<h2><SPAN name="2HCH0029"></SPAN> CHAPTER XXIX.</h2>
<p class="poem">
“Surely whoever speaks to me in the right voice,<br/>
him or her I shall follow.<br/>
As the water follows the moon, silently,<br/>
with fluid steps anywhere around the globe.”<br/>
—W<small>ALT</small> W<small>HITMAN</small>.</p>
<p>“Now my cousins are at Diplow,” said Grandcourt, “will you go
there?—to-morrow? The carriage shall come for Mrs. Davilow. You can tell
me what you would like done in the rooms. Things must be put in decent order
while we are away at Ryelands. And to-morrow is the only day.”</p>
<p>He was sitting sideways on a sofa in the drawing-room at Offendene, one hand
and elbow resting on the back, and the other hand thrust between his crossed
knees—in the attitude of a man who is much interested in watching the
person next to him. Gwendolen, who had always disliked needlework, had taken to
it with apparent zeal since her engagement, and now held a piece of white
embroidery which, on examination, would have shown many false stitches. During
the last eight or nine days their hours had been chiefly spent on horseback,
but some margin had always been left for this more difficult sort of
companionship, which, however, Gwendolen had not found disagreeable. She was
very well satisfied with Grandcourt. His answers to her lively questions about
what he had seen and done in his life, bore drawling very well. From the first
she had noticed that he knew what to say; and she was constantly feeling not
only that he had nothing of the fool in his composition, but that by some
subtle means he communicated to her the impression that all the folly lay with
other people, who did what he did not care to do. A man who seems to have been
able to command the best, has a sovereign power of depreciation. Then
Grandcourt’s behavior as a lover had hardly at all passed the limit of an
amorous homage which was inobtrusive as a wafted odor of roses, and spent all
its effects in a gratified vanity. One day, indeed, he had kissed not her cheek
but her neck a little below her ear; and Gwendolen, taken by surprise, had
started up with a marked agitation which made him rise too and say, “I
beg your pardon—did I annoy you?” “Oh, it was nothing,”
said Gwendolen, rather afraid of herself, “only I cannot bear—to be
kissed under my ear.” She sat down again with a little playful laugh, but
all the while she felt her heart beating with a vague fear: she was no longer
at liberty to flout him as she had flouted poor Rex. Her agitation seemed not
uncomplimentary, and he had been contented not to transgress again.</p>
<p>To-day a slight rain hindered riding; but to compensate, a package had come
from London, and Mrs. Davilow had just left the room after bringing in for
admiration the beautiful things (of Grandcourt’s ordering) which lay
scattered about on the tables. Gwendolen was just then enjoying the scenery of
her life. She let her hands fall on her lap, and said with a pretty air of
perversity,</p>
<p>“Why is to-morrow the only day?”</p>
<p>“Because the next day is the first with the hounds,” said
Grandcourt.</p>
<p>“And after that?”</p>
<p>“After that I must go away for a couple of days—it’s a
bore—but I shall go one day and come back the next.” Grandcourt
noticed a change in her face, and releasing his hand from under his knees, he
laid it on hers, and said, “You object to my going away?”</p>
<p>“It’s no use objecting,” said Gwendolen, coldly. She was
resisting to the utmost her temptation to tell him that she suspected to whom
he was going—the temptation to make a clean breast, speaking without
restraint.</p>
<p>“Yes it is,” said Grandcourt, enfolding her hand. “I will put
off going. And I will travel at night, so as only to be away one day.” He
thought that he knew the reason of what he inwardly called this bit of temper,
and she was particularly fascinating to him at this moment.</p>
<p>“Then don’t put off going, but travel at night,” said
Gwendolen, feeling that she could command him, and finding in this
peremptoriness a small outlet for her irritation.</p>
<p>“Then you will go to Diplow to-morrow?”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, if you wish it,” said Gwendolen, in a high tone of
careless assent. Her concentration in other feelings had really hindered her
from taking notice that her hand was being held.</p>
<p>“How you treat us poor devils of men!” said Grandcourt, lowering
his tone. “We are always getting the worst of it.”</p>
<p>“<i>Are</i> you?” said Gwendolen, in a tone of inquiry, looking at
him more naively than usual. She longed to believe this commonplace
<i>badinage</i> as the serious truth about her lover: in that case, she too was
justified. If she knew everything, Mrs. Glasher would appear more blamable than
Grandcourt. “<i>Are</i> you always getting the worst?”</p>
<p>“Yes. Are you as kind to me as I am to you?” said Grandcourt,
looking into her eyes with his narrow gaze.</p>
<p>Gwendolen felt herself stricken. She was conscious of having received so much,
that her sense of command was checked, and sank away in the perception that,
look around her as she might, she could not turn back: it was as if she had
consented to mount a chariot where another held the reins; and it was not in
her nature to leap out in the eyes of the world. She had not consented in
ignorance, and all she could say now would be a confession that she had not
been ignorant. Her right to explanation was gone. All she had to do now was to
adjust herself, so that the spikes of that unwilling penance which conscience
imposed should not gall her. With a sort of mental shiver, she resolutely
changed her mental attitude. There had been a little pause, during which she
had not turned away her eyes; and with a sudden break into a smile, she said,</p>
<p>“If I were as kind to you as you are to me, that would spoil your
generosity: it would no longer be as great as it could be—and it is that
now.”</p>
<p>“Then I am not to ask for one kiss,” said Grandcourt, contented to
pay a large price for this new kind of love-making, which introduced marriage
by the finest contrast.</p>
<p>“Not one?” said Gwendolen, getting saucy, and nodding at him
defiantly.</p>
<p>He lifted her little left hand to his lips, and then released it respectfully.
Clearly it was faint praise to say of him that he was not disgusting: he was
almost charming; and she felt at this moment that it was not likely she could
ever have loved another man better than this one. His reticence gave her some
inexplicable, delightful consciousness.</p>
<p>“Apropos,” she said, taking up her work again, “is there any
one besides Captain and Mrs. Torrington at Diplow?—or do you leave them
<i>tête-à-tête</i>? I suppose he converses in cigars, and she answers with her
chignon.”</p>
<p>“She has a sister with her,” said Grandcourt, with his shadow of a
smile, “and there are two men besides—one of them you know, I
believe.”</p>
<p>“Ah, then, I have a poor opinion of him,” said Gwendolen, shaking
her head.</p>
<p>“You saw him at Leubronn—young Deronda—a young fellow with
the Mallingers.”</p>
<p>Gwendolen felt as if her heart were making a sudden gambol, and her fingers,
which tried to keep a firm hold on her work, got cold.</p>
<p>“I never spoke to him,” she said, dreading any discernible change
in herself. “Is he not disagreeable?”</p>
<p>“No, not particularly,” said Grandcourt, in his most languid way.
“He thinks a little too much of himself. I thought he had been introduced
to you.”</p>
<p>“No. Some one told me his name the evening before I came away. That was
all. What is he?”</p>
<p>“A sort of ward of Sir Hugo Mallinger’s. Nothing of any
consequence.”</p>
<p>“Oh, poor creature! How very unpleasant for him!” said Gwendolen,
speaking from the lip, and not meaning any sarcasm. “I wonder if it has
left off raining!” she added, rising and going to look out of the window.</p>
<p>Happily it did not rain the next day, and Gwendolen rode to Diplow on Criterion
as she had done on that former day when she returned with her mother in the
carriage. She always felt the more daring for being in her riding-dress;
besides having the agreeable belief that she looked as well as possible in
it—a sustaining consciousness in any meeting which seems formidable. Her
anger toward Deronda had changed into a superstitious dread—due, perhaps,
to the coercion he had exercised over her thought—lest the first
interference of his in her life might foreshadow some future influence. It is
of such stuff that superstitions are commonly made: an intense feeling about
ourselves which makes the evening star shine at us with a threat, and the
blessing of a beggar encourage us. And superstitions carry consequences which
often verify their hope or their foreboding.</p>
<p>The time before luncheon was taken up for Gwendolen by going over the rooms
with Mrs. Torrington and Mrs. Davilow; and she thought it likely that if she
saw Deronda, there would hardly be need for more than a bow between them. She
meant to notice him as little as possible.</p>
<p>And after all she found herself under an inward compulsion too strong for her
pride. From the first moment of their being in the room together, she seemed to
herself to be doing nothing but notice him; everything else was automatic
performance of an habitual part.</p>
<p>When he took his place at lunch, Grandcourt had said, “Deronda, Miss
Harleth tells me you were not introduced to her at Leubronn?”</p>
<p>“Miss Harleth hardly remembers me, I imagine,” said Deronda,
looking at her quite simply, as they bowed. “She was intensely occupied
when I saw her.”</p>
<p>Now, did he suppose that she had not suspected him of being the person who
redeemed her necklace?</p>
<p>“On the contrary. I remember you very well,” said Gwendolen,
feeling rather nervous, but governing herself and looking at him in return with
new examination. “You did not approve of my playing at roulette.”</p>
<p>“How did you come to that conclusion?” said Deronda, gravely.</p>
<p>“Oh, you cast an evil eye on my play,” said Gwendolen, with a turn
of her head and a smile. “I began to lose as soon as you came to look on.
I had always been winning till then.”</p>
<p>“Roulette in such a kennel as Leubronn is a horrid bore,” said
Grandcourt.</p>
<p>“<i>I</i> found it a bore when I began to lose,” said Gwendolen.
Her face was turned toward Grandcourt as she smiled and spoke, but she gave a
sidelong glance at Deronda, and saw his eyes fixed on her with a look so
gravely penetrating that it had a keener edge for her than his ironical smile
at her losses—a keener edge than Klesmer’s judgment. She wheeled
her neck round as if she wanted to listen to what was being said by the rest,
while she was only thinking of Deronda. His face had that disturbing kind of
form and expression which threatens to affect opinion—as if one’s
standard was somehow wrong. (Who has not seen men with faces of this corrective
power till they frustrated it by speech or action?) His voice, heard now for
the first time, was to Grandcourt’s toneless drawl, which had been in her
ears every day, as the deep notes of a violoncello to the broken discourse of
poultry and other lazy gentry in the afternoon sunshine. Grandcourt, she
inwardly conjectured, was perhaps right in saying that Deronda thought too much
of himself:—a favorite way of explaining a superiority that humiliates.
However the talk turned on the rinderpest and Jamaica, and no more was said
about roulette. Grandcourt held that the Jamaica negro was a beastly sort of
baptist Caliban; Deronda said he had always felt a little with Caliban, who
naturally had his own point of view and could sing a good song; Mrs. Davilow
observed that her father had an estate in Barbadoes, but that she herself had
never been in the West Indies; Mrs. Torrington was sure she should never sleep
in her bed if she lived among blacks; her husband corrected her by saying that
the blacks would be manageable enough if it were not for the half-breeds; and
Deronda remarked that the whites had to thank themselves for the half-breeds.</p>
<p>While this polite pea-shooting was going on, Gwendolen trifled with her jelly,
and looked at every speaker in turn that she might feel at ease in looking at
Deronda.</p>
<p>“I wonder what he thinks of me, really? He must have felt interested in
me, else he would not have sent me my necklace. I wonder what he thinks of my
marriage? What notions has he to make him so grave about things? Why is he come
to Diplow?”</p>
<p>These questions ran in her mind as the voice of an uneasy longing to be judged
by Deronda with unmixed admiration—a longing which had had its seed in
her first resentment at his critical glance. Why did she care so much about the
opinion of this man who was “nothing of any consequence”? She had
no time to find the reason—she was too much engaged in caring. In the
drawing-room, when something had called Grandcourt away, she went quite
unpremeditatedly up to Deronda, who was standing at a table apart, turning over
some prints, and said to him,</p>
<p>“Shall you hunt to-morrow, Mr. Deronda?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I believe so.”</p>
<p>“You don’t object to hunting, then?”</p>
<p>“I find excuses for it. It is a sin I am inclined to—when I
can’t get boating or cricketing.”</p>
<p>“Do you object to my hunting?” said Gwendolen, with a saucy
movement of the chin.</p>
<p>“I have no right to object to anything you choose to do.”</p>
<p>“You thought you had a right to object to my gambling,” persisted
Gwendolen.</p>
<p>“I was sorry for it. I am not aware that I told you of my
objection,” said Deronda, with his usual directness of gaze—a
large-eyed gravity, innocent of any intention. His eyes had a peculiarity which
has drawn many men into trouble; they were of a dark yet mild intensity which
seemed to express a special interest in every one on whom he fixed them, and
might easily help to bring on him those claims which ardently sympathetic
people are often creating in the minds of those who need help. In mendicant
fashion we make the goodness of others a reason for exorbitant demands on them.
That sort of effect was penetrating Gwendolen.</p>
<p>“You hindered me from gambling again,” she answered. But she had no
sooner spoken than she blushed over face and neck; and Deronda blushed, too,
conscious that in the little affair of the necklace he had taken a questionable
freedom.</p>
<p>It was impossible to speak further; and she turned away to a window, feeling
that she had stupidly said what she had not meant to say, and yet being rather
happy that she had plunged into this mutual understanding. Deronda also did not
dislike it. Gwendolen seemed more decidedly attractive than before; and
certainly there had been changes going on within her since that time at
Leubronn: the struggle of mind attending a conscious error had wakened
something like a new soul, which had better, but also worse, possibilities than
her former poise of crude self-confidence: among the forces she had come to
dread was something within her that troubled satisfaction.</p>
<p>That evening Mrs. Davilow said, “Was it really so, or only a joke of
yours, about Mr. Deronda’s spoiling your play, Gwen?”</p>
<p>Her curiosity had been excited, and she could venture to ask a question that
did not concern Mr. Grandcourt.</p>
<p>“Oh, it merely happened that he was looking on when I began to
lose,” said Gwendolen, carelessly. “I noticed him.”</p>
<p>“I don’t wonder at that: he is a striking young man. He puts me in
mind of Italian paintings. One would guess, without being told, that there was
foreign blood in his veins.”</p>
<p>“Is there?” said Gwendolen.</p>
<p>“Mrs. Torrington says so. I asked particularly who he was, and she told
me that his mother was some foreigner of high rank.”</p>
<p>“His mother?” said Gwendolen, rather sharply. “Then who was
his father?”</p>
<p>“Well—every one says he is the son of Sir Hugo Mallinger, who
brought him up; though he passes for a ward. She says, if Sir Hugo Mallinger
could have done as he liked with his estates, he would have left them to this
Mr. Deronda, since he has no legitimate son.”</p>
<p>Gwendolen was silent; but her mother observed so marked an effect in her face
that she was angry with herself for having repeated Mrs. Torrington’s
gossip. It seemed, on reflection, unsuited to the ear of her daughter, for whom
Mrs. Davilow disliked what is called knowledge of the world; and indeed she
wished that she herself had not had any of it thrust upon her.</p>
<p>An image which had immediately arisen in Gwendolen’s mind was that of the
unknown mother—no doubt a dark-eyed woman—probably sad. Hardly any
face could be less like Deronda’s than that represented as Sir
Hugo’s in a crayon portrait at Diplow. A dark-eyed woman, no longer
young, had become “stuff o’ the conscience” to Gwendolen.</p>
<p>That night when she had got into her little bed, and only a dim light was
burning, she said,</p>
<p>“Mamma, have men generally children before they are married?”</p>
<p>“No, dear, no,” said Mrs. Davilow. “Why do you ask such a
question?” (But she began to think that she saw the why.)</p>
<p>“If it were so, I ought to know,” said Gwendolen, with some
indignation.</p>
<p>“You are thinking of what I said about Mr. Deronda and Sir Hugo
Mallinger. That is a very unusual case, dear.”</p>
<p>“Does Lady Mallinger know?”</p>
<p>“She knows enough to satisfy her. That is quite clear, because Mr.
Deronda has lived with them.”</p>
<p>“And people think no worse of him?”</p>
<p>“Well, of course he is under some disadvantage: it is not as if he were
Lady Mallinger’s son. He does not inherit the property, and he is not of
any consequence in the world. But people are not obliged to know anything about
his birth; you see, he is very well received.”</p>
<p>“I wonder whether he knows about it; and whether he is angry with his
father?”</p>
<p>“My dear child, why should you think of that?”</p>
<p>“Why?” said Gwendolen, impetuously, sitting up in her bed.
“Haven’t children reason to be angry with their parents? How can
they help their parents marrying or not marrying?”</p>
<p>But a consciousness rushed upon her, which made her fall back again on her
pillow. It was not only what she would have felt months before—that she
might seem to be reproaching her mother for that second marriage of hers; what
she chiefly felt now was that she had been led on to a condemnation which
seemed to make her own marriage a forbidden thing.</p>
<p>There was no further talk, and till sleep came over her Gwendolen lay
struggling with the reasons against that marriage—reasons which pressed
upon her newly now that they were unexpectedly mirrored in the story of a man
whose slight relations with her had, by some hidden affinity, bitten themselves
into the most permanent layers of feeling. It was characteristic that, with all
her debating, she was never troubled by the question whether the
indefensibleness of her marriage did not include the fact that she had accepted
Grandcourt solely as a man whom it was convenient for her to marry, not in the
least as one to whom she would be binding herself in duty. Gwendolen’s
ideas were pitiably crude; but many grand difficulties of life are apt to force
themselves on us in our crudity. And to judge wisely, I suppose we must know
how things appear to the unwise; that kind of appearance making the larger part
of the world’s history.</p>
<p>In the morning there was a double excitement for her. She was going to hunt,
from which scruples about propriety had threatened to hinder her, until it was
found that Mrs. Torrington was horsewoman enough to accompany her—going
to hunt for the first time since her escapade with Rex; and she was going again
to see Deronda, in whom, since last night, her interest had so gathered that
she expected, as people do about revealed celebrities, to see something in his
appearance which she had missed before.</p>
<p>What was he going to be? What sort of life had he before him—he being
nothing of any consequence? And with only a little difference in events he
might have been as important as Grandcourt, nay—her imagination
inevitably went into that direction—might have held the very estates
which Grandcourt was to have. But now, Deronda would probably some day see her
mistress of the Abbey at Topping, see her bearing the title which would have
been his own wife’s. These obvious, futile thoughts of what might have
been, made a new epoch for Gwendolen. She, whose unquestionable habit it had
been to take the best that came to her for less than her own claim, had now to
see the position which tempted her in a new light, as a hard, unfair exclusion
of others. What she had now heard about Deronda seemed to her imagination to
throw him into one group with Mrs. Glasher and her children; before whom she
felt herself in an attitude of apology—she who had hitherto been
surrounded by a group that in her opinion had need be apologetic to her.
Perhaps Deronda himself was thinking of these things. Could he know of Mrs.
Glasher? If he knew that she knew, he would despise her; but he could have no
such knowledge. Would he, without that, despise her for marrying Grandcourt?
His possible judgment of her actions was telling on her as importunately as
Klesmer’s judgment of her powers; but she found larger room for
resistance to a disapproval of her marriage, because it is easier to make our
conduct seem justifiable to ourselves than to make our ability strike others.
“How can I help it?” is not our favorite apology for incompetency.
But Gwendolen felt some strength in saying,</p>
<p>“How can I help what other people have done? Things would not come right
if I were to turn round now and declare that I would not marry Mr.
Grandcourt.” And such turning round was out of the question. The horses
in the chariot she had mounted were going at full speed.</p>
<p>This mood of youthful, elated desperation had a tidal recurrence. She could
dare anything that lay before her sooner than she could choose to go backward,
into humiliation; and it was even soothing to think that there would now be as
much ill-doing in the one as in the other. But the immediate delightful fact
was the hunt, where she would see Deronda, and where he would see her; for
always lurking ready to obtrude before other thoughts about him was the
impression that he was very much interested in her. But to-day she was resolved
not to repeat her folly of yesterday, as if she were anxious to say anything to
him. Indeed, the hunt would be too absorbing.</p>
<p>And so it was for a long while. Deronda was there, and within her sight very
often; but this only added to the stimulus of a pleasure which Gwendolen had
only once before tasted, and which seemed likely always to give a delight
independent of any crosses, except such as took away the chance of riding. No
accident happened to throw them together; the run took them within convenient
reach of home, and the agreeable sombreness of the gray November afternoon,
with a long stratum of yellow light in the west, Gwendolen was returning with
the company from Diplow, who were attending her on the way to Offendene. Now
the sense of glorious excitement was over and gone, she was getting irritably
disappointed that she had had no opportunity of speaking to Deronda, whom she
would not see again, since he was to go away in a couple of days. What was she
going to say? That was not quite certain. She wanted to speak to him.
Grandcourt was by her side; Mrs. Torrington, her husband, and another gentleman
in advance; and Deronda’s horse she could hear behind. The wish to speak
to him and have him speaking to her was becoming imperious; and there was no
chance of it unless she simply asserted her will and defied everything. Where
the order of things could give way to Miss Gwendolen, it must be made to do so.
They had lately emerged from a wood of pines and beeches, where the twilight
stillness had a repressing effect, which increased her impatience. The
horse-hoofs again heard behind at some little distance were a growing
irritation. She reined in her horse and looked behind her; Grandcourt after a
few paces, also paused; but she, waving her whip and nodding sideways with
playful imperiousness, said, “Go on! I want to speak to Mr.
Deronda.”</p>
<p>Grandcourt hesitated; but that he would have done after any proposition. It was
an awkward situation for him. No gentleman, before marriage, could give the
emphasis of refusal to a command delivered in this playful way. He rode on
slowly, and she waited till Deronda came up. He looked at her with tacit
inquiry, and she said at once, letting her horse go alongside of his,</p>
<p>“Mr. Deronda, you must enlighten my ignorance. I want to know why you
thought it wrong for me to gamble. Is it because I am a woman?”</p>
<p>“Not altogether; but I regretted it the more because you were a
woman,” said Deronda, with an irrepressible smile. Apparently it must be
understood between them now that it was he who sent the necklace. “I
think it would be better for men not to gamble. It is a besotting kind of
taste, likely to turn into a disease. And, besides, there is something
revolting to me in raking a heap of money together, and internally chuckling
over it, when others are feeling the loss of it. I should even call it base, if
it were more than an exceptional lapse. There are enough inevitable turns of
fortune which force us to see that our gain is another’s loss:—that
is one of the ugly aspects of life. One would like to reduce it as much as one
could, not get amusement out of exaggerating it.” Deronda’s voice
had gathered some indignation while he was speaking.</p>
<p>“But you do admit that we can’t help things,” said Gwendolen,
with a drop in her tone. The answer had not been anything like what she had
expected. “I mean that things are so in spite of us; we can’t
always help it that our gain is another’s loss.”</p>
<p>“Clearly. Because of that, we should help it where we can.”</p>
<p>Gwendolen, biting her lip inside, paused a moment, and then forcing herself to
speak with an air of playfulness again, said,</p>
<p>“But why should you regret it more because I am a woman?”</p>
<p>“Perhaps because we need that you should be better than we are.”</p>
<p>“But suppose <i>we</i> need that men should be better than we are,”
said Gwendolen with a little air of “check!”</p>
<p>“That is rather a difficulty,” said Deronda, smiling. “I
suppose I should have said, we each of us think it would be better for the
other to be good.”</p>
<p>“You see, I needed you to be better than I was—and you thought
so,” said Gwendolen, nodding and laughing, while she put her horse
forward and joined Grandcourt, who made no observation.</p>
<p>“Don’t you want to know what I had to say to Mr. Deronda?”
said Gwendolen, whose own pride required her to account for her conduct.</p>
<p>“A—no,” said Grandcourt, coldly.</p>
<p>“Now that is the first impolite word you have spoken—that you
don’t wish to hear what I had to say,” said Gwendolen, playing at a
pout.</p>
<p>“I wish to hear what you say to me—not to other men,” said
Grandcourt.</p>
<p>“Then you wish to hear this. I wanted to make him tell me why he objected
to my gambling, and he gave me a little sermon.”</p>
<p>“Yes—but excuse me the sermon.” If Gwendolen imagined that
Grandcourt cared about her speaking to Deronda, he wished her to understand
that she was mistaken. But he was not fond of being told to ride on. She saw he
was piqued, but did not mind. She had accomplished her object of speaking again
to Deronda before he raised his hat and turned with the rest toward Diplow,
while her lover attended her to Offendene, where he was to bid farewell before
a whole day’s absence on the unspecified journey. Grandcourt had spoken
truth in calling the journey a bore: he was going by train to Gadsmere.</p>
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