<h2>CHAPTER XXXIX</h2>
<p>My greatest source of uneasiness, in this time of trial, was
my son, whom his father and his father’s friends delighted
to encourage in all the embryo vices a little child can show, and
to instruct in all the evil habits he could acquire—in a
word, to ‘make a man of him’ was one of their staple
amusements; and I need say no more to justify my alarm on his
account, and my determination to deliver him at any hazard from
the hands of such instructors. I first attempted to keep
him always with me, or in the nursery, and gave Rachel particular
injunctions never to let him come down to dessert as long as
these ‘gentlemen’ stayed; but it was no use: these
orders were immediately countermanded and overruled by his
father; he was not going to have the little fellow moped to death
between an old nurse and a cursed fool of a mother. So the
little fellow came down every evening in spite of his cross
mamma, and learned to tipple wine like papa, to swear like Mr.
Hattersley, and to have his own way like a man, and sent mamma to
the devil when she tried to prevent him. To see such things
done with the roguish naïveté of that pretty little
child, and hear such things spoken by that small infantile voice,
was as peculiarly piquant and irresistibly droll to them as it
was inexpressibly distressing and painful to me; and when he had
set the table in a roar he would look round delightedly upon them
all, and add his shrill laugh to theirs. But if that
beaming blue eye rested on me, its light would vanish for a
moment, and he would say, in some concern, ‘Mamma, why
don’t you laugh? Make her laugh, papa—she never
will.’</p>
<p>Hence was I obliged to stay among these human brutes, watching
an opportunity to get my child away from them instead of leaving
them immediately after the removal of the cloth, as I should
always otherwise have done. He was never willing to go, and
I frequently had to carry him away by force, for which he thought
me very cruel and unjust; and sometimes his father would insist
upon my letting him remain; and then I would leave him to his
kind friends, and retire to indulge my bitterness and despair
alone, or to rack my brains for a remedy to this great evil.</p>
<p>But here again I must do Mr. Hargrave the justice to
acknowledge that I never saw him laugh at the child’s
misdemeanours, nor heard him utter a word of encouragement to his
aspirations after manly accomplishments. But when anything
very extraordinary was said or done by the infant profligate, I
noticed, at times, a peculiar expression in his face that I could
neither interpret nor define: a slight twitching about the
muscles of the mouth; a sudden flash in the eye, as he darted a
sudden glance at the child and then at me: and then I could fancy
there arose a gleam of hard, keen, sombre satisfaction in his
countenance at the look of impotent wrath and anguish he was too
certain to behold in mine. But on one occasion, when Arthur
had been behaving particularly ill, and Mr. Huntingdon and his
guests had been particularly provoking and insulting to me in
their encouragement of him, and I particularly anxious to get him
out of the room, and on the very point of demeaning myself by a
burst of uncontrollable passion—Mr. Hargrave suddenly rose
from his seat with an aspect of stern determination, lifted the
child from his father’s knee, where he was sitting
half-tipsy, cocking his head and laughing at me, and execrating
me with words he little knew the meaning of, handed him out of
the room, and, setting him down in the hall, held the door open
for me, gravely bowed as I withdrew, and closed it after
me. I heard high words exchanged between him and his
already half-inebriated host as I departed, leading away my
bewildered and disconcerted boy.</p>
<p>But this should not continue: my child must not be abandoned
to this corruption: better far that he should live in poverty and
obscurity, with a fugitive mother, than in luxury and affluence
with such a father. These guests might not be with us long,
but they would return again: and he, the most injurious of the
whole, his child’s worst enemy, would still remain. I
could endure it for myself, but for my son it must be borne no
longer: the world’s opinion and the feelings of my friends
must be alike unheeded here, at least—alike unable to deter
me from my duty. But where should I find an asylum, and how
obtain subsistence for us both? Oh, I would take my
precious charge at early dawn, take the coach to M—, flee
to the port of —, cross the Atlantic, and seek a quiet,
humble home in New England, where I would support myself and him
by the labour of my hands. The palette and the easel, my
darling playmates once, must be my sober toil-fellows now.
But was I sufficiently skilful as an artist to obtain my
livelihood in a strange land, without friends and without
recommendation? No; I must wait a little; I must labour
hard to improve my talent, and to produce something worth while
as a specimen of my powers, something to speak favourably for me,
whether as an actual painter or a teacher. Brilliant
success, of course, I did not look for, but some degree of
security from positive failure was indispensable: I must not take
my son to starve. And then I must have money for the
journey, the passage, and some little to support us in our
retreat in case I should be unsuccessful at first: and not too
little either: for who could tell how long I might have to
struggle with the indifference or neglect of others, or my own
inexperience or inability to suit their tastes?</p>
<p>What should I do then? Apply to my brother and explain
my circumstances and my resolves to him? No, no: even if I
told him all my grievances, which I should be very reluctant to
do, he would be certain to disapprove of the step: it would seem
like madness to him, as it would to my uncle and aunt, or to
Milicent. No; I must have patience and gather a hoard of my
own. Rachel should be my only confidante—I thought I
could persuade her into the scheme; and she should help me,
first, to find out a picture-dealer in some distant town; then,
through her means, I would privately sell what pictures I had on
hand that would do for such a purpose, and some of those I should
thereafter paint. Besides this, I would contrive to dispose
of my jewels, not the family jewels, but the few I brought with
me from home, and those my uncle gave me on my marriage. A
few months’ arduous toil might well be borne by me with
such an end in view; and in the interim my son could not be much
more injured than he was already.</p>
<p>Having formed this resolution, I immediately set to work to
accomplish it, I might possibly have been induced to wax cool
upon it afterwards, or perhaps to keep weighing the pros and cons
in my mind till the latter overbalanced the former, and I was
driven to relinquish the project altogether, or delay the
execution of it to an indefinite period, had not something
occurred to confirm me in that determination, to which I still
adhere, which I still think I did well to form, and shall do
better to execute.</p>
<p>Since Lord Lowborough’s departure I had regarded the
library as entirely my own, a secure retreat at all hours of the
day. None of our gentlemen had the smallest pretensions to
a literary taste, except Mr. Hargrave; and he, at present, was
quite contented with the newspapers and periodicals of the
day. And if, by any chance, he should look in here, I felt
assured he would soon depart on seeing me, for, instead of
becoming less cool and distant towards me, he had become
decidedly more so since the departure of his mother and sisters,
which was just what I wished. Here, then, I set up my
easel, and here I worked at my canvas from daylight till dusk,
with very little intermission, saving when pure necessity, or my
duties to little Arthur, called me away: for I still thought
proper to devote some portion of every day exclusively to his
instruction and amusement. But, contrary to my expectation,
on the third morning, while I was thus employed, Mr. Hargrave did
look in, and did not immediately withdraw on seeing me. He
apologized for his intrusion, and said he was only come for a
book; but when he had got it, he condescended to cast a glance
over my picture. Being a man of taste, he had something to
say on this subject as well as another, and having modestly
commented on it, without much encouragement from me, he proceeded
to expatiate on the art in general. Receiving no
encouragement in that either, he dropped it, but did not
depart.</p>
<p>‘You don’t give us much of your company, Mrs.
Huntingdon,’ observed he, after a brief pause, during which
I went on coolly mixing and tempering my colours; ‘and I
cannot wonder at it, for you must be heartily sick of us
all. I myself am so thoroughly ashamed of my companions,
and so weary of their irrational conversation and
pursuits—now that there is no one to humanize them and keep
them in check, since you have justly abandoned us to our own
devices—that I think I shall presently withdraw from
amongst them, probably within this week; and I cannot suppose you
will regret my departure.’</p>
<p>He paused. I did not answer.</p>
<p>‘Probably,’ he added, with a smile, ‘your
only regret on the subject will be that I do not take all my
companions along with me. I flatter myself, at times, that
though among them I am not of them; but it is natural that you
should be glad to get rid of me. I may regret this, but I
cannot blame you for it.’</p>
<p>‘I shall not rejoice at your departure, for you can
conduct yourself like a gentleman,’ said I, thinking it but
right to make some acknowledgment for his good behaviour;
‘but I must confess I shall rejoice to bid adieu to the
rest, inhospitable as it may appear.’</p>
<p>‘No one can blame you for such an avowal,’ replied
he gravely: ‘not even the gentlemen themselves, I
imagine. I’ll just tell you,’ he continued, as
if actuated by a sudden resolution, ‘what was said last
night in the dining-room, after you left us: perhaps you will not
mind it, as you’re so very philosophical on certain
points,’ he added with a slight sneer. ‘They
were talking about Lord Lowborough and his delectable lady, the
cause of whose sudden departure is no secret amongst them; and
her character is so well known to them all, that, nearly related
to me as she is, I could not attempt to defend it. Curse
me!’ he muttered, par parenthese, ‘if I don’t
have vengeance for this! If the villain must disgrace the
family, must he blazon it abroad to every low-bred knave of his
acquaintance? I beg your pardon, Mrs. Huntingdon.
Well, they were talking of these things, and some of them
remarked that, as she was separated from her husband, he might
see her again when he pleased.’</p>
<p>‘“Thank you,” said he; “I’ve had
enough of her for the present: I’ll not trouble to see her,
unless she comes to me.”</p>
<p>‘“Then what do you mean to do, Huntingdon, when
we’re gone?” said Ralph Hattersley. “Do
you mean to turn from the error of your ways, and be a good
husband, a good father, and so forth; as I do, when I get shut of
you and all these rollicking devils you call your friends?
I think it’s time; and your wife is fifty times too good
for you, you know—”</p>
<p>‘And he added some praise of you, which you would not
thank me for repeating, nor him for uttering; proclaiming it
aloud, as he did, without delicacy or discrimination, in an
audience where it seemed profanation to utter your name: himself
utterly incapable of understanding or appreciating your real
excellences. Huntingdon, meanwhile, sat quietly drinking
his wine,—or looking smilingly into his glass and offering
no interruption or reply, till Hattersley shouted
out,—“Do you hear me, man?”</p>
<p>‘“Yes, go on,” said he.</p>
<p>‘“Nay, I’ve done,” replied the other:
“I only want to know if you intend to take my
advice.”</p>
<p>‘“What advice?”</p>
<p>‘“To turn over a new leaf, you double-dyed
scoundrel,” shouted Ralph, “and beg your wife’s
pardon, and be a good boy for the future.”</p>
<p>‘“My wife! what wife? I have no wife,”
replied Huntingdon, looking innocently up from his glass,
“or if I have, look you, gentlemen: I value her so highly
that any one among you, that can fancy her, may have her and
welcome: you may, by Jove, and my blessing into the
bargain!”</p>
<p>‘I—hem—someone asked if he really meant what
he said; upon which he solemnly swore he did, and no
mistake. What do you think of that, Mrs. Huntingdon?’
asked Mr. Hargrave, after a short pause, during which I had felt
he was keenly examining my half-averted face.</p>
<p>‘I say,’ replied I, calmly, ‘that what he
prizes so lightly will not be long in his possession.’</p>
<p>‘You cannot mean that you will break your heart and die
for the detestable conduct of an infamous villain like
that!’</p>
<p>‘By no means: my heart is too thoroughly dried to be
broken in a hurry, and I mean to live as long as I
can.’</p>
<p>‘Will you leave him then?’</p>
<p>‘Yes.’</p>
<p>‘When: and how?’ asked he, eagerly.</p>
<p>‘When I am ready, and how I can manage it most
effectually.’</p>
<p>‘But your child?’</p>
<p>‘My child goes with me.’</p>
<p>‘He will not allow it.’</p>
<p>‘I shall not ask him.’</p>
<p>‘Ah, then, it is a secret flight you meditate! but with
whom, Mrs. Huntingdon?’</p>
<p>‘With my son: and possibly, his nurse.’</p>
<p>‘Alone—and unprotected! But where can you
go? what can you do? He will follow you and bring you
back.’</p>
<p>‘I have laid my plans too well for that. Let me
once get clear of Grassdale, and I shall consider myself
safe.’</p>
<p>Mr. Hargrave advanced one step towards me, looked me in the
face, and drew in his breath to speak; but that look, that
heightened colour, that sudden sparkle of the eye, made my blood
rise in wrath: I abruptly turned away, and, snatching up my
brush, began to dash away at my canvas with rather too much
energy for the good of the picture.</p>
<p>‘Mrs. Huntingdon,’ said he with bitter solemnity,
‘you are cruel—cruel to me—cruel to
yourself.’</p>
<p>‘Mr. Hargrave, remember your promise.’</p>
<p>‘I must speak: my heart will burst if I
don’t! I have been silent long enough, and you must
hear me!’ cried he, boldly intercepting my retreat to the
door. ‘You tell me you owe no allegiance to your
husband; he openly declares himself weary of you, and calmly
gives you up to anybody that will take you; you are about to
leave him; no one will believe that you go alone; all the world
will say, “She has left him at last, and who can wonder at
it? Few can blame her, fewer still can pity him; but who is
the companion of her flight?” Thus you will have no
credit for your virtue (if you call it such): even your best
friends will not believe in it; because it is monstrous, and not
to be credited but by those who suffer, from the effects of it,
such cruel torments that they know it to be indeed reality.
But what can you do in the cold, rough world alone? you, a young
and inexperienced woman, delicately nurtured, and
utterly—’</p>
<p>‘In a word, you would advise me to stay where I
am,’ interrupted I. ‘Well, I’ll see about
it.’</p>
<p>‘By all means, leave him!’ cried he earnestly;
‘but <span class="smcap">not</span> alone! Helen! let me
protect you!’</p>
<p>‘Never! while heaven spares my reason,’ replied I,
snatching away the hand he had presumed to seize and press
between his own. But he was in for it now; he had fairly
broken the barrier: he was completely roused, and determined to
hazard all for victory.</p>
<p>‘I must not be denied!’ exclaimed he, vehemently;
and seizing both my hands, he held them very tight, but dropped
upon his knee, and looked up in my face with a half-imploring,
half-imperious gaze. ‘You have no reason now: you are
flying in the face of heaven’s decrees. God has
designed me to be your comfort and protector—I feel it, I
know it as certainly as if a voice from heaven declared,
“Ye twain shall be one flesh”—and you spurn me
from you—’</p>
<p>‘Let me go, Mr. Hargrave!’ said I, sternly.
But he only tightened his grasp.</p>
<p>‘Let me go!’ I repeated, quivering with
indignation.</p>
<p>His face was almost opposite the window as he knelt.
With a slight start, I saw him glance towards it; and then a
gleam of malicious triumph lit up his countenance. Looking
over my shoulder, I beheld a shadow just retiring round the
corner.</p>
<p>‘That is Grimsby,’ said he deliberately.
‘He will report what he has seen to Huntingdon and all the
rest, with such embellishments as he thinks proper. He has
no love for you, Mrs. Huntingdon—no reverence for your sex,
no belief in virtue, no admiration for its image. He will
give such a version of this story as will leave no doubt at all
about your character, in the minds of those who hear it.
Your fair fame is gone; and nothing that I or you can say can
ever retrieve it. But give me the power to protect you, and
show me the villain that dares to insult!’</p>
<p>‘No one has ever dared to insult me as you are doing
now!’ said I, at length releasing my hands, and recoiling
from him.</p>
<p>‘I do not insult you,’ cried he: ‘I worship
you. You are my angel, my divinity! I lay my powers
at your feet, and you must and shall accept them!’ he
exclaimed, impetuously starting to his feet. ‘I will
be your consoler and defender! and if your conscience upbraid you
for it, say I overcame you, and you could not choose but
yield!’</p>
<p>I never saw a man go terribly excited. He precipitated
himself towards me. I snatched up my palette-knife and held
it against him. This startled him: he stood and gazed at me
in astonishment; I daresay I looked as fierce and resolute as
he. I moved to the bell, and put my hand upon the
cord. This tamed him still more. With a
half-authoritative, half-deprecating wave of the hand, he sought
to deter me from ringing.</p>
<p>‘Stand off, then!’ said I; he stepped back.
‘And listen to me. I don’t like you,’ I
continued, as deliberately and emphatically as I could, to give
the greater efficacy to my words; ‘and if I were divorced
from my husband, or if he were dead, I would not marry you.
There now! I hope you’re satisfied.’</p>
<p>His face grew blanched with anger.</p>
<p>‘I am satisfied,’ he replied, with bitter
emphasis, ‘that you are the most cold-hearted, unnatural,
ungrateful woman I ever yet beheld!’</p>
<p>‘Ungrateful, sir?’</p>
<p>‘Ungrateful.’</p>
<p>‘No, Mr. Hargrave, I am not. For all the good you
ever did me, or ever wished to do, I most sincerely thank you:
for all the evil you have done me, and all you would have done, I
pray God to pardon you, and make you of a better
mind.’ Here the door was thrown open, and Messrs.
Huntingdon and Hattersley appeared without. The latter
remained in the hall, busy with his ramrod and his gun; the
former walked in, and stood with his back to the fire, surveying
Mr. Hargrave and me, particularly the former, with a smile of
insupportable meaning, accompanied as it was by the impudence of
his brazen brow, and the sly, malicious, twinkle of his eye.</p>
<p>‘Well, sir?’ said Hargrave, interrogatively, and
with the air of one prepared to stand on the defensive.</p>
<p>‘Well, sir,’ returned his host.</p>
<p>‘We want to know if you are at liberty to join us in a
go at the pheasants, Walter,’ interposed Hattersley from
without. ‘Come! there shall be nothing shot besides,
except a puss or two; I’ll vouch for that.’</p>
<p>Walter did not answer, but walked to the window to collect his
faculties. Arthur uttered a low whistle, and followed him
with his eyes. A slight flush of anger rose to
Hargrave’s cheek; but in a moment he turned calmly round,
and said carelessly:</p>
<p>‘I came here to bid farewell to Mrs. Huntingdon, and
tell her I must go to-morrow.’</p>
<p>‘Humph! You’re mighty sudden in your
resolution. What takes you off so soon, may I
ask?’</p>
<p>‘Business,’ returned he, repelling the
other’s incredulous sneer with a glance of scornful
defiance.</p>
<p>‘Very good,’ was the reply; and Hargrave walked
away. Thereupon Mr. Huntingdon, gathering his coat-laps
under his arms, and setting his shoulder against the
mantel-piece, turned to me, and, addressing me in a low voice,
scarcely above his breath, poured forth a volley of the vilest
and grossest abuse it was possible for the imagination to
conceive or the tongue to utter. I did not attempt to
interrupt him; but my spirit kindled within me, and when he had
done, I replied, ‘If your accusation were true, Mr.
Huntingdon, how dare you blame me?’</p>
<p>‘She’s hit it, by Jove!’ cried Hattersley,
rearing his gun against the wall; and, stepping into the room, he
took his precious friend by the arm, and attempted to drag him
away. ‘Come, my lad,’ he muttered; ‘true
or false, you’ve no right to blame her, you know, nor him
either; after what you said last night. So come
along.’</p>
<p>There was something implied here that I could not endure.</p>
<p>‘Dare you suspect me, Mr. Hattersley?’ said I,
almost beside myself with fury.</p>
<p>‘Nay, nay, I suspect nobody. It’s all right,
it’s all right. So come along, Huntingdon, you
blackguard.’</p>
<p>‘She can’t deny it!’ cried the gentleman
thus addressed, grinning in mingled rage and triumph.
‘She can’t deny it if her life depended on it!’
and muttering some more abusive language, he walked into the
hall, and took up his hat and gun from the table.</p>
<p>‘I scorn to justify myself to you!’ said I.
‘But you,’ turning to Hattersley, ‘if you
presume to have any doubts on the subject, ask Mr.
Hargrave.’</p>
<p>At this they simultaneously burst into a rude laugh that made
my whole frame tingle to the fingers’ ends.</p>
<p>‘Where is he? I’ll ask him myself!’
said I, advancing towards them.</p>
<p>Suppressing a new burst of merriment, Hattersley pointed to
the outer door. It was half open. His brother-in-law
was standing on the front without.</p>
<p>‘Mr. Hargrave, will you please to step this way?’
said I.</p>
<p>He turned and looked at me in grave surprise.</p>
<p>‘Step this way, if you please!’ I repeated, in so
determined a manner that he could not, or did not choose to
resist its authority. Somewhat reluctantly he ascended the
steps and advanced a pace or two into the hall.</p>
<p>‘And tell those gentlemen,’ I
continued—‘these men, whether or not I yielded to
your solicitations.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t understand you, Mrs.
Huntingdon.’</p>
<p>‘You do understand me, sir; and I charge you, upon your
honour as a gentleman (if you have any), to answer truly.
Did I, or did I not?’</p>
<p>‘No,’ muttered he, turning away.</p>
<p>‘Speak up, sir; they can’t hear you. Did I
grant your request?</p>
<p>‘You did not.’</p>
<p>‘No, I’ll be sworn she didn’t,’ said
Hattersley, ‘or he’d never look so black.’</p>
<p>‘I’m willing to grant you the satisfaction of a
gentleman, Huntingdon,’ said Mr. Hargrave, calmly
addressing his host, but with a bitter sneer upon his
countenance.</p>
<p>‘Go to the deuce!’ replied the latter, with an
impatient jerk of the head. Hargrave withdrew with a look
of cold disdain, saying,—‘You know where to find me,
should you feel disposed to send a friend.’</p>
<p>Muttered oaths and curses were all the answer this intimation
obtained.</p>
<p>‘Now, Huntingdon, you see!’ said Hattersley.
‘Clear as the day.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t care what he sees,’ said I,
‘or what he imagines; but you, Mr. Hattersley, when you
hear my name belied and slandered, will you defend it?’</p>
<p>‘I will.’</p>
<p>I instantly departed and shut myself into the library.
What could possess me to make such a request of such a man I
cannot tell; but drowning men catch at straws: they had driven me
desperate between them; I hardly knew what I said. There
was no other to preserve my name from being blackened and
aspersed among this nest of boon companions, and through them,
perhaps, into the world; and beside my abandoned wretch of a
husband, the base, malignant Grimsby, and the false villain
Hargrave, this boorish ruffian, coarse and brutal as he was,
shone like a glow-worm in the dark, among its fellow worms.</p>
<p>What a scene was this! Could I ever have imagined that I
should be doomed to bear such insults under my own roof—to
hear such things spoken in my presence; nay, spoken to me and of
me; and by those who arrogated to themselves the name of
gentlemen? And could I have imagined that I should have
been able to endure it as calmly, and to repel their insults as
firmly and as boldly as I had done? A hardness such as this
is taught by rough experience and despair alone.</p>
<p>Such thoughts as these chased one another through my mind, as
I paced to and fro the room, and longed—oh, how I
longed—to take my child and leave them now, without an
hour’s delay! But it could not be; there was work
before me: hard work, that must be done.</p>
<p>‘Then let me do it,’ said I, ‘and lose not a
moment in vain repinings and idle chafings against my fate, and
those who influence it.’</p>
<p>And conquering my agitation with a powerful effort, I
immediately resumed my task, and laboured hard all day.</p>
<p>Mr. Hargrave did depart on the morrow; and I have never seen
him since. The others stayed on for two or three weeks
longer; but I kept aloof from them as much as possible, and still
continued my labour, and have continued it, with almost unabated
ardour, to the present day. I soon acquainted Rachel with
my design, confiding all my motives and intentions to her ear,
and, much to my agreeable surprise, found little difficulty in
persuading her to enter into my views. She is a sober,
cautious woman, but she so hates her master, and so loves her
mistress and her nursling, that after several ejaculations, a few
faint objections, and many tears and lamentations that I should
be brought to such a pass, she applauded my resolution and
consented to aid me with all her might: on one condition only:
that she might share my exile: otherwise, she was utterly
inexorable, regarding it as perfect madness for me and Arthur to
go alone. With touching generosity, she modestly offered to
aid me with her little hoard of savings, hoping I would
‘excuse her for the liberty, but really, if I would do her
the favour to accept it as a loan, she would be very
happy.’ Of course I could not think of such a thing;
but now, thank heaven, I have gathered a little hoard of my own,
and my preparations are so far advanced that I am looking forward
to a speedy emancipation. Only let the stormy severity of
this winter weather be somewhat abated, and then, some morning,
Mr. Huntingdon will come down to a solitary breakfast-table, and
perhaps be clamouring through the house for his invisible wife
and child, when they are some fifty miles on their way to the
Western world, or it may be more: for we shall leave him hours
before the dawn, and it is not probable he will discover the loss
of both until the day is far advanced.</p>
<p>I am fully alive to the evils that may and must result upon
the step I am about to take; but I never waver in my resolution,
because I never forget my son. It was only this morning,
while I pursued my usual employment, he was sitting at my feet,
quietly playing with the shreds of canvas I had thrown upon the
carpet; but his mind was otherwise occupied, for, in a while, he
looked up wistfully in my face, and gravely
asked,—‘Mamma, why are you wicked?’</p>
<p>‘Who told you I was wicked, love?’</p>
<p>‘Rachel.’</p>
<p>‘No, Arthur, Rachel never said so, I am
certain.’</p>
<p>‘Well, then, it was papa,’ replied he,
thoughtfully. Then, after a reflective pause, he added,
‘At least, I’ll tell you how it was I got to know:
when I’m with papa, if I say mamma wants me, or mamma says
I’m not to do something that he tells me to do, he always
says, “Mamma be damned,” and Rachel says it’s
only wicked people that are damned. So, mamma, that’s
why I think you must be wicked: and I wish you
wouldn’t.’</p>
<p>‘My dear child, I am not. Those are bad words, and
wicked people often say them of others better than
themselves. Those words cannot make people be damned, nor
show that they deserve it. God will judge us by our own
thoughts and deeds, not by what others say about us. And
when you hear such words spoken, Arthur, remember never to repeat
them: it is wicked to say such things of others, not to have them
said against you.’</p>
<p>‘Then it’s papa that’s wicked,’ said
he, ruefully.</p>
<p>‘Papa is wrong to say such things, and you will be very
wrong to imitate him now that you know better.’</p>
<p>‘What is imitate?’</p>
<p>‘To do as he does.’</p>
<p>‘Does he know better?’</p>
<p>‘Perhaps he does; but that is nothing to you.’</p>
<p>‘If he doesn’t, you ought to tell him,
mamma.’</p>
<p>‘I have told him.’</p>
<p>The little moralist paused and pondered. I tried in vain
to divert his mind from the subject.</p>
<p>‘I’m sorry papa’s wicked,’ said he
mournfully, at length, ‘for I don’t want him to go to
hell.’ And so saying he burst into tears.</p>
<p>I consoled him with the hope that perhaps his papa would alter
and become good before he died—; but is it not time to
deliver him from such a parent?</p>
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