<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
<h3>AN INTERVIEW.—THE LIME TREE.—ROSALIND'S LETTER TO MR. MOWBRAY.</h3>
<p>At about eleven o'clock the following morning, Miss Torrington was
informed that Mr. Cartwright requested to speak to her for a few minutes
in the drawing-room. Henrietta was with her when the message was
delivered, and seemed to await her reply with some curiosity.</p>
<p>"I will wait upon him immediately," was the civil and ready answer; and
as Rosalind gave it, and at the same moment rose from her chair to obey
the summons, she looked in the face of her companion to see if there
were any wish expressed there that the silence so strictly enjoined
should be broken. But Miss Cartwright was occupied by a volume of
engravings which lay before her, and Rosalind left the room without
having met her eye.</p>
<p>It is impossible to imagine a demeanour or address more perfectly
gentlemanlike and respectful than those of Mr. Cartwright as he walked
across the room to receive Miss Torrington. Strong as her feelings were
against him, this still produced some effect; and as she seated herself,
and motioned to him to do the same, her mental soliloquy amounted to
this:—"At any rate, I will listen patiently to what he has to say."</p>
<p>"I have taken the liberty of requesting to speak to you, Miss
Torrington, because I feel persuaded that my conduct and principles have
from some accident been misunderstood; and I cannot but hope that it
may be in my power to explain them, so as in some degree to remove the
prejudice which I fear you have conceived against me."</p>
<p>"It is my duty, sir, both as a matter of courtesy and justice, to hear
whatever you wish to say in justification or excuse of the scene I
witnessed yesterday morning. Miss Fanny Mowbray is not yet recovered
from the effects of the agitation into which she was thrown by it; and I
have no objection, Mr. Cartwright, to repeat to you in person my fixed
determination not to continue in the house if that scene be repeated."</p>
<p>"It is impossible," replied Mr. Cartwright "to find a lady of your age
so steadfast in adhering to what she believes to be right, without
feeling both admiration and respect for her; and I should think—forgive
me if I wound you—I should think that such an one cannot altogether
condemn the offering of prayer and thanksgiving?"</p>
<p>"Mr. Cartwright," replied Rosalind, her colour rising, and her voice
expressive of great agitation, "you talk of having been misunderstood;
but it is I, sir, who have reason to make this complaint. From which of
my words, either written or spoken, do you presume to infer that I
contemn the offering of prayer and thanksgiving?"</p>
<p>"I beseech you to bear with me patiently," said Mr. Cartwright with a
look and tone of the most touching mildness; "and be assured that by
doing so, we shall not only be more likely to make ourselves mutually
understood, but finally to arrive at that truth which, I am willing to
believe, is equally the object of both. And the theme, my dear young
lady, on which we speak should never be alluded to,—at least, I think
not,—with any mixture of temper."</p>
<p>Poor Rosalind! Honest as her vehemence was, she felt that she had been
wrong to show it, and with an effort that did her honour she contrived
to say "You are quite right, sir. As far as manner is concerned, you
have greatly the advantage of me by your self-possession and calmness.
Herein I will endeavour to imitate you, and assure you, with a <i>sang
froid</i> as perfect as your own, that I consider the offering of prayer
and thanksgiving as the first duty of a Christian. It is in consequence
of the reverence in which I hold this sacred duty, that I shrink from
seeing it performed irreverently. I have been taught to believe, sir,
that the deepest learning, the most deliberative wisdom, and the most
grave and solemn meditation given to the subject by the fathers and
founders of our church, were not too much to bestow on the sublime and
awful attempt to address ourselves suitably to God in prayer. Prayers so
framed, and fitted for every exigency that human nature can know, have
been prepared for us with equal piety and wisdom; and while such exist,
I will never join in any crude, unweighed, unauthorised jargon addressed
to the Deity, however vehement the assumption of piety may be in the
bold man who uses it."</p>
<p>"It is seldom that so young a lady," replied the vicar with a kind and
gentle smile, "can have found time to give this important question so
much attention as you appear to have done. Yet, perhaps,—yet, perhaps,
Miss Torrington, when a few years more of deep consideration have been
given by you to the subject, you may be led to think that fervour of
feeling may more than atone for imperfection in expression."</p>
<p>"If you imagine, sir," replied Rosalind, in a voice as tranquil and
deliberate as his own, "that I have dared to regulate my conduct and
opinions on such a point as this by any wisdom of my own, you do me
great injustice. Such conduct, if general, would make as many churches
upon earth as there are audacious spirits who reject control. My father,
Mr. Cartwright, was one whose life was passed in the situation which,
perhaps, beyond all others in the world, taught him the value of the
establishment to which he belonged. To those of another and an adverse
faith he was a kind friend and generous benefactor; but he could not be
insensible, nor did he leave me so, of the superior purity and moral
efficacy of his own;—and I hope not to live long enough to forget the
reverence which he has left impressed upon my mind for all that our
church holds sacred."</p>
<p>"Not for worlds, my excellent young lady," exclaimed Mr. Cartwright with
warmth, "would I attempt to shake opinions so evidently sustained by a
sense of duty! Respect for such will assuredly prevent my again
attempting to perform the office which offended your opinions this
morning, as long as you continue, what you certainly ought to be at this
time, the mistress of this family. I will only ask, Miss Torrington, in
return for the sincere veneration I feel for your conscientious
scruples, that you will judge me with equal candour, and will believe
that however we may differ in judgment, I am not less anxious to be
right than yourself."</p>
<p>Rosalind answered this appeal by a silent bow.</p>
<p>"May I, then, hope that we are friends?" said he, rising and presenting
his hand; "and that I may venture to call, as I promised Mrs. Mowbray I
would do, on yourself, Miss Fanny, and my daughter, without driving you
from the house?"</p>
<p>"Certainly, sir," was Rosalind's cold reply. The request appeared as
reasonable in itself as it was politely and respectfully made, and to
refuse it would have been equally churlish, presumptuous and unjust.
Nevertheless, there was something at the bottom of her heart that
revolted against the act of shaking hands with him; and feigning to be
occupied by arranging some flowers on the table, she suffered the
offered hand to remain extended, till at length its patient owner
withdrew it.</p>
<p>Though well pleased that her remonstrance had put a stop to the vicar's
extempore prayings at the house, Rosalind was not altogether satisfied
by the result of the interview. "We are still upon infinitely too civil
terms," thought she: "but I see that just at present it would be an
Herculean labour to quarrel with him:—if I smite him on one cheek, he
will turn himself about as unresistingly as a sucking pig upon the spit,
and submit to be basted all round without uttering a single squeak. But
when Mrs. Mowbray returns I suspect that it will be my turn to be
basted:—<i>n'importe</i>—I am sure I have done no more than my father would
have thought right."</p>
<p>With this consolation she returned to her dressing-room and applied
herself to her usual occupations. Henrietta was no longer there; but as
the fashion of the house was for every one to find employment and
amusement for themselves during the morning, she did not think it
necessary to pursue her in order to prove her wish to be agreeable.</p>
<p>At luncheon the three young ladies met as usual in the dining-room:
Fanny appeared to have recovered her spirits and good-humour, and
Henrietta seemed to wish to be more conversable than usual. They then
strolled into the gardens, visited the hothouses, and finally placed
themselves in a shady and fragrant bower, where they discoursed of
poetry and music for an hour or two.</p>
<p>When these subjects seemed to be wellnigh exhausted, Miss Cartwright
rose and slowly walked towards the house without intimating to her
companions what it was her purpose to do next.</p>
<p>Rosalind and Fanny being thus left t�te-�-t�te, the former said, "What
do you think of our new acquaintance, Fanny?—How do you like Miss
Cartwright?"</p>
<p>"I do not think she seems at all an amiable girl," replied Fanny. "With
such advantages as she has, it is quite astonishing that her manners are
so little agreeable."</p>
<p>"She is not remarkably conversable, certainly," said Rosalind; "but I
suspect that she has very bad health. How dreadfully sallow she is!"</p>
<p>"I suspect that she has a worse infirmity than bad health," answered
Fanny;—"she has, I fear, an extremely bad temper."</p>
<p>"She has not a violent temper, at any rate," observed Rosalind; "for I
never remember to have seen any one who gave me a greater idea of being
subdued and spirit-broken."</p>
<p>"That is not at all the impression she makes upon me," said Fanny: "I
should call her rather sullen than gentle, and obstinate instead of
subdued. But this gossiping is sad idle work, Rosalind: as Miss
Henrietta has fortunately taken herself off, I may go on with what I was
doing before luncheon."</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>Late in the evening, Mr. Cartwright and his son Jacob paid the young
ladies a visit. The vicar's conversation was chiefly addressed to Miss
Torrington; and if she had never seen him before, she must have agreed
with Fanny in thinking him one of the most agreeable persons in the
world—for he spoke fluently and well upon every subject, and with a
person and voice calculated to please every eye and every ear. There
were probably, indeed, but few who could retain as steady a dislike to
him as our Rosalind did.</p>
<p>The young man got hold of a purse that Fanny was netting, and did his
best to entangle her silks; but his chief amusement was derived from
attempts to quiz and plague his sister, who treated him much as a large
and powerful dog does a little one,—enduring his gambols and annoying
tricks with imperturbable patience for a while, and then suddenly
putting forth a heavy paw and driving him off in an instant.</p>
<p>The following day passed very nearly in the same manner, excepting that
the three girls separated immediately after breakfast, and did not meet
again till luncheon-time. On the third, Fanny was the first to leave the
breakfast-room; and Miss Cartwright and Rosalind being left together,
the former said,</p>
<p>"I suppose we owe our repose from morning and evening ranting to you,
Miss Torrington?"</p>
<p>"I certainly did not approve it, Miss Cartwright, and I took the liberty
of telling your father so."</p>
<p>"You were undoubtedly very right and very wise, and I dare say you feel
some inward satisfaction at your success. Mr. Cartwright has really
shown great deference to your opinion by so immediately abandoning, at
your request, so very favourite an occupation."</p>
<p>Rosalind was about to reply, when Miss Cartwright changed the
conversation by abruptly saying,</p>
<p>"Will you take a stroll with me this morning, Miss Torrington?"</p>
<p>"Yes, certainly, if you wish it;—but I think we shall find it very
warm."</p>
<p>"Oh! no. I will lead you a very nice shady walk to the prettiest and
most sheltered little thicket in the world. Let us put on our bonnets
directly;—shall we?"</p>
<p>"I will not delay you a moment," said Rosalind. "Shall I ask Fanny to go
with us?"</p>
<p>"Why no," replied Miss Cartwright; "I think you had better not;—the
chances are ten to one against her finding it convenient. You know she
is so fond of solitary study——"</p>
<p>"I believe you are right," said Rosalind; and the young ladies parted,
to meet again a few minutes after, with bonnets and parasols, at the
hall-door.</p>
<p>"And which way are we to go to find this welcome shade?" said Rosalind,
holding her parasol low down to shelter her pretty face. "The sun is
almost intolerable."</p>
<p>"This way," said Henrietta, turning aside from the drive in a direction
which soon brought them to a thickly-planted ride that surrounded the
Park. "We shall find it delightful here."</p>
<p>It was an hour which, in the month of July, few ladies would choose for
walking; but Miss Torrington politely exerted herself to converse,
though she secretly longed to be lying silent and alone on the sofa in
her own dressing-room, with no greater exertion than was necessary for
the perusal of—</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">"The dear pages of some new romance."<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>Henrietta, however, only answered her dryly and shortly, and presently
said,</p>
<p>"I should be really very much obliged to you, Miss Torrington, if you
would not speak to me any more. Just listen to the blackbirds, will
you?—depend upon it we can neither of us express ourselves one half so
well as they do."</p>
<p>Rosalind willingly submitted to this request; and the young ladies
walked onward, producing no other sound than the occasional brushing of
their dresses against the underwood, which at every step became thicker,
rendering the path almost too narrow for two to walk abreast.</p>
<p>"Now, let us just turn down through this little opening," said Henrietta
in a whisper; "and pray do not speak to me."</p>
<p>Rosalind, who began to believe that she must have some meaning for her
strange manner of proceeding, followed her in perfect silence; and they
had not gone far into the intricacies of the tangled copse, before she
heard the sound of a human voice at no great distance from her.
Henrietta, who was in advance, turned round and laid her finger on her
lips. The caution was not needed: Rosalind had already recognised the
tones of Mr. Cartwright, and a few more silent steps brought them to a
spot thickly surrounded on all sides, but from whence they could look
out upon a small and beautiful opening, in the centre of which a
majestic lime-tree stretched its arms in all directions over the soft
green turf.</p>
<p>Rosalind instantly recognised the spot as one frequently resorted to in
their evening rambles, for the sake of its cool and secluded beauty, and
also because a bench, divided into commodious stalls, surrounded the
capacious tree, from whence opened a vista commanding a charming view
across the Park.</p>
<p>On the turf before this bench, and with their backs turned towards the
spot where Rosalind and Henrietta stood, knelt Mr. Cartwright and Fanny.
His eyes were fixed upon her with passionate admiration, and the first
words they distinctly heard were these, spoken with great vehemence by
the vicar:—</p>
<p>"Persecuted—trampled on—turned forth from every other roof, let thy
blue vault spread over us, and while I struggle to snatch this precious
brand from the eternal fire of thy wrath, pour upon our heads the dew of
thy love! Grant me power to save this one dear soul alive, though it
should seem good in thy sight that millions should perish around her!
Save her from the eternal flame that even now rises to lick her feet,
and if not stayed by prayer—the prayer of thy saints,—will speedily
envelope and consume her!"</p>
<p>Rosalind remained to hear no more. Heartsick, indignant, disgusted, and
almost terrified by what she saw and heard, she retreated hastily, and,
followed by Henrietta, rapidly pursued her way to the house.</p>
<p>Her companion made an effort to overtake her, and, almost out of breath
by an exertion to which she was hardly equal, she said,</p>
<p>"I have shown you this, Miss Torrington, for the sake of giving you a
useful lesson. If you are wise, you will profit by it, and learn to know
that it is not always safe to suppose you have produced an effect,
merely because it may be worth some one's while to persuade you into
believing it. Having said thus much to point the moral of our walk in
the sun, you may go your way, and I will go mine. I shall not enter upon
any more elaborate exposition of Mr. Cartwright's character."</p>
<p>So saying, she fell back among the bushes, and Rosalind reached the
house alone.</p>
<p>On entering her dressing-room, Miss Torrington sat herself down, with
her eau de Cologne bottle in one hand and a large feather fan in the
other, to meditate—coolly, if she could, but at any rate to
meditate—upon what she ought to do in order immediately to put a stop
to the very objectionable influence which Mr. Cartwright appeared to
exercise over the mind of Fanny.</p>
<p>Had she been aware of Sir Gilbert Harrington's having written to recall
his refusal of the executorship, she would immediately have had recourse
to him; but this fact had never transpired beyond Mrs. Mowbray and the
vicar; and the idea that he had resisted the representation which she
felt sure his son had made to him after the conversation Helen and
herself had held with him, not only made her too angry to attempt any
farther to soften him, but naturally impressed her with the belief that,
do or say what she would on the subject, it must be in vain.</p>
<p>At length it struck her that Charles Mowbray was the most proper person
to whom she could address herself; yet the writing such a letter as
might immediately bring him home, was a measure which, under all
existing circumstances, she felt to be awkward and disagreeable. But the
more she meditated the more she felt convinced, that, notwithstanding
the obvious objections to it, this was the safest course she could
pursue: so having once made up her mind upon the subject, she set about
it without farther delay, and, with the straightforward frankness and
sincerity of her character, produced the following epistle:—</p>
<blockquote><p>"Dear Mr. Mowbray,</p>
<p>"Your last letter to Helen, giving so very agreeable an account
of the style and manner of your <i>Little-go</i>, makes it an
ungracious task to interrupt your studies—and yet that is what
I am bent upon doing. You will be rather puzzled, I suspect, at
finding me assuming the rights and privileges of a
correspondent, and moreover of an adviser, or rather a
dictator: but so it is—and you must not blame me till you are
quite sure you know all my reasons for it.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Mowbray is gone to London, accompanied by Helen, for the
purpose of proving (I think it is called) your father's will; a
business in which Sir Gilbert Harrington has, most unkindly for
all of you, refused to join her. This journey was so suddenly
decided upon, that dear Helen had no time to write to you about
it: she knew not she was to go till about nine o'clock the
evening preceding.</p>
<p>"The Vicar of Wrexhill was probably acquainted with the
intended movement earlier; for no day passes, or has passed for
some weeks, without his holding a private consultation with
your mother.</p>
<p>"Oh! that vicar, Charles! I think I told you that I hated him,
and you seemed to smile at my hatred as a sort of missish
impertinence and caprice; but what was instinct then has become
reason now, and I am strangely mistaken if your hatred would
not fully keep pace with mine had you seen and heard what I
have done.</p>
<p>"When I decided upon writing to you I intended, I believe, to
enter into all particulars; but I cannot do this—you must see
for yourself, and draw your own inferences. My dislike for this
man may carry me too far, and you must be much more capable of
forming a judgment respecting his motives than I can be. Of
this however I am quite sure,—Fanny ought at this time to have
some one near her more capable of protecting her from the
mischievous influence of this hateful man than I am. I know,
Mr. Charles, that you have no very exalted idea of my wisdom;
and I am not without some fear that instead of coming home
immediately, as I think you ought to do, you may write me a
very witty, clever answer, with reasons as plenty as
blackberries to prove that I am a goose. <i>Do not do this, Mr.
Mowbray.</i> I do not think that you know me very well, but in
common courtesy you ought not to believe that any young lady
would write you such a summons as this without having very
serious reasons for it.</p>
<p>"As one proof of the rapidly-increasing intimacy between the
family of the vicar and your own, you will, on your arrival,
find the daughter, Miss Cartwright, established here to console
us for your mother's (and Helen's!) absence. She is a very
singular personage: but on her I pass no judgment, sincerely
feeling that I am not competent to it. If my opinion be of
sufficient weight to induce you to come, Mr. Mowbray, I must
beg you to let your arrival appear the result of accident; and
not to let any one but Helen know of this letter.</p>
<p>"Believe me, very sincerely,</p>
<p>"Your friend,</p>
<p>"<span class="smcap">Rosalind Torrington</span>."</p>
</blockquote>
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