<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
<p>It was about the close of the month, that, yielding at length
to the urgent importunities of Rose, I accompanied her in a visit
to Wildfell Hall. To our surprise, we were ushered into a
room where the first object that met the eye was a
painter’s easel, with a table beside it covered with rolls
of canvas, bottles of oil and varnish, palette, brushes, paints,
&c. Leaning against the wall were several sketches in
various stages of progression, and a few finished
paintings—mostly of landscapes and figures.</p>
<p>‘I must make you welcome to my studio,’ said Mrs.
Graham; ‘there is no fire in the sitting-room to-day, and
it is rather too cold to show you into a place with an empty
grate.’</p>
<p>And disengaging a couple of chairs from the artistical lumber
that usurped them, she bid us be seated, and resumed her place
beside the easel—not facing it exactly, but now and then
glancing at the picture upon it while she conversed, and giving
it an occasional touch with her brush, as if she found it
impossible to wean her attention entirely from her occupation to
fix it upon her guests. It was a view of Wildfell Hall, as
seen at early morning from the field below, rising in dark relief
against a sky of clear silvery blue, with a few red streaks on
the horizon, faithfully drawn and coloured, and very elegantly
and artistically handled.</p>
<p>‘I see your heart is in your work, Mrs. Graham,’
observed I: ‘I must beg you to go on with it; for if you
suffer our presence to interrupt you, we shall be constrained to
regard ourselves as unwelcome intruders.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, no!’ replied she, throwing her brush on to
the table, as if startled into politeness. ‘I am not
so beset with visitors but that I can readily spare a few minutes
to the few that do favour me with their company.’</p>
<p>‘You have almost completed your painting,’ said I,
approaching to observe it more closely, and surveying it with a
greater degree of admiration and delight than I cared to
express. ‘A few more touches in the foreground will
finish it, I should think. But why have you called it
Fernley Manor, Cumberland, instead of Wildfell Hall,
—shire?’ I asked, alluding to the name she had traced
in small characters at the bottom of the canvas.</p>
<p>But immediately I was sensible of having committed an act of
impertinence in so doing; for she coloured and hesitated; but
after a moment’s pause, with a kind of desperate frankness,
she replied:—</p>
<p>‘Because I have friends—acquaintances at
least—in the world, from whom I desire my present abode to
be concealed; and as they might see the picture, and might
possibly recognise the style in spite of the false initials I
have put in the corner, I take the precaution to give a false
name to the place also, in order to put them on a wrong scent, if
they should attempt to trace me out by it.’</p>
<p>‘Then you don’t intend to keep the picture?’
said I, anxious to say anything to change the subject.</p>
<p>‘No; I cannot afford to paint for my own
amusement.’</p>
<p>‘Mamma sends all her pictures to London,’ said
Arthur; ‘and somebody sells them for her there, and sends
us the money.’</p>
<p>In looking round upon the other pieces, I remarked a pretty
sketch of Linden-hope from the top of the hill; another view of
the old hall basking in the sunny haze of a quiet summer
afternoon; and a simple but striking little picture of a child
brooding, with looks of silent but deep and sorrowful regret,
over a handful of withered flowers, with glimpses of dark low
hills and autumnal fields behind it, and a dull beclouded sky
above.</p>
<p>‘You see there is a sad dearth of subjects,’
observed the fair artist. ‘I took the old hall once
on a moonlight night, and I suppose I must take it again on a
snowy winter’s day, and then again on a dark cloudy
evening; for I really have nothing else to paint. I have
been told that you have a fine view of the sea somewhere in the
neighbourhood. Is it true?—and is it within walking
distance?’</p>
<p>‘Yes, if you don’t object to walking four
miles—or nearly so—little short of eight miles, there
and back—and over a somewhat rough, fatiguing
road.’</p>
<p>‘In what direction does it lie?’</p>
<p>I described the situation as well as I could, and was entering
upon an explanation of the various roads, lanes, and fields to be
traversed in order to reach it, the goings straight on, and
turnings to the right and the left, when she checked me
with,—</p>
<p>‘Oh, stop! don’t tell me now: I shall forget every
word of your directions before I require them. I shall not
think about going till next spring; and then, perhaps, I may
trouble you. At present we have the winter before us,
and—’</p>
<p>She suddenly paused, with a suppressed exclamation, started up
from her seat, and saying, ‘Excuse me one moment,’
hurried from the room, and shut the door behind her.</p>
<p>Curious to see what had startled her so, I looked towards the
window—for her eyes had been carelessly fixed upon it the
moment before—and just beheld the skirts of a man’s
coat vanishing behind a large holly-bush that stood between the
window and the porch.</p>
<p>‘It’s mamma’s friend,’ said
Arthur.</p>
<p>Rose and I looked at each other.</p>
<p>‘I don’t know what to make of her at all,’
whispered Rose.</p>
<p>The child looked at her in grave surprise. She
straightway began to talk to him on indifferent matters, while I
amused myself with looking at the pictures. There was one
in an obscure corner that I had not before observed. It was
a little child, seated on the grass with its lap full of
flowers. The tiny features and large blue eyes, smiling
through a shock of light brown curls, shaken over the forehead as
it bent above its treasure, bore sufficient resemblance to those
of the young gentleman before me to proclaim it a portrait of
Arthur Graham in his early infancy.</p>
<p>In taking this up to bring it to the light, I discovered
another behind it, with its face to the wall. I ventured to
take that up too. It was the portrait of a gentleman in the
full prime of youthful manhood—handsome enough, and not
badly executed; but if done by the same hand as the others, it
was evidently some years before; for there was far more careful
minuteness of detail, and less of that freshness of colouring and
freedom of handling that delighted and surprised me in
them. Nevertheless, I surveyed it with considerable
interest. There was a certain individuality in the features
and expression that stamped it, at once, a successful
likeness. The bright blue eyes regarded the spectator with
a kind of lurking drollery—you almost expected to see them
wink; the lips—a little too voluptuously full—seemed
ready to break into a smile; the warmly-tinted cheeks were
embellished with a luxuriant growth of reddish whiskers; while
the bright chestnut hair, clustering in abundant, wavy curls,
trespassed too much upon the forehead, and seemed to intimate
that the owner thereof was prouder of his beauty than his
intellect—as, perhaps, he had reason to be; and yet he
looked no fool.</p>
<p>I had not had the portrait in my hands two minutes before the
fair artist returned.</p>
<p>‘Only some one come about the pictures,’ said she,
in apology for her abrupt departure: ‘I told him to
wait.’</p>
<p>‘I fear it will be considered an act of
impertinence,’ said ‘to presume to look at a picture
that the artist has turned to the wall; but may I
ask—’</p>
<p>‘It is an act of very great impertinence, sir; and
therefore I beg you will ask nothing about it, for your curiosity
will not be gratified,’ replied she, attempting to cover
the tartness of her rebuke with a smile; but I could see, by her
flushed cheek and kindling eye, that she was seriously
annoyed.</p>
<p>‘I was only going to ask if you had painted it
yourself,’ said I, sulkily resigning the picture into her
hands; for without a grain of ceremony she took it from me; and
quickly restoring it to the dark corner, with its face to the
wall, placed the other against it as before, and then turned to
me and laughed.</p>
<p>But I was in no humour for jesting. I carelessly turned
to the window, and stood looking out upon the desolate garden,
leaving her to talk to Rose for a minute or two; and then,
telling my sister it was time to go, shook hands with the little
gentleman, coolly bowed to the lady, and moved towards the
door. But, having bid adieu to Rose, Mrs. Graham presented
her hand to me, saying, with a soft voice, and by no means a
disagreeable smile,—‘Let not the sun go down upon
your wrath, Mr. Markham. I’m sorry I offended you by
my abruptness.’</p>
<p>When a lady condescends to apologise, there is no keeping
one’s anger, of course; so we parted good friends for once;
and this time I squeezed her hand with a cordial, not a spiteful
pressure.</p>
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