<h2>CHAPTER XXXI</h2>
<p>March 20th, 1824. The dreaded time is come, and Arthur
is gone, as I expected. This time he announced it his
intention to make but a short stay in London, and pass over to
the Continent, where he should probably stay a few weeks; but I
shall not expect him till after the lapse of many weeks: I now
know that, with him, days signify weeks, and weeks months.</p>
<p>July 30th.—He returned about three weeks ago, rather
better in health, certainly, than before, but still worse in
temper. And yet, perhaps, I am wrong: it is I that am less
patient and forbearing. I am tired out with his injustice,
his selfishness and hopeless depravity. I wish a milder
word would do; I am no angel, and my corruption rises against
it. My poor father died last week: Arthur was vexed to hear
of it, because he saw that I was shocked and grieved, and he
feared the circumstance would mar his comfort. When I spoke
of ordering my mourning, he exclaimed,—‘Oh, I hate
black! But, however, I suppose you must wear it awhile, for
form’s sake; but I hope, Helen, you won’t think it
your bounden duty to compose your face and manners into
conformity with your funereal garb. Why should you sigh and
groan, and I be made uncomfortable, because an old gentleman in
—shire, a perfect stranger to us both, has thought proper
to drink himself to death? There, now, I declare
you’re crying! Well, it must be
affectation.’</p>
<p>He would not hear of my attending the funeral, or going for a
day or two, to cheer poor Frederick’s solitude. It
was quite unnecessary, he said, and I was unreasonable to wish
it. What was my father to me? I had never seen him
but once since I was a baby, and I well knew he had never cared a
stiver about me; and my brother, too, was little better than a
stranger. ‘Besides, dear Helen,’ said he,
embracing me with flattering fondness, ‘I cannot spare you
for a single day.’</p>
<p>‘Then how have you managed without me these many
days?’ said I.</p>
<p>‘Ah! then I was knocking about the world, now I am at
home, and home without you, my household deity, would be
intolerable.’</p>
<p>‘Yes, as long as I am necessary to your comfort; but you
did not say so before, when you urged me to leave you, in order
that you might get away from your home without me,’
retorted I; but before the words were well out of my mouth, I
regretted having uttered them. It seemed so heavy a charge:
if false, too gross an insult; if true, too humiliating a fact to
be thus openly cast in his teeth. But I might have spared
myself that momentary pang of self-reproach. The accusation
awoke neither shame nor indignation in him: he attempted neither
denial nor excuse, but only answered with a long, low, chuckling
laugh, as if he viewed the whole transaction as a clever, merry
jest from beginning to end. Surely that man will make me
dislike him at last!</p>
<p class="poetry">Sine as ye brew, my maiden fair,<br/>
Keep mind that ye maun drink the yill.</p>
<p>Yes; and I will drink it to the very dregs: and none but
myself shall know how bitter I find it!</p>
<p>August 20th.—We are shaken down again to about our usual
position. Arthur has returned to nearly his former
condition and habits; and I have found it my wisest plan to shut
my eyes against the past and future, as far as he, at least, is
concerned, and live only for the present: to love him when I can;
to smile (if possible) when he smiles, be cheerful when he is
cheerful, and pleased when he is agreeable; and when he is not,
to try to make him so; and if that won’t answer, to bear
with him, to excuse him, and forgive him as well as I can, and
restrain my own evil passions from aggravating his; and yet,
while I thus yield and minister to his more harmless propensities
to self-indulgence, to do all in my power to save him from the
worse.</p>
<p>But we shall not be long alone together. I shall shortly
be called upon to entertain the same select body of friends as we
had the autumn before last, with the addition of Mr. Hattersley
and, at my special request, his wife and child. I long to
see Milicent, and her little girl too. The latter is now
above a year old; she will be a charming playmate for my little
Arthur.</p>
<p>September 30th.—Our guests have been here a week or two;
but I have had no leisure to pass any comments upon them till
now. I cannot get over my dislike to Lady Lowborough.
It is not founded on mere personal pique; it is the woman herself
that I dislike, because I so thoroughly disapprove of her.
I always avoid her company as much as I can without violating the
laws of hospitality; but when we do speak or converse together,
it is with the utmost civility, even apparent cordiality on her
part; but preserve me from such cordiality! It is like
handling brier-roses and may-blossoms, bright enough to the eye,
and outwardly soft to the touch, but you know there are thorns
beneath, and every now and then you feel them too; and perhaps
resent the injury by crushing them in till you have destroyed
their power, though somewhat to the detriment of your own
fingers.</p>
<p>Of late, however, I have seen nothing in her conduct towards
Arthur to anger or alarm me. During the first few days I
thought she seemed very solicitous to win his admiration.
Her efforts were not unnoticed by him: I frequently saw him
smiling to himself at her artful manoeuvres: but, to his praise
be it spoken, her shafts fell powerless by his side. Her
most bewitching smiles, her haughtiest frowns were ever received
with the same immutable, careless good-humour; till, finding he
was indeed impenetrable, she suddenly remitted her efforts, and
became, to all appearance, as perfectly indifferent as
himself. Nor have I since witnessed any symptom of pique on
his part, or renewed attempts at conquest upon hers.</p>
<p>This is as it should be; but Arthur never will let me be
satisfied with him. I have never, for a single hour since I
married him, known what it is to realise that sweet idea,
‘In quietness and confidence shall be your
rest.’ Those two detestable men, Grimsby and
Hattersley, have destroyed all my labour against his love of
wine. They encourage him daily to overstep the bounds of
moderation, and not unfrequently to disgrace himself by positive
excess. I shall not soon forget the second night after
their arrival. Just as I had retired from the dining-room
with the ladies, before the door was closed upon us, Arthur
exclaimed,—‘Now then, my lads, what say you to a
regular jollification?’</p>
<p>Milicent glanced at me with a half-reproachful look, as if I
could hinder it; but her countenance changed when she heard
Hattersley’s voice, shouting through door and
wall,—‘I’m your man! Send for more wine:
here isn’t half enough!’</p>
<p>We had scarcely entered the drawing-room before we were joined
by Lord Lowborough.</p>
<p>‘What can induce you to come so soon?’ exclaimed
his lady, with a most ungracious air of dissatisfaction.</p>
<p>‘You know I never drink, Annabella,’ replied he
seriously.</p>
<p>‘Well, but you might stay with them a little: it looks
so silly to be always dangling after the women; I wonder you
can!’</p>
<p>He reproached her with a look of mingled bitterness and
surprise, and, sinking into a chair, suppressed a heavy sigh, bit
his pale lips, and fixed his eyes upon the floor.</p>
<p>‘You did right to leave them, Lord Lowborough,’
said I. ‘I trust you will always continue to honour
us so early with your company. And if Annabella knew the
value of true wisdom, and the misery of folly and—and
intemperance, she would not talk such nonsense—even in
jest.’</p>
<p>He raised his eyes while I spoke, and gravely turned them upon
me, with a half-surprised, half-abstracted look, and then bent
them on his wife.</p>
<p>‘At least,’ said she, ‘I know the value of a
warm heart and a bold, manly spirit.’</p>
<p>‘Well, Annabella,’ said he, in a deep and hollow
tone, ‘since my presence is disagreeable to you, I will
relieve you of it.’</p>
<p>‘Are you going back to them, then?’ said she,
carelessly.</p>
<p>‘No,’ exclaimed he, with harsh and startling
emphasis. ‘I will not go back to them! And I
will never stay with them one moment longer than I think right,
for you or any other tempter! But you needn’t mind
that; I shall never trouble you again by intruding my company
upon you so unseasonably.’</p>
<p>He left the room: I heard the hall-door open and shut, and
immediately after, on putting aside the curtain, I saw him pacing
down the park, in the comfortless gloom of the damp, cloudy
twilight.</p>
<p>‘It would serve you right, Annabella,’ said I, at
length, ‘if Lord Lowborough were to return to his old
habits, which had so nearly effected his ruin, and which it cost
him such an effort to break: you would then see cause to repent
such conduct as this.’</p>
<p>‘Not at all, my dear! I should not mind if his
lordship were to see fit to intoxicate himself every day: I
should only the sooner be rid of him.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, Annabella!’ cried Milicent. ‘How
can you say such wicked things! It would, indeed, be a just
punishment, as far as you are concerned, if Providence should
take you at your word, and make you feel what others feel,
that—‘ She paused as a sudden burst of loud
talking and laughter reached us from the dining-room, in which
the voice of Hattersley was pre-eminently conspicuous, even to my
unpractised ear.</p>
<p>‘What you feel at this moment, I suppose?’ said
Lady Lowborough, with a malicious smile, fixing her eyes upon her
cousin’s distressed countenance.</p>
<p>The latter offered no reply, but averted her face and brushed
away a tear. At that moment the door opened and admitted
Mr. Hargrave, just a little flushed, his dark eyes sparkling with
unwonted vivacity.</p>
<p>‘Oh, I’m so glad you’re come, Walter?’
cried his sister. ‘But I wish you could have got
Ralph to come too.’</p>
<p>‘Utterly impossible, dear Milicent,’ replied he,
gaily. ‘I had much ado to get away myself.
Ralph attempted to keep me by violence; Huntingdon threatened me
with the eternal loss of his friendship; and Grimsby, worse than
all, endeavoured to make me ashamed of my virtue, by such galling
sarcasms and innuendoes as he knew would wound me the most.
So you see, ladies, you ought to make me welcome when I have
braved and suffered so much for the favour of your sweet
society.’ He smilingly turned to me and bowed as he
finished the sentence.</p>
<p>‘Isn’t he handsome now, Helen!’ whispered
Milicent, her sisterly pride overcoming, for the moment, all
other considerations.</p>
<p>‘He would be,’ I returned, ‘if that
brilliance of eye, and lip, and cheek were natural to him; but
look again, a few hours hence.’</p>
<p>Here the gentleman took a seat near me at the table, and
petitioned for a cup of coffee.</p>
<p>‘I consider this an apt illustration of heaven taken by
storm,’ said he, as I handed one to him. ‘I am
in paradise, now; but I have fought my way through flood and fire
to win it. Ralph Hattersley’s last resource was to
set his back against the door, and swear I should find no passage
but through his body (a pretty substantial one too).
Happily, however, that was not the only door, and I effected my
escape by the side entrance through the butler’s pantry, to
the infinite amazement of Benson, who was cleaning the
plate.’</p>
<p>Mr. Hargrave laughed, and so did his cousin; but his sister
and I remained silent and grave.</p>
<p>‘Pardon my levity, Mrs. Huntingdon,’ murmured he,
more seriously, as he raised his eyes to my face.
‘You are not used to these things: you suffer them to
affect your delicate mind too sensibly. But I thought of
you in the midst of those lawless roysterers; and I endeavoured
to persuade Mr. Huntingdon to think of you too; but to no
purpose: I fear he is fully determined to enjoy himself this
night; and it will be no use keeping the coffee waiting for him
or his companions; it will be much if they join us at tea.
Meantime, I earnestly wish I could banish the thoughts of them
from your mind—and my own too, for I hate to think of
them—yes—even of my dear friend Huntingdon, when I
consider the power he possesses over the happiness of one so
immeasurably superior to himself, and the use he makes of
it—I positively detest the man!’</p>
<p>‘You had better not say so to me, then,’ said I;
‘for, bad as he is, he is part of myself, and you cannot
abuse him without offending me.’</p>
<p>‘Pardon me, then, for I would sooner die than offend
you. But let us say no more of him for the present, if you
please.’</p>
<p>At last they came; but not till after ten, when tea, which had
been delayed for more than half an hour, was nearly over.
Much as I had longed for their coming, my heart failed me at the
riotous uproar of their approach; and Milicent turned pale, and
almost started from her seat, as Mr. Hattersley burst into the
room with a clamorous volley of oaths in his mouth, which
Hargrave endeavoured to check by entreating him to remember the
ladies.</p>
<p>‘Ah! you do well to remind me of the ladies, you
dastardly deserter,’ cried he, shaking his formidable fist
at his brother-in-law. ‘If it were not for them, you
well know, I’d demolish you in the twinkling of an eye, and
give your body to the fowls of heaven and the lilies of the
fields!’ Then, planting a chair by Lady
Lowborough’s side, he stationed himself in it, and began to
talk to her with a mixture of absurdity and impudence that seemed
rather to amuse than to offend her; though she affected to resent
his insolence, and to keep him at bay with sallies of smart and
spirited repartee.</p>
<p>Meantime Mr. Grimsby seated himself by me, in the chair
vacated by Hargrave as they entered, and gravely stated that he
would thank me for a cup of tea: and Arthur placed himself beside
poor Milicent, confidentially pushing his head into her face, and
drawing in closer to her as she shrank away from him. He
was not so noisy as Hattersley, but his face was exceedingly
flushed: he laughed incessantly, and while I blushed for all I
saw and heard of him, I was glad that he chose to talk to his
companion in so low a tone that no one could hear what he said
but herself.</p>
<p>‘What fools they are!’ drawled Mr. Grimsby, who
had been talking away, at my elbow, with sententious gravity all
the time; but I had been too much absorbed in contemplating the
deplorable state of the other two—especially
Arthur—to attend to him.</p>
<p>‘Did you ever hear such nonsense as they talk, Mrs.
Huntingdon?’ he continued. ‘I’m quite
ashamed of them for my part: they can’t take so much as a
bottle between them without its getting into their
heads—’</p>
<p>‘You are pouring the cream into your saucer, Mr.
Grimsby.’</p>
<p>‘Ah! yes, I see, but we’re almost in darkness
here. Hargrave, snuff those candles, will you?’</p>
<p>‘They’re wax; they don’t require
snuffing,’ said I.</p>
<p>‘“The light of the body is the eye,”’
observed Hargrave, with a sarcastic smile. ‘“If
thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of
light.”’</p>
<p>Grimsby repulsed him with a solemn wave of the hand, and then
turning to me, continued, with the same drawling tones and
strange uncertainty of utterance and heavy gravity of aspect as
before: ‘But as I was saying, Mrs. Huntingdon, they have no
head at all: they can’t take half a bottle without being
affected some way; whereas I—well, I’ve taken three
times as much as they have to-night, and you see I’m
perfectly steady. Now that may strike you as very singular,
but I think I can explain it: you see their brains—I
mention no names, but you’ll understand to whom I
allude—their brains are light to begin with, and the fumes
of the fermented liquor render them lighter still, and produce an
entire light-headedness, or giddiness, resulting in intoxication;
whereas my brains, being composed of more solid materials, will
absorb a considerable quantity of this alcoholic vapour without
the production of any sensible result—’</p>
<p>‘I think you will find a sensible result produced on
that tea,’ interrupted Mr. Hargrave, ‘by the quantity
of sugar you have put into it. Instead of your usual
complement of one lump, you have put in six.’</p>
<p>‘Have I so?’ replied the philosopher, diving with
his spoon into the cup, and bringing up several half-dissolved
pieces in confirmation of the assertion. ‘Hum!
I perceive. Thus, Madam, you see the evil of absence of
mind—of thinking too much while engaged in the common
concerns of life. Now, if I had had my wits about me, like
ordinary men, instead of within me like a philosopher, I should
not have spoiled this cup of tea, and been constrained to trouble
you for another.’</p>
<p>‘That is the sugar-basin, Mr. Grimsby. Now you
have spoiled the sugar too; and I’ll thank you to ring for
some more, for here is Lord Lowborough at last; and I hope his
lordship will condescend to sit down with us, such as we are, and
allow me to give him some tea.’</p>
<p>His lordship gravely bowed in answer to my appeal, but said
nothing. Meantime, Hargrave volunteered to ring for the
sugar, while Grimsby lamented his mistake, and attempted to prove
that it was owing to the shadow of the urn and the badness of the
lights.</p>
<p>Lord Lowborough had entered a minute or two before, unobserved
by anyone but me, and had been standing before the door, grimly
surveying the company. He now stepped up to Annabella, who
sat with her back towards him, with Hattersley still beside her,
though not now attending to her, being occupied in vociferously
abusing and bullying his host.</p>
<p>‘Well, Annabella,’ said her husband, as he leant
over the back of her chair, ‘which of these three
“bold, manly spirits” would you have me to
resemble?’</p>
<p>‘By heaven and earth, you shall resemble us all!’
cried Hattersley, starting up and rudely seizing him by the
arm. ‘Hallo, Huntingdon!’ he
shouted—‘I’ve got him! Come, man, and
help me! And d—n me, if I don’t make him drunk
before I let him go! He shall make up for all past
delinquencies as sure as I’m a living soul!’</p>
<p>There followed a disgraceful contest: Lord Lowborough, in
desperate earnest, and pale with anger, silently struggling to
release himself from the powerful madman that was striving to
drag him from the room. I attempted to urge Arthur to
interfere in behalf of his outraged guest, but he could do
nothing but laugh.</p>
<p>‘Huntingdon, you fool, come and help me, can’t
you!’ cried Hattersley, himself somewhat weakened by his
excesses.</p>
<p>‘I’m wishing you God-speed, Hattersley,’
cried Arthur, ‘and aiding you with my prayers: I
can’t do anything else if my life depended on it!
I’m quite used up. Oh—oh!’ and leaning
back in his seat, he clapped his hands on his sides and groaned
aloud.</p>
<p>‘Annabella, give me a candle!’ said Lowborough,
whose antagonist had now got him round the waist and was
endeavouring to root him from the door-post, to which he madly
clung with all the energy of desperation.</p>
<p>‘I shall take no part in your rude sports!’
replied the lady coldly drawing back. ‘I wonder you
can expect it.’ But I snatched up a candle and
brought it to him. He took it and held the flame to
Hattersley’s hands, till, roaring like a wild beast, the
latter unclasped them and let him go. He vanished, I
suppose to his own apartment, for nothing more was seen of him
till the morning. Swearing and cursing like a maniac,
Hattersley threw himself on to the ottoman beside the
window. The door being now free, Milicent attempted to make
her escape from the scene of her husband’s disgrace; but he
called her back, and insisted upon her coming to him.</p>
<p>‘What do you want, Ralph?’ murmured she,
reluctantly approaching him.</p>
<p>‘I want to know what’s the matter with you,’
said he, pulling her on to his knee like a child.
‘What are you crying for, Milicent?—Tell
me!’</p>
<p>‘I’m not crying.’</p>
<p>‘You are,’ persisted he, rudely pulling her hands
from her face. ‘How dare you tell such a
lie!’</p>
<p>‘I’m not crying now,’ pleaded she.</p>
<p>‘But you have been, and just this minute too; and I will
know what for. Come, now, you shall tell me!’</p>
<p>‘Do let me alone, Ralph! Remember, we are not at
home.’</p>
<p>‘No matter: you shall answer my question!’
exclaimed her tormentor; and he attempted to extort the
confession by shaking her, and remorselessly crushing her slight
arms in the gripe of his powerful fingers.</p>
<p>‘Don’t let him treat your sister in that
way,’ said I to Mr. Hargrave.</p>
<p>‘Come now, Hattersley, I can’t allow that,’
said that gentleman, stepping up to the ill-assorted
couple. ‘Let my sister alone, if you
please.’</p>
<p>And he made an effort to unclasp the ruffian’s fingers
from her arm, but was suddenly driven backward, and nearly laid
upon the floor by a violent blow on the chest, accompanied with
the admonition, ‘Take that for your insolence! and learn to
interfere between me and mine again.’</p>
<p>‘If you were not drunk, I’d have satisfaction for
that!’ gasped Hargrave, white and breathless as much from
passion as from the immediate effects of the blow.</p>
<p>‘Go to the devil!’ responded his
brother-in-law. ‘Now, Milicent, tell me what you were
crying for.’</p>
<p>‘I’ll tell you some other time,’ murmured
she, ‘when we are alone.’</p>
<p>‘Tell me now!’ said he, with another shake and a
squeeze that made her draw in her breath and bite her lip to
suppress a cry of pain.</p>
<p>‘I’ll tell you, Mr. Hattersley,’ said
I. ‘She was crying from pure shame and humiliation
for you; because she could not bear to see you conduct yourself
so disgracefully.’</p>
<p>‘Confound you, Madam!’ muttered he, with a stare
of stupid amazement at my ‘impudence.’
‘It was not that—was it, Milicent?’</p>
<p>She was silent.</p>
<p>‘Come, speak up, child!’</p>
<p>‘I can’t tell now,’ sobbed she.</p>
<p>‘But you can say “yes” or “no”
as well as “I can’t
tell.”—Come!’</p>
<p>‘Yes,’ she whispered, hanging her head, and
blushing at the awful acknowledgment.</p>
<p>‘Curse you for an impertinent hussy, then!’ cried
he, throwing her from him with such violence that she fell on her
side; but she was up again before either I or her brother could
come to her assistance, and made the best of her way out of the
room, and, I suppose, up-stairs, without loss of time.</p>
<p>The next object of assault was Arthur, who sat opposite, and
had, no doubt, richly enjoyed the whole scene.</p>
<p>‘Now, Huntingdon,’ exclaimed his irascible friend,
‘I will not have you sitting there and laughing like an
idiot!’</p>
<p>‘Oh, Hattersley,’ cried he, wiping his swimming
eyes—‘you’ll be the death of me.’</p>
<p>‘Yes, I will, but not as you suppose: I’ll have
the heart out of your body, man, if you irritate me with any more
of that imbecile laughter!—What! are you at it
yet?—There! see if that’ll settle you!’ cried
Hattersley, snatching up a footstool and hurting it at the head
of his host; but he as well as missed his aim, and the latter
still sat collapsed and quaking with feeble laughter, with tears
running down his face: a deplorable spectacle indeed.</p>
<p>Hattersley tried cursing and swearing, but it would not do: he
then took a number of books from the table beside him, and threw
them, one by one, at the object of his wrath; but Arthur only
laughed the more; and, finally, Hattersley rushed upon him in a
frenzy and seizing him by the shoulders, gave him a violent
shaking, under which he laughed and shrieked alarmingly.
But I saw no more: I thought I had witnessed enough of my
husband’s degradation; and leaving Annabella and the rest
to follow when they pleased, I withdrew, but not to bed.
Dismissing Rachel to her rest, I walked up and down my room, in
an agony of misery for what had been done, and suspense, not
knowing what might further happen, or how or when that unhappy
creature would come up to bed.</p>
<p>At last he came, slowly and stumblingly ascending the stairs,
supported by Grimsby and Hattersley, who neither of them walked
quite steadily themselves, but were both laughing and joking at
him, and making noise enough for all the servants to hear.
He himself was no longer laughing now, but sick and stupid.
I will write no more about that.</p>
<p>Such disgraceful scenes (or nearly such) have been repeated
more than once. I don’t say much to Arthur about it,
for, if I did, it would do more harm than good; but I let him
know that I intensely dislike such exhibitions; and each time he
has promised they should never again be repeated. But I
fear he is losing the little self-command and self-respect he
once possessed: formerly, he would have been ashamed to act
thus—at least, before any other witnesses than his boon
companions, or such as they. His friend Hargrave, with a
prudence and self-government that I envy for him, never disgraces
himself by taking more than sufficient to render him a little
‘elevated,’ and is always the first to leave the
table after Lord Lowborough, who, wiser still, perseveres in
vacating the dining-room immediately after us: but never once,
since Annabella offended him so deeply, has he entered the
drawing-room before the rest; always spending the interim in the
library, which I take care to have lighted for his accommodation;
or, on fine moonlight nights, in roaming about the grounds.
But I think she regrets her misconduct, for she has never
repeated it since, and of late she has comported herself with
wonderful propriety towards him, treating him with more uniform
kindness and consideration than ever I have observed her to do
before. I date the time of this improvement from the period
when she ceased to hope and strive for Arthur’s
admiration.</p>
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