleased by the visit:</p>
<p>"Mr. Cartwright," said she, "appears to me to be one of the most amiable
men I ever saw; every tone of his voice speaks kindness, and indeed, if
he did not speak at all, one look of his has more feeling and pity in it
than other people could express by a volume of words."</p>
<p>"Do you really think so, mamma?" said Helen eagerly, but suddenly
stopped herself, aware that in truth she had no grounds whatever for the
strong feeling of dislike towards him of which she was conscious. She
remembered, too, that her father had expressed himself greatly pleased
by the urbanity of his manners, and that the last act of the benign
influence he was wont to exercise on those around him had been to
conquer the prejudice against him, to which the exclusion of the Wallace
family had unjustly given rise. Helen remembered all this in a moment;
the colour mounted to her cheeks, and she was silent.</p>
<p>Rosalind, too, was silent, at least from words; but her eyes could speak
as many volumes at a glance as Mr. Cartwright's, and she fixed them for
an instant on Helen with a look that told her plainly her prejudices
against their new neighbour, however unreasonable, were fully shared by
her.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Fanny had thrown her arms round her mother's neck in a sort of
rapture at hearing her own opinions confirmed by such authority. "Oh,
how true that is, dearest mamma!" she exclaimed; "how exactly I feel the
same when he speaks to me!... Such goodness, such gentleness, so much
superiority, yet so much humility! Poor dear Mr. Wallace was an
excellent good man, certainly, but no more to be compared to Mr.
Cartwright than I to Hercules!"</p>
<p>"How many times have you seen Mr. Cartwright, Fanny?" said Rosalind.</p>
<p>"I have heard him preach three times," she replied, "and they were all
the most beautiful sermons in the world; and I have seen and spoken to
him four times more."</p>
<p>"Poor Mr. Wallace!" said Rosalind. "It was he who christened you, Fanny;
and from that time to the hour of his death, you seldom passed many days
together, I believe, without seeing and receiving affectionate words and
kind looks from him: and yet four times speaking to this gentle
gentleman has driven the memory of the poor old man from your heart!"</p>
<p>"No, it has not, Rosalind," replied Fanny, deeply blushing: "I am sure I
did not say that, did I, mamma?—But my loving and remembering Mr.
Wallace all the days of my life need not make me dislike everybody else,
I suppose?"</p>
<p>"It would be a great misfortune to you if it did, Fanny," said Mrs.
Mowbray. "I am delighted to see, both in you and many others, that the
violent and most unjustifiable prejudice which was conceived against Mr.
Cartwright before he was seen and known, is giving way before his
amiable and excellent qualities: I have no doubt that he will soon be
quite as popular in the parish as Mr. Wallace was."</p>
<p>"And Miss Cartwright, mamma?" said Helen; "do you think we shall love
her as well as we did Emma Wallace?"</p>
<p>"I know nothing whatever of Miss Cartwright as yet, Helen; she appears
very shy, but we must try to give her courage, my dear girls. I hope we
shall be on terms of as great intimacy with our new Clergyman as with
our former one: it was a sort of association that your dear father
particularly approved, and that alone is a sufficient reason for our
wishing to cultivate it."</p>
<p>This allusion was too solemn to admit any light conversation to follow
it. Mrs. Mowbray strolled with Fanny into the conservatory, and Rosalind
persuaded Helen that they should find the shrubberies infinitely cooler
and more agreeable than the house.</p>
<p>But even under the thickest cover that the grounds could offer, Helen
could not be tempted fully to open her heart upon the subject of Mr.
Cartwright, an indulgence which Rosalind certainly expected to obtain
when she proposed the walk; but the name of her father had acted like a
spell on Helen, and all that she could be brought positively to advance
on the subject of the Cartwright family was, that she did not think Miss
Cartwright was shy.</p>
<p>Within the next fortnight nearly every one who claimed a visiting
acquaintance with the Mowbray family, both in the village and the
neighbourhood round it, had called at the Park.</p>
<p>"All the calling is over now," said Helen, "and I am very glad of it."</p>
<p>"Every body has been very kind and attentive," replied her mother, "and
next week we must begin to return their calls. I hope nobody will be
offended, for some of them must be left for many days; the weather is
very hot, and the horses must not be overworked."</p>
<p>"I wonder why that charming little person that I fell in love with—the
widow, I mean, that lives in the Cottage at Wrexhill," said
Rosalind,—"I wonder she has not been to see you! She appeared to like
you all very much."</p>
<p>"I have thought of that two or three times," replied Helen. "I think, if
they had any of them been ill, we should have heard it; and yet
otherwise I cannot account for such inattention."</p>
<p>"It is merely accidental, I am sure," said Mrs. Mowbray. "But there is
one omission, Helen, that cuts me to the heart!" Tears burst from her
eyes as she spoke.</p>
<p>Poor Helen knew not how to answer: she was well aware that the omission
her mother alluded to was that of Sir Gilbert and Lady Harrington; and
she knew too the cause of it. Lady Harrington, who, with one of the best
hearts in the world, was sometimes rather blunt in her manner of showing
it, had sent over a groom with a letter to Helen, her god-daughter and
especial favourite, very fully explaining the cause of their not
calling, but in a manner that could in no degree enable her to remove
her mother's uneasiness respecting it. This letter, which by her
ladyship's especial orders was delivered privately into the hands of
Helen, ran thus:</p>
<blockquote><p>"My darling Child!</p>
<p>"Can't you think what a way I must be in at being prevented
coming to see you? Sir Gilbert excels himself this time for
obstinacy and wilfulness. Every breakfast, every dinner, and
every tea since it happened, William and I do nothing but beg
and entreat that I may be permitted to go over and see your
poor mother! Good gracious! as I tell him, it is not her
fault—though God knows I do think just as much as he does,
that no man ever did make such a tom-fool of a will as your
father. Such a man as Charles! as Sir Gilbert says. 'Twas made
at the full of the moon, my dear, and that's the long and the
short of it; he was just mad, Helen, and nothing else. But is
that any reason that your poor dear mother should be neglected
and forsaken this way! God bless her dear soul! she's more like
a baby than any thing I ever saw, about money; and as to her
being an heiress, why I don't believe, upon my honour, that she
has ever recollected it from the day she married to the time
that your unlucky, poor dear distracted madman of a father
threw all her money back at her in this wild way. He had much
better have pelted her with rotten eggs, Helen! Such a friend
as Sir Gilbert, so warm-hearted, so steady, and so true, is not
to be found every day—old tiger as he is. But what on earth am
I to do about it? I shall certainly go mad too, if I can't get
at you; and yet, I give you my word, I no more dare order the
coachman to drive me to Mowbray Park than to the devil. You
never saw such a tyrannical brute of a husband as Sir Gilbert
is making himself about it! And poor William, too—he really
speaks to him as if he were a little beggar-boy in the streets,
instead of a colonel of dragoons. William said last night
something very like, 'I shall ride over to Wrexhill to-morrow,
and perhaps I shall see the family at Mow....' I wish you had
seen him—I only wish you had seen Sir Gilbert, Helen, for half
a moment!—you would never have forgotten it, my dear, and it
might have given you a hint as to choosing a husband. Never
marry a man with great, wide, open, light-coloured eyes, and
enormous black eyebrows, for fear he should swallow you alive
some day before you know where you are. 'See them! 'roared Sir
Gilbert. 'If you do, by G—d, sir, I'll leave every sou I have
in the world to some cursed old woman myself; but it shan't be
to you, madam,' turning short round as if he would bite
me:—'laugh if you will, but go to Mowbray if you dare!'</p>
<p>"'But are we never to see any of the family again, sir?' said
the colonel very meekly. 'I never told you so, Colonel Booby,'
was the reply. 'You may see that glorious fellow Charles as
often as you will, and the more you see of him the better; and
I'll manage if I can, as soon as he has taken this degree that
his heart's set upon, to get a commission for him in your
regiment; so you need not palaver about my wanting to part you
from him. And as for you, my lady, I give you full leave to
kidnap the poor destitute, penniless girls if you can; but if I
ever catch you doing any thing that can be construed into
respect or civility to that sly, artful hussy who cajoled my
poor friend Mowbray to make that cursed will, may I.... You
shall see, old lady, what will come of it!'</p>
<p>"Now what on earth can I do, dear darling? I believe your
mother's as innocent of cajoling as I am, and that's saying
something; and as for your being destitute, sweethearts, you'll
have fifty thousand pounds apiece if you've a farthing. I know
all about the property, and so does Sir Gilbert too; only the
old tiger pretends to believe, just to feed his rage, that your
mother will marry her footman, and bequeath her money to all
the little footboys and girls that may ensue: for one principal
cause of his vengeance against your poor mother is, that she is
still young enough to have children. Was there ever such a
man!—But here have I, according to custom, scribbled my paper
as full as it will hold, and yet have got a hundred thousand
more things to say; but it would all come to this, if I were to
scrawl over a ream. I am miserable because I can't come to see
your mother and you, and yet I can't help myself any more than
if I were shut up in Bridewell: for I never did do any thing
that my abominable old husband desired me not to do, and I
don't think I could do it even to please you, my pretty Helen;
only don't fancy I have forgotten you: but for God's sake don't
write to me! I am quite sure I should get my ears boxed.</p>
<p>"Believe me, darling child,</p>
<p>"Your loving friend and godmother,</p>
<p>"<span class="smcap">Jane Matilda Harrington</span>."</p>
<p>"P. S. I am quite sure that the colonel would send pretty
messages if he knew what I was about: but I will not make him a
party in my sin. I was just going to tell him this morning; but
my conscience smote me, and I turned very sublimely away,
muttering, in the words of Macbeth—'Be innocent of this, my
dearest chuck!'"</p>
</blockquote>
<p>This coarse but well-meaning letter gave inexpressible pain to Helen.
She dared not show it to her mother, who, she felt quite sure, would
consider the unjust suspicions of Sir Gilbert as the most cruel insult:
not could she, after Lady Harrington's prohibition, attempt to answer
it, though she greatly wished to do it, in the hope that she might be
able to place her mother's conduct and feelings in a proper light. But
she well knew that, with all her friend's rhodomontade, she was most
devotedly attached to her excellent though hot-headed husband, and that
she could not disoblige her more than by betraying a secret which, under
the present circumstances, would certainly make him very angry.</p>
<p>But the sight of her mother's tears, and her utter inability to say any
thing that might console her very just sorrow, inspired Helen with a
bold device. To Rosalind only had she shown Lady Harrington's letter,
and to Rosalind only did she communicate her project of boldly writing
to the enraged baronet himself.</p>
<p>"Do so, Helen," said Rosalind promptly: "it is the only measure to
pursue—unless indeed you and I were to set off and surprise him by a
visit."</p>
<p>"But my mother?..." replied Helen, evidently struck by the advantages of
this bolder scheme over her own,—"what would my mother say to our
going?"</p>
<p>"If she knew of it, Helen, I suspect it would lose all favour in Sir
Gilbert's eyes, and you would have no chance whatever of softening his
rage towards her. The expedition, if undertaken at all, must be a secret
one. When he learns it is so, I think it will touch his tough heart,
Helen, for he knows, I fancy, that such escapades are not at all in your
line. I only hope that he will not find out that I proposed it, as that
might lessen your merit in his eyes."</p>
<p>"No, no, that would do no harm. My doing it would be quite proof enough
how near this matter is to my heart."</p>
<p>"Well, then, Helen, shall we go?"</p>
<p>"Let me sleep upon it, Rosalind. If we do go, it must, I think, be quite
early in the morning, so as to have no questions asked before we set
out. It is not a long walk. Shall we see if he will give us some
breakfast?"</p>
<p>"A most diplomatic project!" replied Rosalind; "for it will enlist his
hospitality on our side, and ten to one but the rough coating of his
heart will thaw and resolve itself into a dew, as Fanny would say, by
the mere act of administering coffee and hot cakes to us; and then the
field is won."</p>
<p>"I think we will try," said Helen, smiling with a sort of inward
strengthening, from the conviction that such would very probably be the
result.</p>
<p>A few more words settled the exact time and manner of the expedition,
and the friends parted to dress for dinner.</p>
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