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  JILTED!

  OR,

  MY UNCLE’S SCHEME.




  JILTED!

  OR,

  MY UNCLE’S SCHEME.


  A Novel, in Three Vols.


  VOL. III.


  London:
  SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, LOW, & SEARLE,
  CROWN BUILDINGS, FLEET STREET.
  1875.

  [_All Rights Reserved._]




  CHARLES DICKENS AND EVANS,
  CRYSTAL PALACE PRESS.




CONTENTS.


                    PAGE

  CHAPTER I.           1

  CHAPTER II.         26

  CHAPTER III.        48

  CHAPTER IV.         80

  CHAPTER V.         119

  CHAPTER VI.        158

  CHAPTER VII.       184

  CHAPTER VIII.      207




  JILTED!

  OR,

  MY UNCLE’S SCHEME.




MY UNCLE’S SCHEME.




CHAPTER I.

  “What’s the use of snivelling,
  And worrying and drivelling?
  Sure you might give over now,
  And get another lover.”

                     _A Chorus._


Meanwhile, had I wanted solace, it lay close at hand. Theresa was as
kind to me as she had been, on our first meeting, rude. I rode with
her, sometimes twice a day, and got to like the exercise so well,
that I looked forward to it with pleasure. I don’t say the pleasure
wasn’t immensely increased by my companion. She talked charmingly,
with a mixture of vivacity and good sense that made her conversation
refreshing to listen to. She _was_ well-read, as her father had
affirmed, but displayed her stores with so much tact and modesty,
that I never remember hearing her make a learned allusion of which
the appropriateness to the matter under discussion did not entirely
extinguish every suspicion of pedantry.

It was manifestly her resolution to charm out of my memory the very
false impression of her character she had sought to establish. The
sense that my heart belonged to another made her feel perfectly easy
with me. She would speak her mind on a great variety of subjects;
sentimental arguments were frequent; we could talk of love in an
“aibstract sense” like Sidney Smith’s Scotch young lady; reason on
the emotions, and puzzle each other with metaphysics. We were both
perfectly honest and knew no danger. Moreover we were cousins, and
everybody knows the nature of cousins’ rights.

Now I may as well confess--being of opinion that a man ought always
to seize the earliest opportunity to tell the truth--that, like most
young men of four-and-twenty, I was large-hearted: by which I mean,
there beat in my bosom an organ sufficiently elastic to include
several objects at once. I have pretty well established my claims to
inflammability by my brief reference to Pauline (not to speak of the
others, who are nameless) and by the very headlong way in which I had
fallen in love with Conny. I am well aware that among a certain order
of novelists and novel readers, a hero is thought a very contemptible
poor creature if he does not remain undeviatingly true to his first
love through forty or fifty chapters of close print; although during
his journey through these chapters, he may have to encounter several
fascinating and seductive young persons, who exert all the arts they
have acquired by a long apprenticeship to the science of love-making,
to divert him from the straight path that leads him to the altar,
where, robed in the shining nuptial raiment, stands the Only and the
True.

If this were an idle work of fiction, instead of a solid and
trustworthy narrative of facts, I should, no doubt, pursue the
established system, and save the printers a very great deal of labour
by enabling them to use some of their stereotypes. But I carry my
ink-bottle in my bosom; and into it I dip my pen, whilst memory
hoarsely dictates and judgment scowlingly corrects.

Now, do I represent a species, or am I a unique? When I tell you that
though I remained fondly attached to Conny through a large number of
those days darkened by her barbarous neglect, I could still find a
very great pleasure in riding with Theresa, talking to her, listening
to her singing, and saying pretty things with a tolerably significant
face, will you pronounce me an impossibility, or allow that I acted as
a great number of young men have acted, are acting, and will for ever
act?

Come, drop that stone. You know I’m a species. Every woman knows I am
a species. No need to quote bacchanalian lyrics, to mangle Moore, or
steal from Morris, to prove that a man may be fond of one and flirt
with many. But since the testimonies of the great are always valuable,
hear musical Prior sing:

  “So when I am wearied with wandering all day,
  To thee, my delight, in the evening I come.
  No matter what beauties I saw in my way,
  They were but my visits, but thou art my home!”

Theresa gained upon me every day. Fresh characteristics were for ever
cropping up to charm me with new aspects of her nature. She was hearty,
genuine, cheerful; piquant with candour, amusing with originality.
Moreover, I found my admiration of her fine face and figure increase
in proportion as I grew familiar with them. The longer Conny remained
silent the more powerful became my regard for her cousin. I pictured
that fair-haired girl devoted--to Curling; and jealousy stung me, and
turned me to Theresa, and obliged me to think of her.

And how did Theresa treat me? Amiably. Her behaviour admitted no
other construction. But of one thing I was sure; had she suspected
the very doubtful feelings that made my mind wave to and fro like a
Brahmin swinging at a holy festival, she would have chilled me into
a very decorous and distant reserve. Pride she had in abundance. It
peeped out in all directions. But it did not affect her behaviour to
me; simply because she believed me heart and soul devoted to Conny;
and attributed any effervescing manner of mine to the most cousinly
impulses, and the most laudable anxiety to be thought amiable.

I had been now ten days at my uncle’s. He had begged me in his hearty,
hospitable manner to stop the fortnight, and I had consented.

There had been a time during those ten days when I was eager for
nothing but to return to Updown. But Conny’s silence had made me
rebellious. I have indicated some of the thoughts that upset me. Since
she wouldn’t write to me, what right had she to expect me to show any
great desire to see her? I said to myself: “She ought to understand
that I am not to be trifled with. My feelings are not to be trampled
upon. If she really cares about me, my prolonged absence will chafe
her; and an irritant may serve to excite her languid emotion into a
good, sturdy passion. She will conclude that I have found something
_very_ fascinating in Theresa; thus, by reasoning herself into a
jealous mood, she will be taught that she loves; my behaviour shall
attest my sincerity, and the rest shall be lost in the murmurs of the
marriage-service.”

However, I should be untruthful to pretend that my resolution to stop a
fortnight at Thistlewood was entirely owing to my desire to pique Conny.

It was quite impossible for a young man so ardently devoted to the sex
as I was, to be day after day in the company of a young lady with finer
eyes than ever Reynolds painted, and with such a figure as Canova had
worshipped, and not be very sensibly affected. I well remember leaning
over her one day when she was playing the piano, and sighing inaudibly,
“Yes! were Conny to deceive me, here might I find her substitute.”
Did I start on becoming sensible of the escape of so disloyal a
sentiment? Not I. I never started in my life at an idea of my own. Am
I a Radcliffean, an Ainsworthian hero, that I skip in my cloak to an
impulse, and recoil with bloodshot eyes before a fancy?

It was Conny’s fault. Were it the last drop in the well--I mean, were
this my last breath, I should say, “Conny was to blame.”

I loved her as fondly as any man can love whose passion is fed by
the beauty, but not by the promises, of the adored. Is beauty a good
foundation for love? Are the Goodwin Sands a good dry dock for a ship?
Beauty inspires passion, but will it create sincerity? Something more
than that is wanted, I think. No love lasts that is unrequited. No
lamp burns long that isn’t replenished with oil. There are hundreds of
verses among the poets illustrative of this, the best of which I might
easily quote if I knew where to find them. Don’t say this digression
is neither here nor there. It is here and there too. It concerns my
sincerity; it vindicates my loyalty.

Riding with Theresa on a fragrant and glowing summer evening, we
fell to talking about Conny. By this time I had made up my mind to
understand that she didn’t mean to answer my letter, and something
like a sense of resignation was lodged at the centre of my being. All
those tendencies to pull my hair, to neglect my cravat, to write verses
against the whole sex, with citric acid in my ink-bottle, were subdued
or dead. I had, indeed, my sneerful intervals, but Theresa was always
at hand with her beauty for me to forget myself in.

How the subject came about I don’t know, but I remember that Theresa
asked me if Conny had ever answered my letter.

“No,” I answered quickly, clapping my hand, so to speak, over the
nerve-pulp her innocent question had laid bare.

“I suppose she does not think it worth while to write, as she hopes to
meet you shortly.”

“That is no excuse,” I answered sternly. “I wrote to her eight, nine
days ago, and she _ought_ to have answered me.”

Theresa lifted her eyebrows, and thoughtfully patted her horse’s neck.

“_You_ would have answered me,” I said.

“I always answer the letters I receive.”

“If she loved me she would have replied by return of post.”

“Oh, you mustn’t rush to severe conclusions. A word will explain
everything, no doubt.”

“I can imagine no excuse for her silence,” I exclaimed sulkily. “Would
I have treated her so? Had I received a letter from her, she would
have had my answer before the ink upon her pen was dry. I hate to be
neglected. People neglect those they despise. She very well knows how a
letter would have gratified me, and nothing but an abominable theory of
heartlessness,” I cried, “can account for her neglect.”

It was fortunate for my horse that I wore no spurs, or God knows where
I should have driven them to, with the violent plunge I gave with my
legs as I spoke.

“All this is rank heresy,” said Theresa, laughing, “for which, on your
return, you will be judged, sentenced, and executed.”

“It is galling truth,” I answered; “but if she thinks I care, she is
very much mistaken.”

“Then let us suppose she cares.”

“Neither of us cares. She never liked me. It amused her to hear my
nonsense; though, for anything I know, I may barely have saved myself
from being repulsive. A woman detests to be made love to by the man
she dislikes. Why did she encourage me? A look would have kept me off;
a sneer dispersed me. I’m not a burr. I am not one of those adhesive
animals whom no hints, no open-mouthed aversion, can dislodge. I am by
nature so sensitive, that it is now a miracle to me how I contrived to
tell her what feelings I had, before I was sure she was willing to hear
them.”

“You must make allowances,” said Theresa, who seemed greatly amused.
“You confessed that Conny wasn’t in love with you, and you have
therefore no right to expect any favour from her.”

“But you’ll allow that she might have answered my letter.”

Well, she would allow that.

“And you’ll allow that there is nothing more mortifying than to write a
letter and receive no answer.”

Yes; that also could be allowed.

“It is gross rudeness,” I continued, “even in a stranger whose reply
you don’t care twopence about. But in a relation--a cousin--a young
lady--a girl who knows that the writer of the letter she receives with
silent contempt is--is--is----”

Words failed me.

“Conny will explain when you meet.”

“I don’t care whether she does or not,” I exclaimed. “My love has
received a blow--a wound--if it dies the blood is on her head.”

“Nonsense!” cried Theresa. “A lover’s quarrel.”

I felt too indignant to answer. So we jogged on in silence for some
minutes, I as insensible to the abounding beauties of the evening, as
if I had worn green spectacles.

“I wouldn’t feel so vexed,” said I presently, “by her not answering my
letter, if I were sure that I had no rival. But I can’t forget--I never
can forget--that there is one Curling, a frizzy-headed youth, cashier
in my uncle’s bank, who paid her so much attention before I knew her,
that her mamma grew frightened, and forbade him the house.”

“But you knew of this Mr. Curling before you made love to her?”

“Come, come, Theresa, her conduct is inexcusable. Oughtn’t she to have
answered my letter? Answer me that.”

“I have answered you that once. In my opinion, Charlie, if Conny is not
in love with you, she is to be congratulated.”

“Eh! how?” I cried.

“Because I don’t think you are in love with her,” she answered, fixing
her bright eyes on me.

“If I am not, whose fault is it?” I said, blushing.

“There is an old French proverb that says we forgive in proportion as
we love. I don’t find you making enough excuses for Conny to satisfy me
that you love her.”

“Love makes people critical and harsh,” said I, “not lenient. I never
believe what a Frenchman says about love. They know nothing about it in
that country. When I left Updown I was in Conny’s power. She could have
twisted me round her little finger. But she has chosen to ill-use me,
and by heavens----who-o-o!”

The movement of my horse spoilt a rabid peroration.

“I consider Conny treats you exactly as you deserve.”

“What do you mean? do you really think I don’t--I didn’t love her?”

“You admired her, and mistook your feelings. It is fortunate for you
both,” she continued, with great seriousness, “that you left Updown,
as your absence has enabled you to test your own feelings as well as
hers. You would have married her for her face, without asking your
heart if it contained a more permanent emotion than admiration; and it
is quite impossible to imagine how unhappy disappointment would have
rendered you both.”

I laughed outright, so much was I amused by her cool and critical
summary of my feelings. I don’t know whether she saw anything to
disapprove in my merriment, but she remained very grave. There is no
question but that I ought to have been abashed; that I ought to have
cried, either aloud or to myself, “Can it be possible that my cousin
speaks the truth? have I mistaken my sentiments? Has a ten days’
separation from the girl I was prepared to adore, coupled with a little
trifling neglect on her part, taught me a right appreciation of the
emotion I had regarded as the most exalted and undying love?”

But I indulged in no such soliloquy. Looking at Theresa, steadily, I
said, “Do you think me a jilt?”

“No. If I did, I shouldn’t take the trouble to be commonly civil to
you.”

“But you think I have jilted Conny?”

“I have not said so. I don’t believe she is in love with you, and a man
can’t jilt a girl who doesn’t care for him.”

“If I were conceited, I shouldn’t like to hear that.”

“Oh,” she answered, smiling, “this is a very old story. Pictures and
books have been made out of it in abundance. Some silly writers vamp
up a broken heart as a condition of the tale, but never yet was heart
broken by people who didn’t know their own minds.”

She shook her reins, and started her horse into a gallop.

I rode with so much assurance now that I could admire her fine figure
with my faculties entirely unengaged by the cares of the highway.
How well she sat her horse! How gracefully her form responded to the
movement of the animal! She was a finer woman than Conny. There was a
tartness, too, in her speech that made her language relishable, with a
spiciness I could not remember tasting in Conny’s conversation. I was
both piqued and amused by the very cool way in which she had disposed
of these sentiments of mine, of which, after all, she could only
suspect the evanescence.

Only the other day I was thinking I would rather marry Lucifer
than such a shrew, and now nothing hindered me from expressing my
admiration, in terms that would have borrowed a very soft significance
from my heart, but the apprehension of a curt and contemptuous rebuff.

Again and again I will repeat, it was all owing to Conny. She had
me once securely; she might have kept me for ever. Why hadn’t she
answered my letter? One tender sentence would have made me her slave
again. Echo not, Eugenio, the remark of Theresa that I had no right to
expect a favour of any kind from Conny. An answer to my letter I could
claim, not as a favour, but as a right. Two lines would have sufficed
me. Yea, my bare address on an envelope would have told me I was not
forgotten--that my tender breathings were remembered. Didn’t she know
the risk she ran by treating me neglectfully at the time that Theresa
was my companion; at the time that a fine, a handsome, and an amiable
woman was the sole female society I frequented? You starve your dog,
and call him unfaithful, because he takes up his quarters in the house
of a neighbour where he is affectionately caressed and plentifully
fed! What vile logic is here? Treat me well and I’ll love thee. Answer
me my long and amorous letter, and I’ll be true. Hint that thy heart
is not insensible to the pleadings of my passion, and I’ll adore. But
leave me to quit thee, chewing the airiest cud of unsubstantial hope,
suffer me to depart, making no sign, to be absent and illuminate my
desolate fancies with no gleam from thy careless heart--What wonder if
I am found wanting? What marvel if I discover in eyes as splendid as
thine, in hair as abundant though darker, in speech more vivacious,
intelligent and characteristic, in manners as womanly, as gentle, as
dignified, a magic that leads me from thy altar, oh faithless one, on
which no fire burns, to another shrine, whereon it may be my rapture to
kindle an inextinguishable flame?




CHAPTER II.

  _Justice._ “Why, you little truant, how durst you wander so far from
  the house without my leave?”

                                              _The Scheming Lieutenant._


Whether it was because Theresa had told her papa that I was in love
with Conny, or because he was too fastidious to refer to the subject,
my uncle never once throughout my visit had a word to say about his
brother’s scheme. He was highly gratified--as was plainly visible in
his broad countenance--to see how well I got on with Theresa; but
this satisfaction I considered entirely the result of his hospitable
feelings. Whilst his daughter misbehaved herself and snubbed me, he
had spoken in her praise, for then she stood in need of it; but on her
dropping her mocking manners and exhibiting herself as an agreeable,
lady-like girl, he said no more about her, good nor bad. It was indeed
as if he had exclaimed--“There she is, my boy: she is now herself; and
you must find out what you want to know without any help from me. If
you fall in love with her, _bon_; if she falls in love with you, _bon_
again. If you don’t fall in love with each other, still _bon_. I’ll
not trumpet her praises. I am entirely at your service when you want a
companion; but I am decidedly unwilling to lose time I might be very
usefully employing, in helping a young man and a young woman to love
each other.”

I thought none the worse of him for holding aloof from his daughter’s
and my business.

When the day at last came on which I believed it necessary to return
to Updown, he was heartily grieved to part with me. We had been much
together, and I knew he would miss me. He had always found me a
good listener, ready to laugh loudly at his stories, whether I had
heard them before or not. I invariably, moreover, exhibited a great
interest in his books, of which he was even prouder than he was of his
recollections of the great men of his young days. There was certainly
no one in the neighbourhood who could take my place after I was gone.

Theresa was also very sorry to part with me; but there was nothing
in her behaviour to cause me to imagine I had produced the least
sentimental impression. As I stood talking to her in the hall, while
the carriage was preparing to drive me to the station, I said:

“If I write to you, Theresa, will you answer my letter?”

“Certainly I will,” she answered. “I hope you will write. I shall be
very glad to hear from you.”

“I have passed a most delightful time,” said I, looking into her
expressive eyes.

“I am glad to hear you say so. Before you leave me, you must let me
know that I am thoroughly forgiven for the outrageous reception I gave
you.”

“Do you think it possible I could bear resentment against you? You
must forgive me for ever having given you the trouble to assume so
disagreeable a part.” I added a little bashfully: “it would have been
better for my peace of mind, perhaps, had you persisted in being
disagreeable.”

The faintest flush came into her cheeks, and she immediately said:

“Write to me when Conny has forgiven you for the wrong construction you
have put upon her silence.”

“I won’t promise that,” I replied, quite appreciating the little rebuff
that was implied in her remark. “She may make up her mind not to
forgive me, and I should be sorry to depend upon her caprice in order
to write to you.”

At this moment the carriage drove up, and I had no opportunity for
saying more; which was perhaps fortunate, as I might have committed
myself.

“Mind you come and see us again soon,” my uncle said to me as we
rattled towards the station. “We shall remain here for the next two
months; after that we may, perhaps, go to Scotland for a short time.
Come to us, if only for a night. You may depend upon a hearty welcome.”

It was four o’clock when I arrived at Updown. How was it that, on
alighting on the platform, my heart didn’t throb wildly at the prospect
of seeing Conny? How was it that, instead of my heart throbbing wildly,
I found myself thinking, with a positive feeling of regret, of the girl
I had left behind me? Had anybody asked me which I would rather do: go
to Grove End or return to Thistlewood, how would I have answered?

Don’t call me heartless. Suppress your sneers. Do people in this
world never mistake their feelings? are our impulses always right? do
we never find they have directed us the wrong road? Let the secure
despise: they are in so small a minority as to be contemptible. The
many are with me. Yes, there _are_ men who, having fallen in love, have
never had reason to suppose they made a mistake. But how many millions
have blundered into spooning with the wrong creatures?

For six revolving moons, Sempronius dallied and adored: Clorinda was
his goddess, and a hundred poems distributed among the magazines may,
by the diligent explorer, be found to survive his error. But even
whilst the seventh moon was a mere line in the heavens--as delicate a
curve, my dear, as your eyebrow--Sempronius the base met Sacharissa
the sweet. Hey, presto, pass! cried the Magician we all know.
Sempronius’ heart sped with miraculous speed from the white bosom of
Clorinda to the whiter bosom of Sacharissa. There it still is--there
it will probably remain. Sempronius the base is engaged to Sacharissa,
and Clorinda sailed for India last week along with her husband, Major
O’Ulysses. No hearts were broken, no tears were shed--no eyes became
bloodshot--no hair was torn out by the roots; the fact being, that
heaven in its mercy hath qualified humanity with a marvellous power of
forgetting its mistakes, and of accommodating itself to the first new
condition events impose.

I walked to my lodgings and there found a long letter from my father.
It was all about my uncle’s scheme, Tom had written a full account of
his fine idea for making my fortune, and on receipt of it, down had sat
my father, to urge me, as I respected myself, to fall in with Tom’s
views, marry Theresa, and become a partner in two senses.

A fortnight before I should have glowered over the parental scribble
with bilious eyes; I could now read it with complacency and appreciate
the philosophy that illuminated the illegible, but very aristocratic
scrawl. There was no Longueville news in the letter. It was all about
my marriage with Theresa.

“My horror of the sea,” said my father in a postscript, “is as great
as ever it was, and not even Tom’s hospitable entreaties could induce
me to set foot on the steamboat. But you may depend upon my being
present at your marriage with Theresa; for so great is my anxiety to
see you in a secure and affluent position, that I would brave the
fiercest gale rather than miss the marriage ceremony.”

Having read this letter, and had a short chat with my landlady, I
pulled out my watch, and saw that I should have time to walk to Grove
End before they began dinner. I had not written to tell them of my
return; but I assumed that they would expect me, as in my letter to
Conny I had told her, that on no account could I endure to be away
longer than a fortnight from Updown.

The bank was closed as I passed it; but as it was market-day, I had no
doubt Mr. Curling was still hard at work within. I was very meditative
as I walked. What would Conny answer, I wondered, when I asked her
why she had not replied to my letter? She would be pert, of course.
That would make me bitter. I should talk with a bold face of Theresa’s
beauty, of Theresa’s talents, of Theresa’s figure; if she was the least
bit in love with me, I would render her violently jealous. I would
humble her with comparisons. I would let her know there were other
charming women in the world besides her, that I had a catholic taste,
and could admire brown hair and tall figures as well as yellow locks
and blue eyes. What! was my heart to be trampled upon? No, by heavens!
if she loved me, let her tell me so; if she didn’t, let her marry
Curling, and suffer me to seek, unmolested, some bosom on which to
repose my well-shaped head and aching brows.

I reached the house and knocked at the door. My heart thumped an echo
to the summons. I nodded to the servant, and strode in as a man might
into his own house. I hung my hat on a peg, and turning round to enter
the drawing-room, faced my uncle.

“Good gracious!” I exclaimed, taking his hand and staring at his
melancholy, haggard face, “what is the matter? what has happened?”

“Come in,” he answered, and drawing me into the room, closed the door.
My aunt, who stood near the window, ran up to me.

“Oh, Charlie!” she cried, “what do you think has happened? Conny has
left us! she has run away with Mr. Curling! Think of her deserting us
in our old age! the cruel, undutiful, ungrateful child!”

“What!” I gasped, staring at my uncle, and scarce crediting my own
ears. “Conny gone!”

“Sit down,” he answered. “Don’t cry, my dear,” to his wife, “it
unmans me. This is a dreadful blow, but it has happened to many
besides ourselves, and we must be resigned to the common lot. Yes,”
he exclaimed, addressing me, his lips twitching with emotion as he
spoke, “our child has left us. She went out last night under pretence
of spending the evening with the Maddison girls. James walked with her
as far as the town, and Conny then told him he could return home. At
half-past ten we sent the phaeton for her, and James came galloping
back to say that the Maddisons had not seen anything of her that
evening.”

“Instantly,” interrupted my aunt sobbing wildly, “I feared the worst.”

“I seized my hat,” continued my uncle, “jumped into the phaeton, and
drove to the Maddisons, who assured me that my daughter had not been
to their house. I then drove to Mr. Curling’s lodgings, acting upon
a suggestion my wife had made before I started, and learned that the
young man had gone out two hours and a half before, carrying a bag with
him. Hearing this, I went to the railway station, and there learnt that
Mr. Curling and my child had started for London by the train that left
at twenty minutes to eight. My intention, then, was to send a telegram
to the London terminus, desiring that my daughter should be detained on
her arrival; but, I was told that by that time the train had reached
London. Nothing remained but for me to return home and break the news
to my wife.”

I was too astounded to speak.

“Oh, Charlie,” cried my aunt, clasping her hands, “I so wanted you!
You would have followed her and brought her back! but oh! it is too
late now--she is ruined--degraded! she has shamed our name for ever! To
think that the baby I have nursed, that I have loved and watched over
with pride and hope from the hour of her birth, should abandon her poor
father and me in our old age! Oh, shame, shame! My poor Thomas--my poor
husband! it is too much for us--too much for us to bear!”

“Nay, nay, have patience--have faith,” answered her husband, seizing
her hand and caressing her. “Mr. Curling has acted wildly, but he is
an honourable man. They both knew we should never consent to their
marriage, and they have done as thousands have done before them--defied
father and mother, and eloped. To-morrow we shall get a letter, telling
us they are married, and begging our forgiveness.”

“Of course they have run away to get married,” I gasped.

“But oh! what a man to marry! Oh, what a man to have for a son-in-law!”
raved my aunt. “I felt--I knew all along that Conny was in love with
him, and so I wanted her to marry you. I was certain that she would
never be safe from that wicked wretch until she was married. All along
I was certain of that.”

“We never went to bed all last night,” groaned my uncle.

“Oh, Thomas, Thomas!” cried my aunt. “Why did you discourage my efforts
to marry her to Charlie? Why did you tell him you could never sanction
his marriage with her? Didn’t I assure you, night after night, that
there was no other way of saving her from that wretch! My child, my
child! where is she now? Will she ever come back to me?”

“She will, believe me, she will,” I said. “She will tell you that she
never could have been happy without Curling, and nothing you could have
said or done would have prevented this thing from happening sooner or
later.”

“But to be deceived by one’s only child!” burst out my aunt. “Has she
no heart? Didn’t she fear that such conduct would break her papa and
me down, and put us into our graves? And how cruelly _you_ have been
deceived!”

“Oh, don’t think of me--I am nowhere in this grief. What can I do to
serve you? Give me some commission.”

“If I knew where to find her,” cried my uncle, “I wouldn’t seek her.
What! bring her back alone, after she has been away from us two days?
If she returns at all, she must return with her husband.”

“You are quite right,” said I. “We can do nothing but be patient.
Depend upon it you will receive a letter from her to-morrow morning.”

And then as the whole truth burst upon me, in one of those successive
shocks, with which an astounding event thunders its way, so to speak,
into the mind, I shouted: “What a villain! what a trickster! what a
hypocrite! Never by word or look, often as I have tried to get the
truth out of him, has he given me reason to believe he cared a fig for
Conny!”

And then _her_ treachery smote me, and I gasped--I gasped!

At this juncture my aunt went into hysterics.

What an evening that was! I wouldn’t go through such a time again, not
for the love of all the fair women Mr. Tennyson dreamt about. _Dinner!_
We had no dinner. It was served--we were summoned to it--but my aunt
was in bed, and the sight of food made my uncle speechless. I swallowed
some soup, quite unconsciously, because it was set before me; but my
grief revolted at solids. I could as soon have eaten the cook as the
slice of beef which my uncle, with the tears standing in his eyes,
blindly hacked off for me.

Oh daughters, dear! what do you mean by making your papas and mammas
wretched? Can’t you love decently, and marry becomingly? Do you think
it fun to go running off o’ nights with men, and wringing tears out of
hearts you were sent into this world to soothe and bless? Is romance
spiced by a mother’s lamentations? Is love sweetened by a father’s
groans? If you think this, get along with you, do, to the Cannibal
Islands, where the people who marry, first propitiate the gods by the
sacrifice of a relation.

As I beheld my uncle’s tears, I cried to myself: “Does a man marry
for _this_? Does he soothe and sue, make presents, and receive them
back, grow cynical, and leave his beard unshorn, laugh at papa’s stale
stories, and submit to mamma’s acidity, for _this_? Does he take upon
himself the responsibilities of a British housekeeper, write cheques
for landlords, wrangle with tradespeople, be interfered with by his
wife’s connections, hunt after monthly nurses, sit up all night with
windy babies--to be made miserable in his old age?”

Art thou a bachelor who readest this? I warn thee--leave well alone.
Hast thou a landlady? Incline thine ear over the staircase when thou
hearest her wearied husband enter, listen to her greeting, withdraw to
thy one room, flop upon thy knees, and breathe thy little prayer of
gratitude that the hat thou puttest on thy head covereth thy family,
and crowneth thee lord of thyself. Accept this chapter as a tombstone,
under which moulder the bones of an Experience. If there be no epitaph,
it is because I choose not to write thee a lie. Ponder and pause, then
go thy ways, moralising on the lot of others, and grateful for thine
own.




CHAPTER III.

  “How say you! do you not yet begin to apprehend a comfort? some allay
  of sweetness in the bitter waters?”

                                                         _Charles Lamb._


It was twelve o’clock before I got back to my lodgings. I had done my
best to cheer my uncle up, and certainly left him a great deal calmer
than I had found him. You may believe he had asked me no questions
about my visit to Thistlewood; the poor man could think and speak of
nothing else but his daughter.

For myself, I never seriously reflected how far I was to be considered
affected by Conny’s unnatural conduct until I reached my lodgings.
Then, in the stillness of my sitting-room, with nothing to distract my
attention but the picture of my landlady’s husband, with a great moon
shining solemnly in through the window, and all the trees breathless in
the night, I could think.

To think was to be shocked. What a depth of duplicity was in that
child! Did I _now_ know why she hadn’t answered my letter! Oh fool,
fool, ever to have given her a thought! For what had she encouraged me?
for what had she simpered and blushed when I had looked and sighed?
for what had she allowed me, that Sunday evening, to coquette with her
hair and the rose? for what had she called Mr. Curling “that nice young
man?” for what had she given me reason to believe that her heart was
entirely vacant, and that, if I would be patient, she would some day or
other permit my image to take up a permanent lodging there? I say for
what? and echo answered, Sot!

She had thrust me between her mother and herself, so that my elegant
shape might hide from her mamma’s eyes the love-making she and that
rascal Curling were enjoying behind me.

I had been made a tool of. Confusion! how that cashier must have
sniggered at me when I wasn’t looking! how, when I had treated him with
the lordly affability that is the marked characteristic of contempt,
how must he have revelled in the reflection that he and his sweetheart
were making, between them, the most consummate ass that ever walked on
two legs, of the very fine gentleman!

Here were the dregs of the nauseating dose, and, phew! filthy and
bitter they were. It was no medicine. It was rank poison; and my love,
sadly emaciated already, and worn out for want of proper nourishment,
gave a kick, and expired. Yes, that night,

  Down dropped my love,
  My love dropped dead!

Blow out your candle, Eugenio, and the sudden extinction of the flame
shall illustrate the awful abruptness with which _my_ flame perished.
From that night, from that hour of pride made wretched by contempt,
Conny was no more to me than the scarecrow that nods its blind head at
the birds and flaps its idle rags along the breeze. I was in her power
once. My heart had palpitated in the golden meshes of her hair like a
robin in a fowler’s net. I was hers--she might have married me. But
she had preferred a cashier. She had chosen for her partner a banker’s
clerk with frizzy hair; for a breast to lean on, a bosom shaped like
a pigeon-pie. Was I going to gnash my teeth and hurl ghastly looks at
the moon? Does Abraham Levi burst into tears when a customer finds
something more striking and splendid in a piece of paste than in a
fine stone? I was a diamond, she might have worn me: she had chosen
a Brummagem article instead, and by heavens, Eugenio! no liquid gem
distilled from my eyes should add one grain of worth to her outrageous
choice!

I was at Grove End early next morning, and was met by my uncle, who,
without a word, put the letter he had just received from Conny into my
hands.

“I prophesied you would hear from her,” said he, and began to read.

What a queer letter it was! how tender, sorrowful, triumphant, and
pert! Not a hint of regret. Curling and she were married, and there
was only one thing wanting to complete her happiness--her papa’s and
mamma’s forgiveness. Her dearest papa might be angry with her at
first; but when he should grow calm, he would see how much better it
was for her to marry the man she loved, and live happily all her life,
than be forced into a union with _one_ for whom, though she liked
and respected him for some things, she could never have the least
affection. (Oh, you deceiver! oh, you little humbug!) Her dear Theodore
hadn’t much money; indeed, he had none at all; and would her dear papa
(how they _dear_ you, these little women!) mind sending her a cheque,
_uncrossed_? She looked forward eagerly to his reply, in which she was
quite sure he would tell her that she and dear Theodore were forgiven,
and then her happiness would be to return to dear old Updown, and
settle down in some little cottage, which Theodore would be able to
maintain by his salary at the bank. Her dear papa and mamma might be
sure that dear Theodore wanted nothing from them but his rights; that
he was willing to work for what he should get; and that he _looked_ to
receive nothing with his darling Conny, whom he had married because it
would have broken his heart to see her Charlie’s wife, and because he
worshipped the ground she trod on.

This was the gist of the letter; but I can convey no notion of its
mixture of love and sauciness.

I returned it to my uncle, without comment, and asked after my aunt.

“She has been far from well during the night,” he answered, “slept but
little, and cried frequently. But this letter has cheered her up. It
has done me good too. Now that I know she is married, I can look about
me again, and think over what is to be done. But oh! my boy, what a
wretched day was yesterday to your aunt and me!”

“Of course,” I replied, “you will write to her to return to Updown.”

“I don’t know what I shall do yet,” he said, shaking his head, and
striding about the room to conceal the nervous tremors that from time
to time shook his frame. “Should not such disobedience be punished?
shall no rebuke follow such heartlessness?”

“No, no! don’t let us talk of punishing her. She is very young: she has
acted, I admit, with great thoughtlessness; but remember, if ever a
girl wants sympathy, and demands the love of her father and mother, it
is when she is newly married. Let me go to London, and be the bearer of
your and her mother’s goodwill and forgiveness, and bring them home.”

“Charlie,” he exclaimed, grasping my hand, “I honour you for your kind
heart.”

I blushed, and looked a protest.

“She has deceived you,” he continued, “and if you can forgive her,
ought not we, her parents, to do so? But I must think awhile, and
confer with my wife before I act. Conny ought to know the torture of
suspense, and be made to feel a little the grief and fear she has
caused us. It is fortunate you have returned, for I could not do
without you at the bank now.”

It was clear to me that the greatest kindness I could do him was to
leave him alone. I therefore declined his invitation to breakfast, and
returned to my lodgings, where breakfast awaited me, and then repaired
to the bank.

Mr. Spratling was very glad to see me, and instantly began to talk of
Curling. Wasn’t it wonderful? Wasn’t he cunning, just? Only the day
before he had run away with Miss Hargrave, he had said he meant to ask
the governor for a holiday, when Mr. Charles came back.

“He seemed to be afraid of meeting you,” Mr. Spratling told me. “He
asked Mr. Hargrave several times when you were expected. I daresay he
thought you would find out his game.”

Perhaps he did. Perhaps in his quiet, cautious way, he was jealous
of Conny, and thought if he should give me time to make love to her
again, I might win her away from him. He had very well known that I had
her mamma on my side; that if my uncle had suspected his daughter’s
attachment, I should have had him on my side too; that I could claim
to be a gentleman; that I was a prospective partner in the bank; in a
word, that I was hedged about with every condition calculated to secure
me a triumph; whilst he on his side had literally nothing whatever
to make him hopeful but Conny’s promises, which caprice might at any
moment cause her to break.

I looked at his vacant stool, and thought of him sitting there and
laughing internally at the trick he and Conny were playing me; of
the grinning that must have gone on behind my back, when my cousin
mockingly repeated the language I had addressed to her, and mimicked
the attitudes of entreaty which I had no doubt unconsciously thrown
myself into whilst begging her to tell me that--

Pshaw! never mind. It is all past. I never really loved her. I thought
her bewitchingly pretty, and wanted to possess her; I thought it would
be the agreeablest pastime to play with her sunny hair, and trace my
haunting face in her deep eyes. It was a young man’s fancy. I fancied
her. But could that mean I _loved_ her, when the first puff that came
blew my flame out, and left my heart free for thy clearer radiance, my
T.?

Mortifying, fearfully mortifying the whole thing was, I agree. To be
made ridiculous in the eyes of a cashier who touched his hat when
he met me in the street and often called me Sir; to be jilted for a
lean banker’s clerk whose learning lay in his ledger, the horizon of
whose mind was the circle of a sovereign; who wrote like a copy-book,
and counted like the sums in Colenso--as accurately, I mean (faugh!
I wouldn’t give twopence for such plebeian parts!). Yes, fearfully
mortifying all this was. How many years have passed since then? It
matters not--but though my waistcoats of that epoch would require
another foot added to them to bring the buttons and the button-holes
together upon my present dignified figure, I cannot recur to this one
great sackcloth-and-ashes experience of mine without feeling my spleen
enlarged under my left ribs, and my multifarious perceptions grow
jaundiced.

God knows whether I should have felt so magnanimously disposed towards
the runaway couple had my heart been as much concerned in the matter
as it ought to have been. All the morning I was resolving, should my
uncle show himself stubborn, to plead their cause and petition his
forgiveness.

Could I have done this had the injury been deadly? and wouldn’t the
injury have been deadly had I adored Conny as I imagined I did?

Well, Mr. John Halifax, perhaps I _might_ have shammed a forgiving
spirit; I _might_ have acted in such a way, as to make her fancy I
bore no grudge. But I didn’t sham, you dear model of a gentleman. I
_did_ forgive her, John. Nay, I even congratulated myself that she had
put it out of my power to show that since my visit to Thistlewood my
sentiments had undergone a change. Had she not run away, I must have
transformed my aunt into an implacable enemy by suggesting that I was
no longer her daughter’s humble, obedient slave; I should have lost
my uncle’s good opinion by exhibiting a character he would mistakenly
regard as unstable and even insincere--for though he objected to my
marriage with Conny, depend upon it he would not have relished my
defection; and lastly, I should have been placed in the extremely
awkward position of having to give Conny to know that my love was not
based upon that permanent rock of sentiment which I had more than once
sworn, with some degree of violence, that it was.

In short, fortune had dealt me the very cards I should have chosen from
the pack, had choice been given me. I preserved my dignity. I could now
turn to Theresa without the faintest chance of being called inconstant.
My pride could still enjoy, with undiminished gust, the lamentations my
aunt would be certain to raise over her abortive hopes; and I could
preserve my credit with Theresa, who, on hearing of Conny’s doings,
would instantly account for the surprising change that had come over my
dream!

My uncle came to the bank at one o’clock, and finding there was little
or no business doing, called me into his private office.

“Charlie,” said he, “my wife and I have made up our minds as to the
course to be pursued. I shall go to London this afternoon, and bring my
daughter and her husband back with me to-morrow.”

“The very thing you should do.”

“I won’t say that we are not both of us showing very great weakness in
forgiving Conny so easily; but she is our only child--and the mother’s
heart yearns for her.”

“And so does yours.”

“I wish it didn’t, I wish I could be severe and obdurate. But we
can’t--we oughtn’t to fight against our instincts. The young people
must live with us until I can furnish a home for them; and, as for
Curling, there is nothing for it but to let him keep his position
here. The eyes of the whole town are upon us, and it won’t do to seem
ashamed.”

“Certainly not. I know what my father would suggest: that we all went
about, forthwith, boasting of our new connexion, and appearing so
proud, as scarcely to be civil to the poorer neighbours. After all,
what is there to be ashamed of? Curling is not ungentlemanly; he is
rather mercantile, perhaps; but he is certain to borrow some graces
from his wife, and to make as good a figure in society as most young
men.”

“I’d have given five thousand pounds rather than this should have
happened; but as it _has_ happened, we must make the best of it. The
first thing to be done is to get them married properly. My wife, I
fear, will give us trouble. She talks as if she loathed Curling, and
though she professes to be willing to do anything now, I fear that when
the time comes she will never consent to be seen with him out of doors,
or to prove, by her behaviour, that the marriage is not a disgrace.”

“We must reason with her.”

“Yes, yes. Sufficient unto the day--this is a contingent evil: we have
enough to do to deal with the present. I was so grieved and worried
last night, that I totally forgot to ask you about your visit. What do
you think of Theresa?”

“I like her very much,” I answered, guardedly.

“Did they make you welcome?”

“They did indeed.”

“Do you think my scheme as disagreeable as it struck you a fortnight
ago?” he asked, smiling languidly.

“We’ll talk about this another time,” I answered, uneasily. “Let us get
Conny home, and make her comfortable, before we trouble ourselves with
other matters.”

“Ay, you are right,” he exclaimed, falling quickly back into the one
absorbing trouble, from which he had momentarily diverged. “I can
leave you in charge here, can’t I? and I must ask you, after the bank
is closed, to go and keep my poor wife company. She will be very dull
and depressed during my absence.”

“I’ll try to cheer her up,” I said.

“Soften her as much as you can, Charlie. She is all tenderness now for
her child; but the moment she has got her again, she may grow severe.
After all, the poor girl will need her kindness. I daresay she has
fretted a great deal whilst thinking of us all. She will have missed
her comforts, her pretty bed-room, our kisses in the morning. Eh?
shouldn’t she be kindly received?”

“Yes, and she will be, I am sure,” I replied, moved by the tears that
sprang to his eyes.

He squeezed my hand, bade God bless me, and left the bank.

There being nothing to do, I thought I could not better occupy my time
than by writing to Theresa. So down I sat at my uncle’s desk, and
wrote four pages. There was a great deal to tell: Conny’s flight to be
related, and a funeral oration to be delivered over my love. “I may
tell _you_,” I said, “that I am not so broken-hearted as I ought to
be. I am pained by her conduct for her father’s and mother’s sake, but
has anybody a right to expect me to have any personal feelings in the
matter, beyond a proper sense of gratefulness that her pretty face and
capricious smiles can no longer keep me awake o’ nights, nor prevent
me from enjoying my food? Ah, Theresa! you may indeed value yourself
on your perceptions. I am afraid I never really loved Conny. How will
this confession affect me with you? I beg and implore that you won’t
consider mine a fickle nature. I could be true and faithful as Abelard,
could I but find a girl who would be my Eloïsa. I made a mistake. I
admired Conny, and mistook the delight with which I used to watch her
young face and profound eyes for love. I won’t pretend to think that I
could have exhibited my present fortitude, were it not for you. There
is not a quality that goes to the making of my mind, that would not
have smarted and throbbed under this elopement. Practically, I have
been snubbed, sneered at, utilised, dropped, cut, disliked, morally
kicked, and hopelessly sat upon; all which unpardonable treatment I
might laugh at, had Conny been the only insulter; but to suffer such
indignities at the hands of Mr. Curling!--Theresa, let your pride bleed
for me. Let me know I have your sympathy. The briefest assurance that
your opinion of me is not lowered because I haven’t broken my heart
over Conny, will give me all the strength I need to support the very
crushing sense of contempt that visits me, whenever I reflect on their
duplicity and my humiliation.” And so on, and so on.

I was as nearly as possible telling her that I had left my heart
behind me at Thistlewood. Who isn’t bold in a letter? Consider the
qualifications a goose-quill and a sheet of paper confer! The stammerer
speaks fluently, without a gasp; Ignorance pronounces all his h’s;
Timidity is as courageous as a wild beast; Modesty makes love without
a blush; Poverty, by hiding his rags, can request a loan without
losing his dignity. I added a postscript, in which I inserted certain
sentiments which, had I had her with me, I don’t think I could have got
my tongue to utter. I then sealed the letter, and walked with it to
the post, satisfied that seldom had love been so well hinted at, that
seldom had the heart’s defection been so eloquently defended by the
submission of more incontrovertible reasons.

The phaeton fetched me at four o’clock, and took me to Grove End. I
found my aunt extremely wretched. She thanked me for coming, and asked
me what I thought of Conny’s letter.

“Why,” I answered, “she doesn’t represent herself as feeling
miserable; and that I consider a good sign.”

“I cannot conceive,” the poor lady cried, “how she could have the
courage and the cruelty to act with such wicked daring. I seem in a
dream. Every moment I expect to see her come in and laugh at me for
imagining that she could be guilty of eloping with such a man. How my
husband jeered me for saying that his clerk was a dangerous person! And
now he is our son-in-law: now we are all fastened together for life,
and degraded for ever!”

“No, no: not degraded. My dear aunt, Mr. Curling is quite as
gentlemanly as the majority of young men. Look at the sons-in-law one
meets with everywhere! Elopements take place in the highest families.
Only last year Lady Florence Miller ran away with her music-master;
and mesalliances are so frequent and expected, that I can assure you,
if two or three years pass without a groom, or a dancing master, or an
usher, running away with a female member of the aristocracy, the _Court
Journal_ languishes, high life becomes uneasy, and aristocratic circles
grow haggard with a sense of want. I admit that Mr. Curling is not such
a man as you would have chosen for Conny to marry, but she might have
done worse.”

“No, she couldn’t have done worse. So pretty as she is, with such good
prospects, she might have married anybody. The cruellest part of it
all is her deceitfulness. She knew I wanted her to marry you, and she
pretended to yield to my wishes, only that she might blind my eyes to
her affection for that Curling. Didn’t she encourage you?”

“Yes, yes,” I groaned. “But I forgive her. I forgive them both. They
have found out that Heaven made them for each other; they are married,
and we must now help to render them happy.”

“Long ago, at the first hint of danger I gave,” cried my afflicted
aunt, “your uncle ought to have turned that young man away.”

And here she began to weep and sob wild reproaches, and to beg me to
tell her if she were not the most unfortunate woman that was ever born,
to bring a child into the world that could turn upon its parents in
their old age; until dinner was announced, when she took my arm; and we
walked into the room with such faces upon us, as mutes might grow sick
with envy to see.

I can’t say I enjoyed the evening that followed. My aunt went into
hysterics twice, and wrung my nerves with violent agitations of
distress and horror. She was not a strong-minded woman, and took to
her woe hungrily. I watched her tears with the keenest apprehensions,
dreading fresh outbreaks of the sobs, and short yells, and rapid
heel-taps with which she had twice favoured me.

However, she calmed down when it was getting near bed-time, and I
then seized the opportunity of impressing upon her the necessity of
receiving her daughter lovingly, and above all, of treating Mr. Curling
in such a way as should put it out of the servants’ power to spread the
truth.

“Our policy,” said I, “is to contrive, by our behaviour to Mr.
Curling, to let the neighbours know that the only thing we regretted
in the whole affair was the elopement; that we were never averse to
Conny’s marriage with Mr. Curling, but only desired that she should
wait until the young man had gained a better position. If the subject
is discussed before me, depend upon it I shall be explicit enough.
The facts are these, I shall say: Mr. Curling was impatient of the
delay Mr. Hargrave insisted upon before he sanctioned their marriage,
and worked upon Conny’s sensibilities to elope with him. It is the
plot of the old comedy, repeated afresh: the heroine running away
with the man everybody had agreed should be her husband. Had they
waited a few months, I shall say, they would have been married in
state, and champagne, sweetmeats and speeches would have made the
union respectable. But they chose to elope and antedate their bliss
by express train to Doctor’s Commons. These things have happened ever
since the better part of Adam manifested itself in the shape of Eve.
They happen most frequently in high life; and an elopement, so far from
being regarded as a disgrace, is universally held to be a first-class
sign of politeness and breeding. That’s how I shall talk, aunt; and I
would advise you to do the same.”

I fancy my reasoning impressed her. She always had a high opinion of my
knowledge of human nature, and believed the world contained not many
persons who were my equals in elegance of deportment and accuracy of
judgment in matters of fashion and behaviour. I left her at eleven
o’clock, not sorry to escape into the cool night, where, amid the
stillness, I could dedicate my thoughts to Theresa.




CHAPTER IV.

  _Bland._ “Never mention what is past. The wranglings of married
  people about unlucky questions that break out between them is like
  the lashing of a top: it only serves to keep it up the longer.”

                                                     _All in the Wrong._


Next day business was a little brisk at the bank, and, considering
my short apprenticeship, I acquitted myself tolerably well. I took
Curling’s place and paid or received the cheques, &c., as they were
presented, and what was extremely wonderful, found at the end of the
day that I had made no mistake. I also conferred with two or three
customers in the manager’s private room, performing the simple duty
of listening to them with a very grave face, and dismissing them in a
style that excited Mr. Spratling, who had a slow and laborious mind,
into applause.

When the bank was closed I went to my lodgings to get some dinner, not
intending to call at Grove End until late in the evening. The fact was,
my uncle had spoken of leaving London with the devoted couple at four
o’clock; Updown would be reached by seven, and I had no wish to intrude
until the violence and agitation of the meeting at Grove End should be
in some degree calmed.

My dinner, composed of a mutton chop and a pint of red wine, was soon
despatched. I pulled an arm-chair to the open window, lighted a pipe,
and surrendered myself up to various reflections.

Among other things, I remember thinking how very pretty my landlady’s
house was, how snugly it would accommodate a newly-married pair--and
then I thought of Theresa.

In imagination I pictured her my wife, moving, at this sunset hour,
with watering-pot in hand, among the flowers in the garden, ever and
anon creeping up to the window, where I was seated, to give me a
flower, and let me take a long look into her bright and speaking eyes.

Heavens! how the wheel goes round! Not very long before I had figured
another young lady as my wife, offering me flowers through that very
identical window, with all the sweetness of her spirit beaming like
the moon in the dark azure of her eyes. That picture was blotted out.
Did I care? A fiddle! I liked the other picture much better. Why, even
that reverence, which, despite Conny’s indifference to me, I should
ever have remembered her beauty with, was sunk, was destroyed by the
consideration that her name was now CURLING, and that the frizzy
cashier was privileged to call her HIS!

His! Imagine that cockneyfied forefinger, that long forefinger with the
olive-coloured nail and the dreadful ring, chucking Conny’s dimpled
chin, playing with Conny’s golden hair! Faugh! The rose that makes the
beauties of your sweetheart’s white bosom killing, becomes a sordid,
vulgar flower when transferred on the morrow to the char-woman, and
pinned by her against the dirt of the handkerchief about her chest.
Though idealism has its limits, yet its circle had been a big one for
Conny, and there was little she could have done in it _alone_ that
would have endangered her charms in my eyes. But she had chosen to lug
Mr. Curling into the magic realm; and souse! the spell was broken.

It was like throwing a duck into a lake, in whose lucent serenity the
stars of the heavens found their duplicates.

Now, whilst I thus sate, the postman came into the garden and handed me
a letter. I caught sight of the initials “T. H.” at the corner of the
envelope, and my heart beat quickly. I pulled out the enclosure. What
a fine, free, dashing hand! How firm and honest and characteristic!
How thoughtful to answer my letter so soon! Why, she could only have
received it that morning, and must therefore have written her reply on
the spot.

“My dear Charlie,” she began: and then went on to express her
astonishment and grief at the news I had sent her of Conny’s elopement.
She could scarcely credit I was in earnest.

“What mad impulse could have prompted her to take such a step! How
grieved my uncle and aunt must be! Surely had they suspected that Conny
was so fond of this young man, they would have allowed her to marry
him, rather than drive her into an elopement by their refusal. Papa is
perfectly stupefied; for he told me that uncle Tom had over and over
again expressed his belief, that Conny would marry well.”

“As for _you_, I am not so surprised as you fancied I should be, to
hear that Conny’s rash act has not broken your heart. I told you
plainly one day that you didn’t love her, and now you confess I was
right. Again and again I tell you that your fickleness, as you call it,
cannot affect my opinion of you. Had you sincerely loved her, taught
her to love you, and then turned from her, no words of mine could
possibly convey how greatly I should despise you. I don’t mean to say
that I or any other woman could think the _better_ of a man for not
knowing his own mind. Judgment is a fine quality in a man, and without
it he can never be devoted, or honest, or resolute.

“But I told you, during that rude fit of mine, that you were a
boy--which you are--and are therefore to be laughed at and excused
for falling into an ecstasy over the first pretty face you meet, and
calling your silly transports, _love_! You have been punished severely
enough through your self-conceit; and I can imagine that you will never
care to be reminded, that at the time you were thinking you had made
a conquest of Conny, she was encouraging you merely that you might
serve her as a kind of dummy, with whom she might coquette whilst she
indulged her real passion with her Theodore.”

Having written so far, she was pleased to suspend her raillery, to make
way for large-hearted expressions of sympathy with Tom and his wife,
and concluded a tolerably voluminous letter by signing herself “Your
affectionate cousin.”

“P.S. Tell me all the news as it comes to hand, that is if you can find
any time to waste upon T. H.”

I was so much piqued and so much pleased with this letter, that, had
I had any further news to tell her--enough to find me an excuse for
writing so promptly--I should there and then have sent her a reply. The
part I liked most was where she had called me a boy. It was delightful
to be rallied so familiarly, to be chided so saucily. And I noticed the
dexterity with which she implied apologies and excuses for the conduct
she seemed to reproach in me.

However, it was now about time that I made my way to Grove End.
Nothing but a sense of duty could have driven me there, I assure you.

I reached the house a little before nine o’clock, and knocked very
tremulously; I never remember feeling more nervous. What should I say
to Conny--to _Mrs. Curling_, I mean? and what was Mrs. Curling to say
to me?

When I entered the hall, I could scarcely do anything for some moments
but wipe my feet. Then I knocked my uncle’s hat off a peg in trying to
hang up my own. The servant opened the drawing-room door, and giving my
faculties a twist, as it were, to make them resonant, I entered.

“Hallo!” said I, seeing the room empty, though the lamps were lighted,
“where’s my uncle?”

In truth, I had forgotten, in my nervousness, to inquire whether he had
returned from London.

“I’ll go and see, sir.”

“Then he has come back?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Alone?”

“No; Mr. and Mrs. Curling have come with him.”

What adaptive aptitude servants have! How long would it take me to talk
of “Mr. and Mrs. Curling” as glibly as if they had been man and wife
ten years?

I sat down and pretended to feel at my ease, meanwhile watching
the door anxiously. In about three minutes’ time it opened, and in
came--everybody! Yes, I protest all my relations swarmed in at once.
First came my uncle, with his shirt collars well up above his ears;
then came my aunt with red eyes; then came Conny looking white as a
sheet: and then came Curling--already a bruised and broken son-in-law,
glancing with scared eyes about him, and stepping forward with the
nervous, dubious air you may have observed in a decayed tradesman, who,
having called four times with a subscription paper, is mistaken by your
servant, and asked to “walk in.”

I stood up, not knowing whom to shake hands with first.

“How are you, Charlie?” said my uncle in a melancholy voice. “We were
all in the library when you came.”

My aunt took an arm-chair, breathing noisily.

“I am glad to welcome you home,” said I, taking Conny’s hand, and
feeling as if I were saluting a stranger.

“Thank you,” she whispered, hanging her head; and then gave her husband
a glance.

Poor little girl! I knew what she meant. The eyes of the mother were
upon me; I was the Representative of the Family Gentility. My soul
warmed to a magnanimous impulse, and, extending my hand cordially to
Mr. Curling, I exclaimed in a loud, impressive voice,

“I heartily congratulate you on your choice of a wife; and I hope you
will both be spared for many long years to be a comfort to each other.”

Boh! boh! Conny burst into tears, ran up to me, clung to my arm, and
upturning her sweet, deceitful eyes, now with their rich blue deepened
by tears, cried,

“Oh, Charlie, I knew you would forgive me! I always felt you would! Do
ask mamma to love me again, and to be friends with Theodore.”

“She will need no asking,” I answered, feeling perfectly patriarchal,
and thinking what a mean figure I was involuntarily making Mr. Theodore
cut. “Her heart is the kindest that ever beat in a woman’s bosom; and
I shall be greatly mistaken if, after you have allowed her a little
breathing time, to recover the shock, she does not clasp her only, her
beloved child again to her breast, and forgive the man whose only sin
has been that he has loved her daughter too well.”

Having uttered which surprising piece of eloquence, I was confounded by
my uncle bursting into tears.

“Don’t mind me,” he sobbed, through his fingers; “I entreat--I implore
that none of you will look at me.”

“Oh, my dear husband!” shrieked his wife, rushing up to him, and
casting her arms around his neck.

“Oh, papa, papa!” cried Conny, likewise running up to him, casting
herself on her knees and fondling his legs.

To complete the tableau nothing was wanting but for Mr. Curling and me
to lock each other’s figure in a passionate embrace. But I would rather
have been poisoned.

“There, there, there!” mumbled my poor uncle, releasing himself from
his wife and child by struggling out of his chair. “I must apologise
for my weakness. God knows how many years it is since I shed a tear.
Charlie, my boy, pray be seated. Curling, raise your wife.”

However, Conny saved her husband this trouble by getting up herself. My
aunt resumed her chair; Curling took the music-stool, and my uncle and
I shared the sofa.

The silence that followed was exquisitely embarrassing. I gasped and
gulped about in my mind for something to say, but was as absolutely
vacant of ideas as a foolish and nervous “best man,” who rises to
propose “the bridesmaids,” and can do nothing for a long and awful
pause but fix a fishy eye on the person immediately opposite.

Conny never looked at me. Her swollen blue eyes were glued to the
carpet. As for my aunt, her face was as stony and hard as anything
ever found by Mr. Layard at Nineveh. At last, feeling the silence too
oppressive for my nerves to endure without something cracking, I asked
my uncle, in a voice that appeared to me fearfully loud,

“How is London looking?”

“Very much as usual,” he replied.

And his tongue being loosened, he proceeded to inquire after the
business that had been transacted at the bank during his absence.
We were now upon a subject in which Curling would feel at home, and
heartily sorry for the poor fellow whose position was, on the whole, as
unenviable as any mortal man was ever placed in, I contrived to address
some observations to him, which he answered with great diffidence.
I then, from a laudable desire to diffuse a more pleasing social
atmosphere than then overhung us, spoke to my aunt, taking care, on
receiving her reply, to appeal to Conny.

But my well-meant effort failed. My aunt was so dogged and tearful, I
might as well have tried to set the pendulum of a clock wagging when
the spring was broken, as have attempted to get her to be cheerful.

“We make a happy family party, don’t we,” said she to me with a ghastly
smile.

“I don’t see why we shouldn’t,” I replied. “I for one am quite disposed
to be comfortable,” and I looked at Conny.

“Ah!” said my aunt with a severe nod, “you are not a mother, Charlie.”

“No,” said I, “and I really hope there is no chance of my ever becoming
one.”

Mr. Curling grinned faintly. Conny looked at me askew, as if she
wondered how I could find the heart to be funny.

“Come, come, don’t let us get personal,” exclaimed my uncle. “What
I told Conny and her husband in London I will repeat here; they have
chosen to act foolishly and cruelly; but greatly as they have made us
suffer, it is our duty, now that the action is irreparable, not only to
wish to see them happy, but to strive to make them so. It is too late
to show any temper, and all reproaches must be idle and foolish.”

“Ay, but flesh and blood must speak!” cried out my aunt.

“I regret the grief and pain I have caused you and Mrs. Hargrave,” said
Curling. “But when I remember what I owe you, sir, when I know that
I am not incapable of gratitude, and that the character I have always
borne has been that of a man whom it needs a great deal to divert from
the straight line of his duty, I think, I--I say I think at least--you,
I mean--that is you should find in my elopement a proof--yes, a
proof, Mrs. Hargrave, of my love for your daughter and--and--an
endorsement--that is, a guarantee, I mean for--of--for our future--for
her future happiness.”

Uttering which he threw a damp glance round the room.

Is that the genuine language of the heart, thought I? But suppose he
_had_ rehearsed the passage, what other kind of eloquence than gasps
and expletives is to be expected from a man in his situation.

“It ought never to have taken place,” cried Mrs. Hargrave.

“Oh, mamma!” exclaimed Conny, “you are too severe, we are all to blame.”

I glanced at her pale face and thought, “Ah! She might have had
_me_ once. There would have been no hysterics then. Nothing but
congratulations and new dresses.”

“WE!” shrieked my aunt. “Did _I_ ask you to elope with Mr. Theodore?”

“For heaven’s sake--!” interposed my uncle.

“You told me I should never marry him with your consent!” cried Conny.

“And you haven’t!” broke in my aunt.

“Good God!” shouted my uncle. “Isn’t the thing over? what’s the use of
wrangling? what’s the use of snapping at each other like that?”

“No use at all,” said I. “And what’s more--though I’m a heretic for
saying so--in my opinion a woman has a perfect right to choose for
herself the man that the law compels her to live with.”

“Shame! shame!” groaned my aunt. “You can’t mean what you say. Aren’t
you, too, grossly deceived?”

“No!” interrupted Conny, a sudden blush dyeing her face scarlet.
“Charlie knew that I didn’t--that I couldn’t love him--greatly as I
liked him.”

Oh! I thought, if you weren’t a young bride, if it weren’t incumbent
upon me to respect your feelings, if it wouldn’t be unmanly to deliver
myself of my sentiments, _how_ I could make you writhe. But I’ll spare
thee, Conny, which I could not do, had I truly loved thee.

“Conny’s quite right,” said I aloud, “she never gave me any
encouragement, she always told me she only liked me. I was very
impertinent to dare to have any hopes.”

She turned a look of triumph on her Theodore. Come, I was a sore point
anyhow, which was better than being nothing at all.

“Why _must_ we be personal?” cried my uncle.

“What _are_ we to talk about if we mayn’t speak of this aw--this
dread--this--this--thing?” sobbed my aunt.

“Well, you must excuse me for taking Charlie into the library,” said
he, rising and laying hold of my arm. “I have many questions to ask him
about the bank.”

Mr. Curling looked at us as if he should cry out, “For the love of
heaven, don’t leave me!” But my uncle took no notice, and hurriedly
walked me out of the room, not even giving me time to make a bow to the
happy trio I left behind.

“I am sick of these squabbles!” he exclaimed, lighting a candle in
the library and flinging himself into an arm-chair. “Sick of these
personalities, hints, innuendos, and aspersions. Oh for the wings of a
dove! Why can’t my wife leave them alone? My word is pledged to them,
and she knows it, but is for ever bursting into our sense of honour
with sharp charges and reckless attacks.”

“It was to be expected,” said I; “but give her time, and she will
become inured to the new state of things.”

“So far as the comfort of my home is concerned, these rows can’t last
longer than to-night. To-morrow Curling takes his wife into lodgings.”

“Small blame to him. He is really to be pitied. I have heard that
mothers-in-law are bad enough company to live with, even when they have
graced the marriage service with their consenting presence, and sobbed
over the bridegroom’s impossible promises. But what they are when
their daughters are married in defiance of them, I can only dimly and
fearfully guess.”

“Ay, it is too true. Relations ought not to live together after they
get married. Deeply offended as I am, I haven’t the heart to turn upon
the young couple. Who are we to throw stones? Who are we to fill the
judgment seat? Life stretches before them; there are, there must be,
many sorrows on the road, and hard trials, and bitter tears. Whether we
forgive them or not, it is unhappily only too certain that the future
will make them more than expiate the vexation and disappointment they
have caused us. No, no! I am not for exacting penances. I am not for
grinding young hearts down because they have betrayed their owners
into folly. Conny _does_ love that young man amazingly. I see it in
every movement of her head, in every look she gives him. He too is very
fond of her. Argue as you will, there was sound truth in what he just
now said. He is a plodding, mechanical-minded fellow, devoted to his
interests, and a thorough business-man; and it could be no ordinary
passion that turned his habits awry, and set him defying fortune for
the privilege of possessing a pretty girl.”

“No, indeed; for he had no reason to suppose that you would give Conny
a penny, or that you would allow him to resume his duties. He is no
doubt sincere.”

“I found them in mean lodgings out of Bloomsbury,” said my uncle.
“Yet, miserable as was their accommodation, and penniless as they
avowed themselves to be, nothing could have induced them to return with
me, but my repeated promises that they would be kindly received and
forgiven. What a thing is love!” he cried, flinging open the window to
get some air. “Imagine it not only powerful enough to drive a delicate
girl, who has been coddled all her life, out of a luxurious country
home, into squalid London lodgings, but to make her perfectly satisfied
with her dirty quarters! Do you see anything in Mr. Curling to fall in
love with? I’ll be hanged if I do.”

“Oh, woman’s caprice is an old song set to a tune to which men have
been capering for many thousand years. Wasn’t Eve glad to be turned out
of Paradise? we have only Milton’s word for it, that she cried. Conny
finds her Theodore lovely--and there’s an end. Women, like birds, will
build their nests in the queerest places. You can’t reason with them.
They obey an instinct that was implanted, in order that the ugliest man
might not be mateless.”

“I hope my wife is not scolding. She will make that young man hate her.
And then good-bye to all our chances of persuading the neighbours that
we don’t consider the marriage a calamity. What did you say to her last
night?”

I told him as well as I could remember.

“My boy,” said he, having listened to me with great attention,
“she has a high opinion of you, and I believe, upon a matter of this
kind, would rather be influenced by you than by me. Never lose an
opportunity, like a dear fellow, to impress upon her that Mr. Curling
is not the shocking bad match she chooses to think him. He has been
with me four years, and during that time has behaved himself like a
gentleman. It is all very fine for my wife to abuse him now; but up
to the moment when she suspected that he was paying Conny attention,
she professed to like him very much. I might hunt a long time before I
should find a man better suited for my work than Curling. And strange
as it will strike you to hear, I can assure you that when my wife has
been trying to frighten me about him and Conny, I have thought that
he might make my child as good a husband as a richer man, and as my
partner be of the greatest use to me.”

I nodded my head, comprehending his drift, and admiring his resolution
to view the affair in the brightest light. This, indeed, was a quality
that belonged in an especial degree to my father’s family--my father
himself owning it largely. I don’t think anything could have made _him_
feel degraded. Had a daughter of his married a sweep, he would have
set to work to trace the sweep’s lineage, and not stopped until he had
come to an aristocratic tributary. His philosophy was to deal with the
events of life, as they befell him, splendidly; to make misfortune
imperial with the crown of self-complacency; to distil a kind of
essence of dignity out of humiliation, and diffuse the perfume where
another man would have hidden the sordid rubbish in the dust-bin of his
bosom, and pretended that there was nothing of the kind on the premises.

My uncle, who did not possess my father’s high self-opinion, allowed
worthier motives to direct him to the same conduct. I don’t mean to say
that the hints he had just dropped of his views regarding Curling were
not owing largely to a wish to make the best of a bad bargain; but the
wish to see the young people comfortable and happy, very powerfully
operated.

“I won’t ask anybody’s advice,” said he, “upon my treatment of Mr.
Curling; but think awhile, watch patiently, and act for myself. There
is nothing like acting for yourself.”

“Nothing.”

“Curling shows a proper spirit in determining not to sleep in this
house longer than a night. He and Conny consented to return with me on
that understanding. To-morrow morning he will take lodgings in Updown,
and there they will live, until I furnish them a house.”

“When are they to be re-married?”

“I’ll see about that to-morrow. The ceremony must be perfectly private.
I don’t believe in registrars acting as clergymen. I would as soon they
should administer the sacrament to me as marry me.”

Here came a feeble knock on the door.

“Come in,” said my uncle, and Conny entered.

I gave her a chair, and her papa said,

“How can you leave your husband?”

“He is arguing with mamma, and it makes me miserable to listen to the
hard things she says to him.”

“These arguments must be stopped!” cried my uncle, leaving his chair.
“Can’t your mother leave him alone for to-night? You’ll be out of the
house to-morrow. What good can reproaches do? Can they unmarry you? My
wife _must_ be made to understand this.”

And he left the room.

Finding myself alone with Conny, I kicked my feet about a little, and
said, “I was quite in earnest when I hoped you would be happy.”

“I am sure you were. But I shall be happier when you tell me I am
forgiven,” she answered, turning her face away from the light.

“Oh, you are forgiven. Your papa means to----.”

“I mean forgiven by you,” she interrupted.

“There is nothing to forgive.”

“Don’t say that, Charlie. I did not act honourably. I was not
straightforward. But I couldn’t--I _dared_ not be. I knew if mamma
should learn that I flatly refused to encourage you, she would contrive
to separate me for ever from Theodore.”

“Yes, yes. I quite understand. I heartily forgive you--I bear no
resentment. I _was_ a little surprised--shocked, I may say; but the
wound is healed, Conny. I am as sound in health and mind as if I had
never received a stab. I was quite sure that it was all up between
us--that you hadn’t, that you never would have a spark of affection for
me, when you allowed the letter I sent you from Thistlewood to remain
unanswered. What _might_ have been, my dear, we needn’t talk about--it
hasn’t taken place. My dream is dreamt out. I have a practical mind;
and being now wide awake, dismiss the little memory with a smile, and
turn with all kindly wishes and greetings to the reality.”

She was too fond of, too engrossed with, and by, her husband, to be
piqued by my cool remarks. She was not a flirt--I could see that. She
had acted the coquette to suit her own purpose: and that being served,
she had torn up the mask.

“I hope you will like Theodore,” she said, earnestly. “I know you
despised him, but I daresay you were prejudiced, because you suspected
I preferred him to you. Did you notice that he has taken off his ring,
Charlie?”

“I can’t say I did.”

“He has, then; and his hand is wonderfully improved. Oh, he is so
affectionate! some of these days mamma will feel heartily ashamed of
herself for treating him so badly.”

“No doubt--but still your mother has a right to regard your elopement
as a grievance.”

“I never would have eloped hadn’t mamma prevented Theodore from seeing
me, and set her face so passionately against our marriage. She forgets
that I have known Theodore for over three years, and that we have loved
each other for two years out of that time. I got weary, Charlie, of
having to meet him stealthily, and of carrying a heavy secret about;
and I was driven into running away when I saw how earnestly mamma was
working to bring about my marriage with you.”

“One question, Conny; do you remember one Sunday night leaving me
hurriedly on hearing the clock strike seven?”

“Yes. I went to meet Theodore. Oh, Charlie, how I hated you for
stopping at home that evening!”

“And on that evening I asked you to marry me!” I exclaimed, with a
laugh like a groan. “What fools men sometimes make of themselves! But
never mind. I’ve pulled the knife out of my side--the wound, I say, is
healed. This is my little folly--but the farce is played out, and I am
obliged to you for letting the curtain fall, and turning us all out
before the tragedy began. Let us join the others. If your husband and I
are to love each other, I mustn’t begin by making him jealous.”

“One word, Charlie--what do you think of Theresa?”

“I like her very much,” I answered, looking into those blue eyes of
hers, in whose depths I had so often sank out of sight of common sense.

“Are you in love with her?”

“I am,” I exclaimed, emphatically.

Quite a bright smile shone in her face.

“That confession makes me happy,” said she; “for it satisfies me that
I have not betrayed _so very devoted_ a heart, after all!”

She opened the door and passed out.

Hush! hark! what was that?

A scream, followed by a gurgle! Good heavens! my aunt was in hysterics
again! My hat was within reach of my hand; two strides would take me to
the door.

“I hate scenes!” I whispered, whilst Conny listened with a pale and
frightened face. “I have no right to intrude on domestic troubles.
Please apologise for my sudden departure. Good night.”

And out I rushed.




CHAPTER V.

  _Frisk._ “Relations aren’t always welcome: but a pretty cousin can
  never come too soon, nor stay too long.”

                                                          _The Vagrant._


On reaching my lodgings, I wrote a letter to Theresa, in which I gave
her all the news she had asked me for, and in which also, I am afraid,
I was more jocose on the subject of my aunt’s hysterics than a strict
sympathy would have sanctioned. However, the letter was entirely to my
satisfaction, especially those portions of it in which I referred with
proper obscurity to my feelings.

I then walked with it to the letter-box, returned, smoked a pipe, and
went to bed, where I meditated without emotion on Conny, and finally
fell asleep to dream of Theresa.

Next morning, whilst I was at breakfast, my uncle drove up to the gate.

“Charlie,” said he, on entering my sitting-room, “my wife has an
idea, and I want to talk it over with you. But get on with your
breakfast--don’t let me disturb you.”

“What is the idea, uncle?”

“Decent lodgings are not to be got in Updown,” he answered, looking
around the room inquisitively; “my wife went everywhere before she
settled upon these for you. But this appears a thoroughly comfortable
house, with a very presentable and respectable exterior. Indeed it is a
house fit for any lady or gentleman to live in.”

“That it is. It’s detached, you see, with nothing sordid on either
side. The garden in front gives us a landed appearance. Nor are there
any black-beetles, rats, or fleas on the premises.”

“Yes, there is a very great deal in its favour. However, what I have
called to ask you, is, will you let Curling and Conny have these rooms
for the present?”

“With the greatest pleasure,” I answered, promptly.

“Thank you, my boy, and you will live with us?”

“I don’t think I have any right to trouble you,” I replied, scarcely
relishing the boundless prospect of arguments, reproaches, tears, and
hysterics, which my uncle’s suggestion opened up to me.

“Oh, nonsense. You don’t think I would ask you to give up your rooms
without finding you other accommodation? Conny’s old bed-room shall be
prepared for you--it is the second best in the house. Is it settled?”

It was settled with _him_, I could see; objections would only make me
appear ill-natured; and as it was out of my power to state any reasons
for declining his hospitality, I consented with a mind agitated by
misgivings.

The landlady was then summoned, and after my uncle had been shown over
the house, the proposed change was told her. My vanity was not a little
flattered by the good lady’s evident reluctance to part with me. My
distinctive virtue was no doubt negative--I gave her no trouble. She
raised her terms when she heard that a lady was to take my place, but
this my uncle did not object to. So she was desired to get her rooms
ready that afternoon for the reception of her new lodgers, and my uncle
and I then started for the bank.

On the road he asked me what had made me hurry away, the night before.

“My aunt’s screams,” I answered. “My nerves disappear when a woman
cries. I hope she is well this morning.”

“Moody, terribly moody. I very much fear that she will never be able to
get over her prejudice against Curling.”

“They’ll have a kind of home of their own,” said I, “and I suppose
before long you’ll furnish a house for them.”

“Oh, that I must do as soon as possible, if only for the sake of
appearances. It would never do for people to say ‘Hargrave’s daughter
is in lodgings. Depend upon it, Hargrave is not the substantial man we
have thought him or he would never allow his child to live so meanly.’
A hint of this kind started by the first malicious person it occurred
to, would run through the town, and ultimately, perhaps, injure the
bank; for people naturally would object to trust their money to a man
who, if he is too poor to assist his daughter, must be obviously living
beyond his means by residing in such a house as mine.”

I quite appreciated this reasoning, which nevertheless had, I was
persuaded, nothing whatever to do with his real motives. The fact
was, he _felt_ he had no business to forgive Conny too readily and
make her as comfortable as if she had married with his full consent.
But as, in spite of his conscience, he _had_ forgiven her, and as he
had determined, in defiance of his sense of justice, that she _should_
be comfortable, there was nothing for him to do but to mask his
fine instincts with worldly considerations, and pretend to find the
inspiration of his kindness in the fear of gossip.

On reaching the bank, he was detained for some time in consultation
with a client. When released, he told me he was now going to call on
the rector to see about getting Conny married properly; and away he
trudged, under a broiling sun, agitated, and energetic, and looking
worried to death.

Ah, Eugenio, these are some of the little troubles people have to put
up with who take wives and raise families. No doubt, if we had our
way, we should marry our daughters to dukes, and our sons to maids of
honour. But our children, most of us find, have their own original
theories upon the subject of matrimony; and, as they are our masters
and mistresses, what are we to do but to submit? follow them humbly,
hat in hand? blubber our congratulations over the marriages contrived
by themselves, and illustrate, by our meek faces, how sensible we
are that we were put upon this earth for no other purpose than to
make handsome settlements, welcome the poor and needy into our family
circles, order wedding-breakfasts and bridesmaids’ lockets, fiddlers
and waiters, champagne and carriages, that the events we deprecate may
be celebrated with all proper magnificence? and, finally, half beggar
ourselves to furnish those houses which we are never afterwards to
enter without being made to feel that, “papa and mamma _do_ interfere
so?”

My poor uncle returned to the bank a little before four o’clock,
covered with dust and perspiration.

“Never,” he gasped, sinking into a chair, “never whilst I live may I be
called upon to do such a day’s work again.”

I listened to the catalogue of his performances with mingled emotions
of astonishment and sympathy.

He had seen the rector, and arranged for a private service to take
place on Monday.

He had then gone to Grove End, where he had found his wife, and Conny,
and Curling, arguing furiously, the ladies in tears, had seized upon
his son-in-law, borne him off to my old lodgings, and desired him to
stop there to superintend the getting ready of the apartments.

He had again driven to Grove End, ordered Conny to get together the
things she wanted, presided over the packing, meanwhile keeping his
wife at bay by every species of entreaty, supplication, dehortation,
and even menace, until Conny was ready, when the trunks were hoisted
into the phaeton, and off they started for Updown.

Nor did my uncle’s labours cease with this; for judging that amid
the excitement, heat, and confusion of the hour, Curling would
entirely lose sight of his own and his wife’s domestic needs, he
had performed a tour of the shops, whence he had sent to them wine,
poultry, groceries--in short, everything he in his dizziness could
think of, finally arriving at the bank in the condition I have just
described; though not to find rest yet. For, scarcely was his panting
narrative concluded, when in came a client--one of those thick-headed,
dull-minded farmers, who spell their names thus: +, and grin as they
pronounce themselves no scholards; who, taking a seat, with his hat
between his legs, began in a tongue turbid with Z’s, to demonstrate
some mental difficulty he was labouring under with regard to a bill
which, his son having died since it came into his possession, he
had nobody now to read to him; and his memory being weak, could not
recollect the date, the sum, or the conditions.

“By the way,” I exclaimed to my uncle just before leaving the bank,
“what has become of my clothes?”

“All your things are packed up, and gone to Grove End.”

“Who packed them?”

“The landlady.”

“All my papers?”

“Everything belonging to you.”

“I’ll just go and have a look round,” said I.

You will understand my uneasiness, when I tell you that, besides
several letters I had written to Theresa, none of which had satisfied
me, though I had not destroyed them, there were various hints for,
and beginnings of, poems in the drawer of my dressing-table, which I
would not have had Conny read for a very great deal. Suppose these
poetical fragments were satires referring to the false and fickle Being
whose initials were “C. H.:” now changed to “C. C.?” Suppose they were
nothing of the kind? The most candid biographer is permitted to keep
something back from the eye of a discerning public: and the contents of
that dressing-table drawer are my secret.

“Make haste,” said my uncle: “I’ll wait for you.”

Off I started, not at all liking to intrude upon the young people, but
resolute to save my papers. To my great relief, I found they had gone
out for a walk, leaving directions with the landlady to have a chicken
cooked by six o’clock. Likewise a pair of soles, and a cherry-pie.

I rushed up-stairs, and found--what I had expected: all my papers! What
a narrow escape! Let me sit down, and take breath. But perhaps Conny
had already peeped at them? Avaunt, odious thought! With eager hands
I rolled them into a bundle, stared about me to see that no further
memorial of mine encumbered the room, and then returned to the bank.

You may guess my amazement, when, on entering my uncle’s house at
Grove End, I beheld in the hall an intimately familiar white hat,
standing upon the table, and by its side, a lady’s parasol, and a
travelling-bag.

“Good gracious!” I exclaimed, grasping my uncle’s arm: “do you know
whose hat that is?”

“Dick’s!” cried my uncle, and pushed open the drawing-room door.

What made my heart to beat when I saw thee, Theresa?

She and her papa left my aunt, and met us half-way.

“How are you, Dick?” “How are you, Tom?” “This _is_ kind of you,
Theresa!” “Delighted to see you, Charlie!” “What a blow! when did you
come?” “How unexpected! where is Conny?”

These greetings having been got through, we all sat down, I close
alongside of Theresa.

“This is a real pleasure,” said I. “Did you get my letter?”

“Yes, and answered it.”

“I mean the one I posted last night.”

“No. We left before the mid-day post arrived. Papa thought we couldn’t
do less than run over to Grove End and see how you were all enduring
your trouble.”

“Do I look crushed?”

She smiled.

“Am I thinner, do you think? do I appear wasted? are my cheeks hollow,
and is there anything approaching a broken-hearted expression in my
eyes?”

“You look very well. I wish I could say as much for poor aunt. Troubles
of this kind seem to agree with you.”

And how well and how handsome _she_ was looking! how her fine eyes
glittered! “Well,” said I, “though this trouble hasn’t disagreed with
me, I feel very much for the father and mother. How long are you going
to stop here?”

“We return to-morrow.”

“I shall be very much disgusted if you do,” I exclaimed.

“Why, what does Theresa mean by sitting in her hat?” cried uncle Tom.

“We have only been here ten minutes,” answered his brother.

“My dear, take off your hat,” said my aunt, leaving the sofa, with her
eyes inflamed by tears. “Come up-stairs with me.”

“But we didn’t mean to stay,” answered Theresa.

“But you will, and you’ll sleep here, too,” exclaimed uncle Tom.

This observation provoked an argument which ended in Theresa’s defeat
and departure with her aunt up-stairs.

“I was never more amazed than when I read Charlie’s letter,” said uncle
Dick. “The wife bears it badly.”

“Very badly,” groaned uncle Tom. “In fact she is the great difficulty
now. Grieved and upset as I first was, I could very soon get used to
the thing, if my wife would only stop crying and storming. Of course,
Curling is a wretched match for my child, and the elopement makes the
whole affair confoundedly humiliating. But it has its bright side.
Curling is a first-rate clerk, and, as my son-in-law, can render
himself invaluable to me as a right-hand man. Conny is devoted to him,
and I have no doubt he’ll prove a good husband. If my wife would only
view the matter a little cheerfully, it would lose half its gloom.”

“It _is_ a confounded upset,” said Dick: “but you are perfectly right
to look at it cheerfully. My philosophy, when a bad thing happens,
is, to think that it might have been worse, like the Dutchman in the
‘Spectator,’ who, on breaking his leg, thanked God it wasn’t his neck.
What have you done with the young people?”

This question brought about a long and minute narrative, which was
barely finished when my aunt and cousin returned.

You may conceive that nothing but Conny and her elopement was talked
about till dinner was announced. My aunt was still most violent and
irascible in her views and opinions, nor was her temper improved by her
giving occasion more than once to her husband to call her to order.
Uncle Dick hardly remembered Curling: and Theresa had never seen him;
and from the description my aunt gave of the young man, I believe they
were both prepared to be introduced to the most ugly, insignificant,
vulgar specimen of human nature that ever afflicted the eyesight.

Fortunately, during dinner, the presence of the servants prevented
us from discussing the elopement: and, to my great satisfaction, we
were allowed to converse on topics that bore no reference whatever to
Curling or to Conny.

I sat next to Theresa, and never felt happier. Over and over again I
caught my aunt watching me, with a most melancholy expression in her
eyes, as if she witnessed in my undissembled enjoyment of Theresa’s
society, the dissolution of the last fragment that remained of her
pretty hopes.

“Tom,” said uncle Dick, when the dessert was upon the table, and the
servants had left the room, “I should like to see Conny. She would take
it ill were I to go away without wishing her joy.”

“We’ll walk to Updown after dinner,” replied uncle Tom. “A kindly word
is a great help to a young heart, isn’t it, Dick? and God forbid that
I should prevent my girl winning what love she can at a time when the
want of love would be bitter to her.”

“I should like to go too, papa,” said Theresa.

“And so should I,” observed the Hero of this story.

“I think too many of us would embarrass them,” answered Tom. “You will
see her to-morrow, my dear.”

“But we leave to-morrow.”

“Your father may if he likes; but you shan’t,” exclaimed Tom warmly.
“We want a cheerful face among us, Teazer; and it will be a god-send to
our spirits if you will stop.”

“She shall stop,” said her father.

“Oh, yes, certainly, she must stop,” observed my aunt.

“I have no right to invite anybody,” said I: “but if my uncle wishes, I
shall be happy to prevent Theresa from leaving by mounting guard at the
gate.”

“With a pistol?” said uncle Dick.

I burst into a laugh.

“I have brought no dresses with me,” said Theresa, blushing and
glancing at me with a sly look of mirth.

“Give me a list and I’ll send you all you want,” exclaimed her papa.

“But who will look after you, dear?”

“Myself, to be sure.”

“Tut! tut! let us have no more discussion. Of course Theresa stops with
us,” cried uncle Tom. “There is Conny’s bed-room--oh, I forgot! Charlie
has that.”

“No he hasn’t,” said I. “Any room but that will suit him.”

The two brothers exchanged meaning glances. I knew very well what was
in their minds, but not the shadow, not the ghost of a protest arose
from my soul. As Theresa wasn’t going to see Conny, I did not press my
society upon my uncles; so it ended in their leaving the house after
dinner, whilst my aunt, Theresa, and your servant remained at home to
look after one another.

My aunt could talk of nothing but the dreadful blow Conny had dealt
her pride, and the wretched person she had introduced into the
family. I am very patient, and have never in my life been considered
unsympathetic: but upon my word, I began to grow very sick of hearing
my aunt twanging, eternally twanging, that one groaning string. Having
fruitlessly endeavoured to get her to talk of something else, I began
to cast about for some stratagem to induce her to leave my cousin
and me alone. However, to my great delight, she burst into tears in
the middle of a violent attack on Curling, and, probably feeling
hysterical, and not choosing to show her ankles to Theresa, she
hastened out of the room.

“This is very sad,” said Theresa.

“To everybody,” I answered; “to those who have to feel and to those who
have to hear.”

“I can’t conceive how my aunt could have been so completely tricked.
Surely she must have known that Conny was attached to Mr. Curling.”

“We have all been made fools of,” I answered.

“I consider that you have been the worst treated,” she said, with a
little laugh.

“Why do you think so?”

“Because I can’t imagine anything more mortifying than to be jilted.”

“My dear Theresa, you are labouring under an afflicting delusion. I
have not been jilted. I don’t say I have been well treated; for Conny
ought never to have permitted me to express my admiration for her
face--an admiration,” I added, emphatically, gazing at her, steadily,
“which I still preserve, _absolutely_ indifferent as she is to me--she
ought never to have encouraged me, I say, when she was all the time
engaged to her clerk. But I have observed, several times, and will
repeat the observation once more, that I forgive her. I forgive her
entirely--without reservation--_sans arrière pensée_--which, I take it
upon myself to say, would be impossible had I ever loved her. You would
be amazed were you to know with what cold-blooded unconcern I received
the news of her elopement. My sympathy was for her parents; not a pang
of any kind or description visited me for myself.”

“I daresay she knew how completely you mistook your feelings.... Shall
we go into the grounds. This room is very close.”

“With pleasure,” said I, and forth we strolled.

A warm August evening it was, but not untempered with cool draughts
of air, which stirred the flowers from time to time and set the stray
hairs about Theresa’s forehead dancing.

I admired her more than ever I had admired Conny. My admiration for our
golden cousin had been immediate, but it had attained its full growth
at once and never afterwards increased. It was otherwise with Theresa.
I had begun by detesting her. Afterwards, when I found her womanly,
the pleasure I had taken in watching her gained a new force day by
day; and now, on this calm evening, I found myself regarding her in a
manner which, but that it was qualified by the profound compliment that
glistened in my eyes, she might have thought highly impertinent.

What we talked about as we strolled to and fro, I almost forget. I have
a faint recollection of some unwilling laughter being wrung from her by
my reference to the reception she had vouchsafed me at Thistlewood, and
by a somewhat comical description of the state of my mind on that day
and on the night that followed. I can also recall that she made various
efforts to prove me fickle because of the change that had come over me
respecting Conny, charges which I believe I rebutted with considerable
ingenuity, considering that I was obliged to be sophistical to clear
myself, and that she was extremely shrewd and logical in her reasoning.
Further I can recollect that I was impressed with the idea that she
found much pleasure in my society. I said to her “It is an understood
thing that you are to remain for some time at Grove End.”

“I did not come here with that intention,” she answered, “but if my
company is likely to be of use to my aunt, it is my duty to stop.”

“Yes, for me as well as for my aunt. My spirits want cheering up. You
don’t consider them.”

“Nonsense! you are happy enough.”

“At this moment; but leave us, and then see where my spirits will be.”

Here universal darkness covers all, and nothing survives of the rest
of that walk and talk but the memory of the little blush, the smile,
the wise shake of the head, and the expressive silence that followed my
observation.

We had been chatting with my aunt (whom we found in the drawing-room)
for some twenty minutes, when my uncles entered.

Dick went up to his sister-in-law and exclaimed:

“You’re all anxiety to hear how Conny is, aren’t you? My dear, she is
very well, very happy, and sent you her love. Are you aware that you
are committing a dreadful mistake in abusing her husband? I can assure
you I never wish to meet with a smarter-minded man. Why, I had made
up my mind to be introduced to some coarse, country bumpkin; instead
of which, Teazer,” addressing his daughter, “I was received by a
gentlemanly youth with fine intelligent eyes, and very modest manners,
who detained me for ten minutes with as shrewd a piece of reasoning on
our commercial relations with Austria as ever I could wish to read in a
newspaper.”

“It is true,” said uncle Tom, looking round him, with a broad smile,
and addressing everybody. “Dick has taken a great fancy to the young
fellow--and give me Dick’s opinion before anybody’s.”

“I don’t care a fig about his ideas of Austria,” cried my aunt, hotly.
“I only feel that to my dying day I shall deplore the marriage as a
heavy disgrace.”

“Upon my word you are wilful!” retorted Dick, with equal warmth.
“Disgrace! I’ll tell you what--had Theresa fallen in love with Curling,
she should have married him.”

Theresa smiled.

“And how are you going to get over the elopement?” called out my aunt.

“By forgetting it!” replied the other. “Who cares about an elopement?”
he added, contemptuously. “In my young days we were all of us running
away with one another. Love was then a passion worth feeling--a smart,
adventurous, dashing emotion, fed with stronger waters than the tea and
negus you now give it; a heroical combination of enraged fathers and
moonlit nights, postchaises and turnpikes, cloaks and swoons, brandy
and bliss. I don’t mean to say that Curling had any right to walk off
with your daughter in that manner; but since he _did_, give him the
credit of having spirit. My dear woman, I really expected to meet some
wretched, shrivelled mannikin, a poor fool with about fourpennyworth
of soul in his composition, on no account to be introduced to your
friends, and whom you were to hope would, at your evening parties,
be mistaken for a waiter. Instead, my admiration is challenged by
a gentleman, and my anticipative contempt converted into honest
gratulations.”

“Dick is no humbug,” said his brother, looking into his wife’s dogged
face, “and if he saw anything in Curling to despise he’d say so.”

“Right out,” responded Dick.

“Curling possesses a thorough knowledge of business,” I observed,
thinking it incumbent upon me to say something in the youth’s praise.

“How Thomas can so easily forgive that double-dealing cashier of his,
is horribly puzzling!” cried his wife; “for my part----”

“What would you have me do?” interrupted Thomas. “Suppose the bargain a
bad one: is that a reason for making the worst of it? I _don’t_ forgive
him for running away with Conny: I consider that in doing so he was
guilty of gross impertinence. But can I unmarry them? Teach me how,
and I’ll make them single to-morrow. But since you can’t, and I can’t;
since they are as utterly man and wife as you and I, what’s the use of
storming and raging?”

“No use,” exclaimed uncle Dick, with deep emphasis.

“My argument,” continued Tom, “is, let us strive to make them
comfortable--let us endeavour to find something in this unfortunate
affair to qualify our disappointment and to teach us to believe that,
as it has happened, it has happened for the best.”

“Sound philosophy!” cried Dick as triumphantly as if the speech had
been his; “and worth more than the loudest shrieks with which human
lungs could pierce the ear.”

“Ay, _you_ can talk,” exclaimed my aunt, “but there sits your
daughter--safe!”

“Not so safe as you think,” he answered turning shortly round and
confronting his daughter and me, who sat unnecessarily close together.

Theresa didn’t change colour, but I flushed beautifully, I can promise
you.

“Curling begins afresh at the bank to-morrow,” said uncle Tom to me.

“I am glad to hear it,” I answered, grateful to him for diverting the
general attention.

“And they dine with us to-morrow,” he added, addressing his wife.

“Very proper,” broke in his brother; “and were it not for my rooted
dislike to leave my house at the mercy of my servants, nothing would
give me greater pleasure than to drink to their future happiness in
a bumper of the best champagne you’ve got in your cellar. However,
I’ll tell you what I mean to do, Tom, and I say it in the presence of
witnesses, since it is a verbal agreement; when they have chosen a
house I’ll furnish it for them.”

“No, no,” cried Tom.

“Yes, papa, you shall,” said Theresa.

My aunt hung her head.

“May I never set foot in this room again Tom, if I don’t,” exclaimed
uncle Dick with great energy. “Aren’t I Conny’s uncle? and what’s the
use of uncles if they don’t make presents? I like that young Curling,
and mean to stick to him. Let him go and order what furniture he wants
and send the bill in to me. Pooh! pooh! don’t interrupt, Tom. Curling
has nothing against him that I can see, but his poverty; and if I
choose to help him to furnish a house for his wife, you’ll not have so
much reason to deplore the marriage in a pecuniary sense.”

“But it is my place to furnish their house,” said Tom.

His brother said it wasn’t, and Theresa said it wasn’t.

My aunt proved that it was nobody’s place but Curling’s.

“And Curling shall do it--through me,” said Dick.

A hot argument followed, which ended in my aunt bursting into tears,
and in my uncle Tom wringing his brother’s hand.

All this was sufficiently pleasant, and even my aunt grew more cheerful
as the evening wore away. I heartily applauded uncle Dick’s untiring
efforts to render the poor mother satisfied with her child’s choice.
Suppose he was not so much in earnest as he seemed? so much the more
praise is due to him. It is very easy to sneer, very easy to render
people dissatisfied and wretched. (You can tell that by the number
of stupid persons whom that sort of work gives employment to.) And
detestable as Rochefoucauld’s philosophy always is, there is but too
much truth in his assertion, that there is something in the misfortunes
of our friends that seldom fails to please us. I honoured uncle Dick
for the cheerful light his large kind heart streamed upon this family
trouble. He talked so well, reasoned so clearly and honestly, that
it was difficult to hear him and not consider that Conny had shown
profound sagacity in selecting Curling for a husband; and that this
alliance, so far from being a disgrace, was an affair which all Conny’s
relations had every right to regard with emotions of ungovernable pride.




CHAPTER VI.

  “Wounds, Dolly! this marrying be dear work!”

                                                      _Doves in a Cage._


Curling was at his post next morning when I reached the bank. Marriage
seemed to agree with him, for he looked uncommonly well. He greeted
me nervously, but his embarrassment speedily fell before my cordial
manner. Was I going to be haughty and distant? No, indeed! Infinitely
more should I have preferred a good kicking to his suspicion that I
was mortified by his triumph, and hated him because he had won Conny’s
love. Good heavens! Wasn’t he welcome to it? He began to mumble
something in my ear about a regret that his and Conny’s stratagem
should have involved my feelings--but I cut him very short. No doubt
Conny had instructed him in this apology, and I silenced him bluntly,
expressly that she might learn how distasteful to me was all reference
to distressing folly.

He smiled feebly and said,

“I beg your pardon; I wouldn’t have alluded to the subject had I not
thought an explanation was due.”

“I understand,” I answered, “and now about Mr. Acorn’s promissory
note?” And so the matter ended.

My uncle’s greeting to him was very gentle. He asked tenderly after
Conny, and whether she was going to Grove End during the morning.
Curling replied that as they were to dine there, he did not believe she
would start before him. They then retired into the back office and left
me to think of Theresa.

Now that _she_ was at Grove End, it was delightful to feel that my
residence, too, was there. I was very much in love with her, and what
was strange, I could hug this passion without in any sense feeling that
I was exhibiting surprising weakness in so speedily yielding to a new
fascination whilst the corpse of the old one was still warm.

Not being a Scotchman, I am incapable of going into the metaphysics of
this thing. However, I may point out that there was some difference
between the love I had felt for Conny and the love that I now felt
for Theresa. To begin with, I deny that I ever _did_ love Conny. Oh
yes, you may turn back to other chapters and point me out several most
condemnatory phrases; but don’t judge people by phrases. There is only
one alphabet, but there are a hundred passions; and admiration will
express itself in the language of love, precisely as if it were the
most perfect and enduring devotion.

I had loved Conny for her face and figure. _Voilà tout._ She had not
one intellectual charm, that I can remember, to fascinate me. Reading
her character in the light thrown upon it by her elopement, I found,
let me tell you, a very great deal that was decidedly objectionable.
This was enough to confirm my indifference.

Now it was quite otherwise with Theresa. I won’t pretend that I didn’t
immensely admire her handsome face, and fine eyes, and noble figure,
and that they were not the first cause of my loving her. But during my
stay at Thistlewood, I had discovered many qualities in her which, had
I not been influenced in a great measure by Conny, would have settled
the question there and then, and dismissed me to Updown as much in love
as ever man was. It was enough that Conny should turn out a regular
little trickster, who had trifled with my feelings merely to fool me
at last, to send my thoughts trooping to Theresa. Here was a foil upon
which her fine qualities of head and heart could not fail to glisten
brightly. Long before had the memory of her eccentric reception of
me been transmuted by the alchemy of admiration into a pungent and a
piquant reminiscence; so _that_ could not deform my opinion of her.
Here, then, my love was based upon altogether different ground from
that on which I had built my first and unsubstantial passion. There
were physical graces to charm me; there were mental characteristics
to fascinate me. A love was now inspired that was every day to gain
greater strength; and thus I could start on my new amatory career with
a conviction that, whether I should win Theresa’s love or not, my
devotion would never be met with a heartless betrayal.

I never left the bank to return to Grove End with more pleasure than I
did on that day. Uncle Dick had returned to Thistlewood by the mid-day
train, and I found Theresa thoroughly domiciled, sitting at the open
drawing-room window with some work in her hand. A bright look lighted
up her face when she saw me.

“When will Conny be here?” she asked.

“Very shortly, I expect. How have you been amusing yourself?”

“Aunt and I went for a drive this afternoon,” she answered, laying down
her work, and joining me on the lawn. “Hasn’t uncle Tom returned with
you?”

“He remained behind with the phaeton to drive the turtle doves over,”
said I. “The truth is, he wants Updown to see him and them together. We
all stand in awe of gossip.”

“Aunt is much more reasonable than she was last evening,” exclaimed
Theresa. “The talking-to Papa gave her has done her no harm. She is, I
think, slowly beginning to see that her husband’s view is the soundest,
and that Conny might have done a very great deal worse, though she
might also have done a very great deal better. Mothers are nearly
always the last to come round in these matters. I wonder why?”

“Perhaps because they have more to do with their daughters than the
papas have, and therefore the daughters’ mistakes touch them more
nearly. That’s only one reason--and no reason at all. Women--I don’t
say all women--no, no, Theresa, not all--are not very liberal in their
views of life or of each other. Mothers and daughters are no exception.”

“You are quite right. Women are not liberal-minded.”

“In many things they are, and, queerly enough, in directions where men
are bigoted. But in matters of dress and sentiment, they are often
prodigiously intolerant.”

“Having been deceived by a girl,” said she, with a sweet laugh, “it is
perfectly fair that you should _have at_ the whole sex.”

“Pray,” I entreated earnestly, “pray don’t refer to that piece of
folly. Had I met you before I met Conny, it never could have happened.”

She curtsied, perhaps to hide a little blush; and then asked me if I
had ridden since my return from Thistlewood.

“I haven’t had time yet: but I shall hope to do so frequently now that
you are here. And we’ll have some pistol-shooting too, if you like.”

“Oh, Papa objects, so I mean to give up the unmaidenly pastime.”

“You are very dutiful. Perhaps, on the whole, it _is_ rather
unmaidenly, especially when you take aim at sober-minded and meditative
young gentlemen.”

“Am I _never_ to be allowed to forget my nonsense!” she exclaimed,
looking annoyed.

“And am I never to be allowed to forget mine?” I answered. “But I’ll
enter into an agreement with you, Theresa, never to remind you of
_your_ nonsense, if you will promise never to remind me of mine.”

“I agree.”

“So then, my wrong-headed _penchant_ for Conny is to be forgotten as if
no such a thing had ever been?”

“Well, I’ll do my best to forget.”

“I am afraid you will never see anything to like in me until you _do_
forget.”

“Why do you say that?” she asked, quickly.

“No girl can possibly have any respect or regard for a man she
considers a flirt.”

“Oh, if you _will_ have your theories about your sex, it is better, for
your peace of mind, that they should not be contradicted.... Here’s the
phaeton!”

Yes, there it was, Conny next the coachman, Curling and his _beau-père_
behind.

The two cousins kissed each other profusely--in short, as only young
girls _can_ kiss. Nothing could surpass Theresa’s gracefully cordial
reception of little Conny, and her polite greeting to Mr. Curling.
Conny looked bewitchingly pretty. She gave me her hand and smiled at me
with her eyes. Ah, my child, those smiles can’t affect me now. Don your
loveliest airs, strike your most irresistible attitude, you would find
in me an unmoved spectator.

  My love is dead,
  Gone to his death-bed.

I can watch you as one at a puppet-show. Tender is the tint of your
cheeks, heavenly the azure of your eyes, snow-like your pearly teeth;
but to me, my dear, you are no more than a cunning contrivance of
beauty; the sweetest dummy, from which I can turn away with the
lightest sigh, to think that I could ever have been so weak as to
bestow a thought upon you.

She left us to seek her mamma, and then we got talking, as people not
absolutely at their ease will talk--about the weather. Theresa was
admirably lady-like in her manner to Mr. Curling. The poor fellow was a
good deal embarrassed, but all things considered acquitted himself very
tolerably.

My uncle watched his niece narrowly. He evidently wanted her good
opinion for his son-in-law, and smiled with ghastly approval every time
the young man spoke.

I caught Curling regarding her with great admiration, and even awe;
which put me into the best possible temper with him, so pleased was I
that he should see what a splendid substitute fortune had provided me
with in the room of the young lady he had married.

The trying moment presently came, when my aunt stepped out of the
house, followed by Conny. Theresa and I fell back with the instinctive
horror of people of sensibility who apprehend a shock. However, nothing
very disagreeable happened. There was something, indeed, unpleasantly
chilling in the hard smile with which my aunt gave Curling her hand and
in the hasty manner with which she withdrew it; but the effect, to us
lookers-on at least, was somewhat qualified by the broad, nervous smile
with which my uncle superintended the greeting.

As for Curling, his politeness was cringing. He smiled if his
mother-in-law turned her head, listened with painful eagerness to be
agreeable if she opened her mouth, agreed with her before he well knew
what she had said, and in every respect showed himself thoroughly
afraid of her.

“I don’t think he is going the right way to work to make her respect
him,” I whispered to Theresa.

“Poor fellow!” she answered. “I wonder Conny had the heart to bring him
here. I should be sorry to subject my husband to such treatment.”

“What do you think of him?”

“He seems gentlemanly enough.”

“Could you have run off with him, Theresa?”

“As soon with O’Twist!”

I had made up my mind to have Conny given me to take into dinner; but
to my great relief and pleasure, she took her papa’s arm, Curling
conducted Mrs. Hargrave, and I was left to Theresa. Curling and his
mother-in-law walked in front of us from the drawing-room, and I had
great difficulty to retrain myself from bursting into a fit of laughter
on catching sight of my aunt’s face, and watching the contemptuous air
with which she waddled alongside her new connexion. Theresa begged me
not to speak to her, lest she should lose her self-control. The sight
was, indeed, ludicrous enough; and one of the servants, at all events,
saw the joke, for she turned rapidly away as my aunt entered the
dining-room and emitted a laugh over the sideboard, which made my uncle
look smartly round under the impression, I believe, that a cork had
flown.

The dinner was not a very lively affair. Nothing but the having Theresa
at my side saved me from wishing myself a hundred miles away. In vain
my uncle strove to be cheerful; in vain he told his best stories; in
vain he indulged in little flirting allusions to matrimony, and winked
out, so to speak, those little modest jokes which are universally held
to be permissible on the occasion of the presence of a newly married
couple. God knows no man ever tried to laugh more resolutely than I
did; but my hoarse notes were as destitute of mirth as a raven’s croak.
Had I wept I should have shown myself more sympathetic; for my uncle’s
humour tottered on the very verge of tears.

Theresa did all she could: tried her relations on twenty different
subjects, then out of sheer weariness took refuge in silence.

Curling was so nervous, he could scarcely eat. I felt for him--yes,
my whole heart went out to him--when he knocked a wine-glass full of
claret over the table-cloth. The wine wasn’t redder than his face, I
promise you.

“Don’t bother,” said my uncle, seeing the poor fellow spoon the wine up.

“Sprinkle some salt over it,” said Conny, looking abject.

It was plain to everybody that Theodore had been scarcely able to
handle his knife and fork for nervousness, that though he might have
known how to behave with perfect propriety, fear of his mother-in-law
bereft him of his knowledge and hurried him into _grossièretés_. For
instance, he refused to begin until the others were helped; insisted
upon passing whatever was set before him to Mrs. Hargrave; eat up
his bread in a trice and hopelessly entangled himself in a wild
complication of knives, forks, spoons, and glasses. I doubt if he would
have committed a single blunder had my aunt been absent. Ah, Eugenio,
_you_ know what it is to have a mother-in-law watching you with a
foregone prejudice of the bitterest kind rankling in her eyes. I know
a young man whom his mother-in-law made so anxious and apprehensive
that, before dinner was over, he had kicked both his boots off under
the table, and would have joined the ladies in his socks had not a
good-natured footman directed his attention to the state of his feet.

Tears were in Conny’s eyes before the dessert was brought in; and I
felt so heartily sorry for the poor girl and her yet more-to-be-pitied
husband, that addressing my uncle, I exclaimed,

“Aren’t we going to drink to the happiness of the bride and
bridegroom?” hoping that the hearty expression of our good wishes would
render them happier and force some of the acidity out of my aunt’s face.

“Certainly,” he replied.

We then filled our glasses and all spoke at once, to the effect that
the young people would enjoy a long life and unbounded happiness:
Theresa speaking very feelingly and my aunt nodding her head with a
face that expressed everything but the prevailing sentiment.

Now I really believe this toast would have ended in putting us all into
a better temper, had well been let alone; for even as we drank, Conny
smiled and looked much gratified.

But judge my surprise, when, after an interval of not less than
five minutes, I observed Mr. Curling, who had been pulling at his
watchguard in a fashion that threatened to tear the waistcoat off his
back, rise, and in rising knock his chair over, which however, nobody
offered to pick up, that he might not be interrupted. In a very faint
and difficult voice, he thanked us for our good wishes, which, he
particularly desired his mother-in-law to believe, he should strive his
utmost to deserve. He next informed us that he was never considered a
good speaker, and that if he didn’t express all the gratitude he felt,
it was not because he didn’t feel it, but because he hadn’t the words.

Here I hoped he would sit down. But there are two notorious
difficulties in public and unpremeditated speaking, of which every
nervous man who has ever got upon his legs is but too keenly sensible:
the first difficulty is to know how to begin, and the second is to
know when to stop. On such an occasion, and in such company, it would
probably have taxed the wit of a Disraeli not to have said something
offensive. Mr. Curling wanted Mr. Disraeli’s wit, and the result
therefore was, he, to the confusion of everybody, began to apologise
for eloping with Conny; assuring us, and the servants who stood choking
at the door, that he never would have been guilty of such a mistake had
he not worshipped the ground his ker-ker-Conny trod on.

This was too much for my aunt. It was bad enough that so delicate
a matter should have been referred to at all: of its peculiar
inopportuneness at that moment, one had only to glance at the giggling
servants to understand. In a loud, angry voice, she begged him to
cease, burst into tears, and rushed out of the room.

Curling _did_ cease; and, forgetting in his nervousness that his chair
was upset, sat down before any of us could cry out: the consequence
of which was that he tumbled head over heels, pulling the table-cloth
with him, and covering himself with his unique collection of glass and
cutlery.

There was instantly a scramble. My uncle, who thought Curling had
fainted, shouted to the servants for brandy. Conny, weeping bitterly,
fell on her knees and picked the broken glass away from the carpet near
her husband’s head. Theresa turned pale, and clasped her hands; but I,
suspecting by the young fellow lying still that he couldn’t get up,
laid hold of his arm and pulled him on to his legs.

Now then Conny’s affection displayed itself. She clung to her husband,
kissed him, asked him if he was hurt and where, behaved herself
altogether so pathetically that I felt myself a wretch for having
laughed to see him fall.

“Do let us go home!” she cried, turning to her papa. “We are _so_ much
happier alone. Theodore never wanted to come, and mamma will break his
heart.”

Ay, and his neck too, she might have added.

“Yes, yes! go home! go home!” exclaimed my poor uncle. “Tell James, one
of you, to bring the phaeton round. I have acted cruelly in subjecting
you both to this.”

“I’m not hurt,” said Curling, rubbing his back, obviously relieved by
the prospect of an immediate release.

“Why didn’t somebody pick up that chair?” exclaimed my uncle.

“I should have done so,” replied Conny, “but I didn’t like to interrupt
Theodore, for fear of breaking the thread of his ideas. Mary, go and
get me my hat, it’s in mamma’s bed-room.”

In a few minutes the phaeton was ready, the young couple, wearing now
far cheerfuller faces than we who were left behind, jumped up, and off
they drove.

“The next time they come to dinner,” said my uncle, wiping his forehead
with a pocket handkerchief, “shall be at somebody else’s invitation.
I’ll never subject the poor things to such treatment again whilst I
have breath in my body.”




CHAPTER VII.

  _Mrs. Croaker._ “Well, if they concealed their amour, they shan’t
  conceal their wedding; that shall be public, I’m resolved.”

                                                 _The Good-natured Man._


My aunt afterwards apologised to us for having lost her temper, but I
was heartily glad my uncle had resolved not to ask the young couple
to dinner again. A few scenes of this kind would hardly fail to drive
Theresa away, and without Theresa, what were life?

And to tell you the truth, the less I should see of Conny, the more,
I felt, should I be pleased. I was so much in love with Theresa, that
all reference to the past was peculiarly disagreeable. To have had
Conny’s large, blue, surprised eyes watching me whilst I talked with
her cousin, and cut my little jokes and looked happy, would have been
more than I could bear.

Next morning my uncle suggested to me that I should remain at Grove End
and amuse Theresa.

“She will be dull with my wife,” said he, “whose temper makes her bad
company.” This proposal was perfectly agreeable to me, and I had the
pleasure of spending a happier day than I firmly believe was ever
passed even at Rosherville. Unfortunately, we could not ride, because
Theresa’s habit had not arrived from Thistlewood; but we could walk,
and talk, and pick the flowers, and lounge under the cool trees, and
snatch Arcadian joys from the breezy quiet grounds.

I longed to find out whether it was amiability that kept her happy in
my company, or some more complimentary, some tenderer feeling. Somehow
or other, I couldn’t make love to her as I had made love to Conny.
Nothing had been easier than to mutter my eternal devotion into the
ears of the golden-haired maid; nothing was harder than to pay Theresa
even a compliment. It was not that she was cold; on the contrary,
she was very genial. She gave me every reason to believe that my
society pleased her; and throughout the long day, during which we were
constantly together, never once suggested that she had had enough of
me. The fault was mine, not hers. I was diffident. I was shy, bashful,
muffish. Conny and other young ladies (who shall be nameless, for they
may still be single) I had been able to make love to, as I have said,
easily; but Theresa awed me. She was so honest, so open-hearted and
candid, so womanly, so superior in numberless points to the girls whose
friendship or whose hearts I had had the honour of possessing, that I
could as soon have deliberately insulted her, as indulged in any of
those light and jocose strokes of sentimentality with which I had been
heretofore used to pay my court.

One thing struck both of us that afternoon and made us laugh: she had
stopped at Grove End to be a companion for my aunt.

“I am sure she has enjoyed your society very much,” said I, ironically.

And she blushed and averted her face with a self-conscious expression
upon it that filled me with delight.

However, I don’t think my aunt wanted her. The good lady was very
gloomy, and quite impenetrable to the attacks of cheerfulness. When we
entered the house, we caught her helping a servant to pack a hamper,
which she boldly avowed was for her daughter; and the moment the
servant left the room she exclaimed,

“My daughter shan’t be starved by that man.”

Here was prejudice!

“Starved!” I cried; “why, poor fellow, he worships her.”

“And so he ought. But all young men of his kind are intolerably selfish
and never think of their wives’ necessities, so long as their own are
supplied.”

“Why his kind particularly?” asked Theresa, with a glance at me.

“Because he is _not_ a gentleman,” answered my aunt.

Nothing but time will cure this stubbornness, I thought, turning away.

The young people were to be married “properly” on Monday morning, at
nine o’clock. This early hour was fixed that the people at Updown
might not get scent of the proceedings. Curling, in my presence, had
protested against the ceremony, as superfluous. But my uncle was firm.

“I shall never consider my daughter your wife, sir,” he exclaimed with
some heat, “until the service as directed by the Church of England has
been read over you.”

“But we _are_ married!” urged Curling. “Thoroughly married.”

“I say you are not!” shouted my uncle. “You dare not disobey me, sir!”

“I’ll do anything you want,” replied Curling: “but I shall go to my
grave protesting against this second ceremony.”

I looked forward to the ceremony with many misgivings, having no doubt
that my aunt would misconduct herself. When Monday morning came we
all rose very early, and supplied, at the breakfast table, such an
assemblage of dolorous faces, that more dejection could not have been
expressed, had we been going to escort some favourite relation to the
gallows. My uncle proposed that Theresa and I should walk to the church
in advance of him and his wife, lest, should we go in a body, the
attention of the people might be drawn, and a procession follow us to
the altar.

“Anything to keep this matter secret,” said he.

So Theresa and I started alone.

It was a bright, fresh morning, so gay and sunny that all depression
was out of the question.

“I know it is proper to look wretched on these occasions,” said I. “But
what is a man to do if he _can’t_ cry?”

“I don’t see any reason to be dull,” answered Theresa, “though aunt’s
face makes cheerfulness rather difficult.”

“I wonder how we should feel if _we_ were going to be married?” said I.

She did not answer.

“Would you like to be going to be married?”

“Would you?”

“If you were the bride.”

She turned her head away and grew so nervous, that her step quickened,
and I had to catch her hand to detain her.

“Theresa,” I exclaimed, whilst my heart beat violently, “I had no
intention of frightening you with a declaration when we left the house.
But--but, dearest--haven’t you foreseen that--that I should speak to
you before long--that--that I should tell you----Oh Theresa!” I gasped,
“I am so agitated I can scarcely speak. My impulse has taken my breath
away. My darling, I am in love with you. I fell in love with you at
Thistlewood, and I am able to think of nothing--of nobody but you....
Oh, tell me something.”

“It is quite impossible that you could have learnt to love me in this
short time,” she answered in a low voice.

“How can it be impossible when I _do_ love you? I know what you are
thinking of--Conny. Don’t, pray don’t. If it were in my power to
bare my heart, you’d know then that I loved you. No, no. I have been
weak--all men are. I may have flirted--I may have played the fool, but
all _that_ is over, a deep and serious play is begun. Do you believe
me?”

She looked at me steadily, let her eyes fall, and answered,

“Yes, I believe you are in earnest.”

I glanced around to see that nobody was in sight and, Eugenio, I kissed
her. “Will you marry me?” I asked her.

She was so long silent that I feared my kiss had made her indignant.

“Charlie,” she answered presently, “I wish you had taken a longer time
to consider your feelings before you spoke to me. Have I any right to
depend upon your love when I see how quickly you can forget the old and
take to the new?”

“Ah!” I exclaimed, bitterly; “I always feared that Conny would come
between us.”

“It is not Conny, but your own heart. Can you be faithful?”

“Try me.”

“If I were to tell you I love you, would you abandon me for the first
pretty girl you met?”

“Try me,” I groaned.

“I know,” she continued, “that it is papa’s wish I should marry you;
but I would rather die than give my hand to a man on whose sincerity I
could not rely.”

To this, Eugenio, what did I answer? Credit me when I assure you that I
answered her eloquently. I was inspired. It was not alone the beauty of
her eyes, the rapture of the kiss I had stolen, her blushing face, the
sense of security that is bred by solitude, the glorious blue of the
morning heavens, and the sweetness of the breeze rich with odours from
the fields and woods, which gave me power to speak; the impulse that
had broken through my diffidence had also annihilated it. Why write
down what I said to her? Why describe her appearance as she listened?
We have jogged on so far very well without sentiment: let us not take a
dose of it now.

I solemnly protest that I had left Grove End with Theresa, en route
for the church, with no more intention of telling my love than
of playing at leap-frog with the haystacks on the road. This has
happened to others. Have I not seen? No rules govern the heart. At
the most unexpected moment love is blurted out, proposals of marriage
stammered through; emotion triumphs over fear, and even imbecility
grows eloquent. Let the ladies be grateful for these little bursts
of passion. Were it all premeditation, all rehearsal, few would be
the offers made. Young Froth, adoring Lauretta, breaks into a cold
sweat over the idea of a formal submission of his heart and fortune.
To-morrow and to-morrow and to-morrow steals on this petty pace, and
Froth has still to propose. Ah, nights of agony, days of ineffable
meditation, how have ye worn this gentle shepherd! At last, a glass of
champagne and a ten minutes’ lounge in the balcony after the feverish
waltz, do the work. With a ghastly look at the man in the moon, Froth
mumbles his feelings; he is accepted on the spot, and his fears are at
an end. _De te fabula_, &c. Change the name, and the story is told of
thee.

Had I begun to think when, how, where, and in what language I should
propose, I might have been a bachelor to this day.

That walk to the church! (it took us three quarters of an hour) how
sentimental was it! Did I enjoy it? was I happy? was Theresa happy?
Surely such questions are in bad taste since they imply a doubt.

“Oh!” I exclaimed, “what would I give, Theresa, if instead of going to
Conny’s marriage we were going to our own!”

“We mustn’t look too pleased,” she answered, with a laugh, “or we shall
grieve poor aunt.”

“I wonder,” said I, “if she will guess what this walk of ours has
terminated in. How glad your father will be! how we shall delight uncle
Tom! Wonderful is life! only the other day I was thinking you a rude,
uncivilised female, fit only to shoot pistols and break horses; and
now--and _now_!”

“And only the other day,” said she, “I was making up my mind to insult
you as grossly as I possibly could, to disgust and drive you out of my
sight, so odious was the notion of having a husband forced upon me.”

“And now?”

“And now it is otherwise.”

We reached the church where we found nobody but the clerk, who, after
inquiring our business, conducted us with a stealthy face to a seat.
Scarcely three minutes after we had entered, Conny and her husband,
both looking very pale and agitated, came up to us. The poor fellow
shook hands with me and muttered,

“I consider this quite superfluous.”

“It’ll soon be over,” I replied.

“It can’t make Conny more my wife than she is?”

“My dear friend,” said I, “consider yourselves in the light of a book
which is to be handsomely re-bound. The first plain binding keeps the
leaves as securely together as the richer covers will, but the gilt and
morocco are necessary to your importance.”

Here my uncle and aunt entered, the former gazing about him, into
the pews and up at the gallery, to make sure that no spectators were
present. At the same moment the clock struck nine, forth stepped the
rector in full dress out of the vestry, and the clerk beckoned to us to
take our places.

The marriage service is always a trial to married people to hear, it is
so full of reproaches. My aunt cried so abundantly that I every moment
expected to see her bump upon the floor in hysterics. However she kept
her feet stoutly, and I truly hoped that the tender and beautiful words
she was listening to would soften her towards the young fellow whose
reverential face and ardent glances at his little wife persuaded me
that all would go well with them.

On the completion of the ceremony, my uncle grasped my arm.

“Look!” he muttered.

I glanced in the direction he indicated and beheld the porch of the
church crowded with women with here and there a man among them; while
several females had pushed their way into the pews and were watching us
with profound interest.

“I feared, I feared we should never be able to keep this a secret,”
whispered my uncle, “but why weren’t the doors shut?”

The doors shut! what manner of woodwork, what manner of brickwork,
would keep women away from a marriage? I believe were a wedding to be
celebrated at the bottom of a well, two or three ladies would be found
swinging in or holding on to the bucket, watching the proceedings.
What, my dears, _what_ is there in the spectacle of half a dozen
or more or less people standing before a clergyman so astounding,
so novel, so exciting as to cause you to abandon your babies, your
wash-tubs, your lodgers, your cooking, to witness it? Positively
this hungry and piercing curiosity fully justifies the remark my
friend Adolphe Beau once made to me: “Either weddings in England
are exceedingly rare, monsieur, or else they symbolise some hideous
sacrifice compared to which the African celebration of their King’s
nuptials are innocent childplay: or whence comes your morbid national
love of witnessing these sights?”

“Well, thank God, this is over,” exclaimed my uncle, receiving Conny
from her blubbering mamma, and kissing her.

Poor Conny! was she so perfectly satisfied with her husband that she
could think without regret upon the breakfast she had missed, the
speeches, the congratulations, the blonde and the tulle, the bouquets,
the presents, and the triumphal drive to the railway station, she
had forfeited? Ah, miss, you who are reading this, see what you will
be infallibly deprived of if ever you dare to run away with a young
man unknown to your parents. A midnight excursion may be romantic:
but, take my word for it, a noontide festival, of which you are the
heroine, is a great deal more comfortable. Don’t believe your Edward,
who tells you that he despises the flummery of the marriage-show; that
a registrar in his sight is as good as a parson; that friends are a
nuisance, and speeches detestable. It is true that veils and champagne
don’t make happiness; but they leave a good impression, which he for
one won’t forget. Bridesmaids and flowers won’t prevent you from
quarrelling; but they will put it out of his power to say several
unpleasant things when you and he _do_ quarrel. A wedding is a launch;
and, depend upon it, there is no better way to slip into the ocean of
life than with streamers flying, bands playing, and kindly hands to
chase our flying feet with wine.

Conny and her husband returned to their lodgings with my uncle, who
desired me to escort the ladies home. The first thing that I did after
we were out of the town was to tell my aunt that Theresa had accepted
me. She received the intelligence without an ejaculation. All she did
was to force a smile and say,

“I expected it would come to that. I am very pleased. Thomas will be
delighted. Poor, poor Conny!”

Seeing how utterly engrossed she was by her daughter’s fate, I squeezed
Theresa’s hand by way of apologising to her for dropping the subject
of our engagement, and began a long and vigorous appeal for Curling. I
think I must have grown warm; for I have a recollection of reproaching
her for her behaviour, which, I pointed out, was not only calculated
to make her daughter miserable, but to excite her contempt for her
husband, and so create feelings which would result in rendering the
elopement calamitous in a very different and sterner sense than it now
was.

“I daresay I am wrong. I daresay I am to blame,” she kept on saying.

Theresa at last silenced me by whispering:

“All the talk in the world will not make her see the matter in its
true light, yet; it will probably dawn upon her in a few weeks; but
arguments now will do nothing but harden her.”




CHAPTER VIII.

  _Puff._ “Now gentlemen, this scene goes entirely for what we call
  situation and stage effect, by which the greatest applause may be
  obtained without the assistance of ... sentiment or character. Pray
  mark.”

                                                           _The Critic._


I returned to the Bank after seeing the ladies to Grove End, and going
straight into my uncle’s private room, told him that Theresa and I were
engaged.

“Engaged!” he cried, staring at me. “Are you in earnest?”

“Certainly I am.”

I never saw any man look so pleased.

“It is almost time,” he said, “that I had something to give my spirits
a turn. _This_ delights me. But, good gracious! how sudden! how
unexpected! I had no idea you were in love with her.”

“I came home from Thistlewood in love; but I never meant to ask her to
be my wife yet awhile. My feelings overpowered me this morning and out
came everything.”

“And does she love you, Charlie?”

“I don’t suppose she would accept me if she didn’t.”

“To be sure she wouldn’t. Of course she loves you. Well, well, this
_is_ cheering news after our late troubles. That old scheme of mine
was quite pushed out of my mind by this elopement. I have been able to
think of nothing else. Now at all events there will be _one_ marriage
after my heart. Has she written to Dick yet about it?”

“Why, you see, I only proposed to her this morning.”

“True, I forgot. You had better go to her. We can very well do without
you just now--far better than she can. Upon my word,” he cried,
grasping my hand, “your news is as good as a cordial. It throws quite
a bright light on the future, and I can see my way now as I never saw
it before. But I’ll not keep you. Get away to Grove End. We’ll talk the
thing over this evening.”

I left him, but stopped a moment to ask Curling, who was at his desk,
how he and Conny felt after the wedding.

“Very well thank you, Mr. Hargrave,” he replied: “but as I told
your uncle, I shall go to my grave protesting that it was entirely
superfluous.”

“No, no! come, you must confess that you feel more comfortable now that
you have been married correctly.”

“Not a bit,” he said, “and whilst I live I shall always say it was
superfluous.”

“By the way,” said I, halting as I was moving off, as though arrested
by an afterthought: “you might tell Conny when you see her that I am
engaged to be married.”

“Really!”

“Yes, my cousin Theresa has done me the honour to accept me. The news
will interest your wife.”

“And delight her too,” said Curling, “for she still worries now and
then over the trick we were unavoidably----”

“Tell her to forget everything as I have,” I interrupted quickly, for
I never could stand any reference to that trick from him. “She has
nothing to forget so far as I am concerned, as I hope my engagement
proves.”

And I left the bank.

I found Theresa alone--my aunt having been seized with an auspicious
fit of tenderness which had driven her (in her carriage) to her
daughter’s lodgings.

“It seems that I was destined to make love to you,” said I; “for I am
perpetually finding you by yourself all alone, as the song says, and
opportunity creates the thief.”

“I can hardly believe we are engaged,” she answered. “We have, I fear,
both been too hasty--you in proposing, I in accepting you.”

“If you mean to imitate Conny, I had better withdraw to my bed-room and
cut my gorge. What! accept me, and then break into lamentations?”

“_I_ can be true,” said she, firmly and proudly, “and do not speak of
myself. But----”

There was only one way of silencing her buts, and that was by stopping
her mouth. I leave you to guess how I did it. There was a vast deal of
blushing, tender charges of sauciness, assumptions of indignation which
the eyes vowed were terrible hypocrisies, and----

But, my Eugenio, even were love-making not an amusement in which no
breathing creature can take the faintest interest, save those who are
concerned in it, still ought I, and do I, politely but firmly decline
to set down the particulars of that dear, delightful morning. The very
respectable fear of growing sentimental is one check; but another and
a more violent restraint is that profound sense of what d’ye call it?
with which most men recur to the nonsense they are forced to emit when
the fit is on them.

However, I ought not to conceal that our conversation brought out some
little secrets of great value and moment to me; of which one was the
assurance that she had fallen in love with me before I left Thistlewood.

“I never suspected it,” said I.

“I don’t think,” she whispered, “that I should have been so easily
conquered had I not been resolved to atone for the cruel reception I
gave you, and the wicked story I told O’Twist.”

“You tried to harden your heart,” said I; “but the process that ought
to have made iron of it transformed it into wax.”

“I suppose so. I am a silly creature.”

“So much the better, dearest; for were you wise I might be miserable. A
woman must love a man for something; and providing he gains her love,
the means by which he wins her ought not to trouble either of them.”

That afternoon we each wrote to our respective fathers. What Theresa
said I don’t know; but my letter was a very candid confession of
happiness.

I _was_ happy. I loved this cousin of mine dearly. It is true that I
had had to undergo no ordeal for her. I had neither (to use a favourite
order of description) been tried by the fire, nor proved in the
furnace; “long years” had had nothing whatever to do with my love. I
had been guilty of no “passionate yearnings,” nor “wild and wistful
longings.” And I don’t think I had been “thrilled” once. In short, my
passion was totally unlike those which are heard of at Mr. Mudie’s.
And yet I am bold to say that no hero was ever fonder of the heroine
whom he wooes in chapter the first, and loses in chapter the second,
recovers in chapter the third, doubts in chapter the fourth, quarrels
with in chapter the fifth, grows sardonic over in chapter the sixth,
adores in chapter the seventh, flees in chapter the eighth, and finally
marries in chapter the sixty-fourth, than I was of Theresa whom I had
known only a few weeks, and whom, when I had first met her, I had
execrated.

Uncle Dick arrived at Grove End next day in high spirits. I remember
that after making me all manner of handsome compliments, he whispered,
“Nobody shall be miserable when my daughter is happy;” and unknown to
any of us left the house and after an hour’s absence returned--with
Curling and Conny.

“Here they are!” he cried, in great glee, joining us on the lawn. “I
was just in time. Conny had fetched her beloved at the bank and was on
the point of starting for a walk. They were very reluctant to come: but
I told them we couldn’t be happy without them.”

Conny turned a little pale when she met me, but soon recovered her
composure and whispered her congratulations with her deep blue eyes
fully upturned to mine. I gazed calmly into their depths.

“May you be very happy!” said she, and kissed me.

Eheu! when I wanted her kisses she wouldn’t give them.

Thanks to uncle Dick, our dinner-party that day was a very much
livelier one than the last at which the young couple had been present.
Without embarrassing Curling, he contrived to make a very great deal of
him, engaged him in a conversation on topics on which the young man was
well qualified to talk, and developed so many really good social points
in him, that not only was I never more favourably impressed, but I
actually caught my aunt regarding her son-in-law with a face absolutely
promising with a propitiatory expression.

Her Theodore’s success delighted poor little Conny, who, long before
the dinner was over, was chatting; and laughing as playfully as ever
she had done in the days when she was the darling of the house, and
life lay round her like a landscape of flowers and sunshine. She sat
next to her mother, and I assure you that I would rather have forfeited
the pleasure of having Theresa by my side at the table than missed the
satisfaction of seeing Conny slip her hand into her mother’s, and leave
it there to be nursed and petted.

That evening my uncles and myself had a long conversation on a great
variety of topics, all which were of prodigious interest to me, since
they all concerned me very closely. Besides a handsome settlement on
his daughter, Dick promised to make us a present of a large sum of
money, which was to procure me a partnership in uncle Tom’s, bank. But
though that sum was considerable, the income uncle Tom promised me, not
the most rapacious money-lender could have made it yield.

“Taking the capital Dick gives you at five per cent.,” said he, “your
income would be £0,000; the difference, then, between that income and
the sum you will draw, you will consider _my_ present.”

I was overpowered by so much generosity; and, utterly wanting words,
had to content myself with silently shaking their hands. It was a real
relief to me when they began to talk of Curling.

“I had always proposed,” said uncle Tom, “to make the man my daughter
married a partner in the bank; but of course I never anticipated that
she would marry a man like Curling. However, waiving the consideration
of his poverty, a fitter man than Curling to take in with us I don’t
think I could choose.”

“I don’t think you could,” said uncle Dick.

“He is extraordinarily active,” continued uncle Tom, “and were he to be
given an interest in the bank, would by his efforts and business habits
extend its influence to a degree that would abundantly compensate for
his want of capital.”

“Take him in by all means,” said uncle Dick.

“I won’t be in too great a hurry. There is plenty of time. He has
behaved ill, though I am willing to forgive him for my girl’s sake; but
there would be a want of moral propriety in my heaping benefits upon
him too suddenly.”

“Perhaps so,” said uncle Dick. “But Charlie grows uneasy and pines for
his sweetheart.”

“Quite true,” I answered, and without ceremony left the room.

Theresa received a letter next morning from my father, and a very
gorgeous epistle it was--a series of dignified and embroidered
congratulations and loftily-expressed good wishes. She was to let him
know the date of her marriage and he would join us two or three days
before at the house we should be married from. This letter was read
aloud and caused an argument. Which house _should_ we be married from?
It was soon shown that Thistlewood was out of the question. It was
impossible for uncle Tom to absent himself from Updown, owing to his
presence being necessary at the bank, and the same objection held good
with respect to Curling, whose presence and Conny’s at the breakfast
was regarded by us all as essential to the celebration.

“For,” said my uncle Dick, “the breakfast must be given as much in
their honour as in that of Charlie’s and Theresa’s; their healths
have never yet been properly drunk, and until that solemnity has been
gone through, they cannot, in spite of the double ceremony they have
endured, be considered correctly married yet.”

Both my uncles were impatient that the marriage should not be delayed,
and therefore not without a good deal of persuasion, I succeeded in
getting Theresa to fix the day for----which gave us exactly six weeks
to make our preparations. With less time we could hardly do. There were
not only two houses to be sought and furnished (Dick being resolved
that Theresa and Conny should both begin the duties of housekeeping
at the same time) but there were two trousseaux to be got ready, for
as one of us very properly observed, “It isn’t because a girl makes a
runaway marriage that she doesn’t want the same outfit that would be
given her had she been married correctly.”

A busy month that was! Theresa went to Thistlewood, but returned after
an absence of a fortnight; her father declaring that no nonsensical
fastidiousness should permit her to mope alone in a big house, which
would be all the more dull, not only because it was the home she was to
leave for ever, but because she would contrast it with the cheerfulness
of the house at Grove End.

One individual welcomed her back, trust me.

That, I say, was a busy month. Two houses had been found, exactly
“suited to the requirements of young married people,” as the landlords
pointed out: one house in Updown, which was for Conny; and one a mile
away, not very far from Grove End, which was for Theresa. These had to
be furnished; and as my uncle Tom had no time to devote to the work, I
was “told off” to assist uncle Dick.

And now at Grove End Conny was to be found every day, helping her
mother to prepare for Theresa’s marriage, to get together her own
trousseau, to sympathise with her cousin’s maidenly anxieties. She and
I were often together now; but so little did the memory of the past
affect our relations--in short, so dead was all sentiment between us,
that, though Theresa watched us narrowly (which she afterwards declared
was not true), not a glance, not a sigh was exchanged upon which the
most imaginative jealousy could have fastened as an excuse for a
quarrel.

My father arrived at Grove End a week before the marriage. Both my
uncles went to meet him with the phaeton. As I beheld his stately
figure I felt that I had never sufficiently admired him. He certainly
did look most imposing, dressed to perfection, his magnificent whiskers
taking a purple tint from the sun. He grasped both my hands, and I led
him at once to Theresa. Good heavens! with what inimitable grace did he
take and kiss her hand; with which chivalrous greeting, however, she
was by no means satisfied, for she insisted upon offering her cheek,
which he touched with the imperial air of a potentate saluting a queen.
And a queen she looked! and I noticed with happy pride the admiration
that kindled in his face as he regarded her. Indeed, I had very good
reason to be proud of both of them; for such a father and such a bride,
I will venture to say, it has been the lot of very few men to possess
at the same time.

My aunt, who had not seen the major for many years, was quite
overpowered by the reception he gave her; whilst honest Tom was so
vain of having his military brother under his roof, that for very
conceit he couldn’t sit down, but strode about the room, putting all
manner of questions about France, the Emperor, prospects of war with
that country, and so forth, positively as if my father were a returned
ambassador, whose intimacy with French affairs qualified him to raise
or depress the Funds with a shrug or a nod.

One thing I could predict: the presence of the major would entirely
nullify every lingering feeling of humiliation with which Tom and his
wife might still regard Conny’s marriage. So gorgeous a relation could
not but absorb out of the family circle the remnants of degradation
Conny’s elopement had left behind it; and uncle Tom might well
defy the neighbours to sneer after having set eyes on the military
representative of the Hargraves, with his magnificent whiskers and
aquiline nose, when he should sit by his sister-in-law in the carriage,
resembling a monarch on a _tour d’inspection_, or when he worshipped
with lofty solemnity in the family pew.

       *       *       *       *       *

The following extract is from the _Updown Mercury_ of ----, 185--. I
subjoin it because the particulars it gives are expressed in language
which, whether we consider the beauty of its epithets, the elegance
of its construction, the ease of its periods, or the harmony of its
sentences, is equally provocative of lasting admiration, and is so
superior to anything I could write, that it would be injurious to the
reputation of this book to omit it.

“Fashionable Marriage,--On Thursday last our delightfully-situated town
was thrown into a state of unusual excitement by the solemnisation of
the marriage of Charles Hargrave, Esq., son of Major Hargrave, and
nephew of our respected fellow-townsman, Thomas Hargrave, Esq., to
Theresa, only child of Richard Hargrave, Esq., of Thistlewood. The
whole of the population turned out to celebrate the joyous occasion.
The noble and ancient gateway in High Street was elegantly draped
with flags, and a triumphal arch of great beauty was erected at the
bottom of Grove End Lane. The church was densely packed, and an immense
concourse of people assembled around the doors to witness the bridal
party leave the sacred edifice. The bride wore a magnificent robe of
white satin, and looked, to quote the words of a celebrated bard,

  ‘Beautiful exceedingly.’

The dresses of the bridesmaids were beyond praise, and elicited murmurs
of admiration. The service was read impressively by the rector,
assisted by the Reverend John Cattle, M.A.: Mr. Abrahams presided at
the organ. The bridal party left the church and were driven to Grove
End, where a recherché breakfast awaited the happy guests. The usual
toasts were eloquently proposed and eloquently responded to. We must
not forget to say that the breakfast involved a double celebration;
the other happy pair being Theodore Curling, Esq., of London, and
Constance, the only child of Thomas Hargrave, Esq. Much amusement was
created by the very droll speech delivered by Mr. Richard Hargrave in
proposing the health of Mr. and Mrs. Curling; and hearty and cordial
was the applause that greeted the few but graceful words with which Mr.
Curling acknowledged the honour that was done him and his fair bride.

“Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hargrave left Grove End for the railway station
at Updown at one o’clock, en route for the south of France, where we
believe it is their intention to pass the honeymoon. Our best wishes
follow them into their blissful though temporary retirement; nor can we
close this inadequate notice of the auspicious event, without tendering
our respectful congratulations to the parents of the young people whom
the marriage cements with new and indissoluble domestic ties.”

Here I lay down my pen, having brought as much of the story of my life
as I meant to relate, to an end.

Though I want you to accept the book as a work of fiction, who knows
whether there may not be a great deal of truth in it? But whether there
is or not, one thing is certain--there is no moral in the story: and
if this is not a literary excellence of a very high order, perhaps
somebody will tell me what is.

A little more, perhaps, might be said about Curling and his wife, if I
were not sure that you had long ago settled in your mind that Curling
would one day become good friends with his mother-in-law. If I add
that at this time of writing, he has been a partner for seven years in
the banking firm of Hargrave and Co., the sequel of _his_ matrimonial
adventure will be as fully related as if a volume were devoted to that
purpose.


THE END.


CHARLES DICKENS AND EVANS, CRYSTAL PALACE PRESS.




TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:


  Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.

  Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.

  Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.

  Archaic or alternate spelling has been retained from the original.