Part Three
Chapter XXIV. The Valley of the Shadow of Death
The future sometimes seems to sob a low warning of the events it is bringing
us, like some gathering though yet remote storm, which, in tones of the wind, in
flushings of the firmament, in clouds strangely torn, announces a blast strong
to strew the sea with wrecks; or commissioned to bring in fog the yellow taint
of pestilence, covering white Western isles with the poisoned exhalations of the
East, dimming the lattices of English homes with the breath of Indian plague.
At other times this Future bursts suddenly, as if a rock had rent, and in it a
grave had opened, whence issues the body of one that slept. Ere you are aware
you stand face to face with a shrouded and unthought-of Calamity - a new
Lazarus.
Caroline Helstone went home from Hollow's Cottage in good health, as she
imagined. On waking the next morning she felt oppressed with unwonted languor:
at breakfast, at each meal of the following day, she missed all sense of
appetite: palatable food was as ashes and sawdust to her.
'Am I ill?' she asked, and looked at herself in the glass. Her eyes were
bright, their pupils dilated, her cheeks seemed rosier and fuller than usual. 'I
look well; why can I not eat?'
She felt a pulse beat fast in her temples: she felt, too, her brain in
strange activity: her spirits were raised; hundreds of busy and broken, but
brilliant thoughts engaged her mind: a glow rested on them, such as tinged her
complexion.
Now followed a hot, parched, thirsty, restless night. Towards morning one
terrible dream seized her like a tiger: when she woke, she felt and knew she was
ill.
How she had caught the fever (fever it was), she could not tell. Probably in
her late walk home, some sweet, poisoned breeze, redolent of honey-dew and
miasma, had passed into her lungs and veins, and finding there already a fever
of mental excitement, and a languor of long conflict and habitual sadness, had
fanned the spark of flame, and left a well-lit fire behind it.
It seemed, however, but a gentle fire: after two hot days and worried nights,
there was no violence in the symptoms, and neither her uncle, nor Fanny, nor the
doctor, nor Miss Keeldar, when she called, had any fear for her: a few days
would restore her, every one believed.
The few days passed, and - though it was still thought it could not long
delay - the revival had not begun. Mrs. Pryor, who had visited her daily - being
present in her chamber one morning when she had been ill a fortnight - watched
her very narrowly for some minutes: she took her hand, and placed her finger on
her wrist; then, quietly leaving the chamber, she went to Mr. Helstone's study.
With him she remained closeted a long time - half the morning. On returning to
her sick young friend, she laid aside shawl and bonnet: she stood a while at the
bedside, one hand placed in the other, gently rocking herself to and fro, in an
attitude and with a movement habitual to her. At last she said - 'I have sent
Fanny to Fieldhead to fetch a few things for me, such as I shall want during a
short stay here: it is my wish to remain with you till you are better. Your
uncle kindly permits my attendance: will it to yourself be acceptable,
Caroline?'
'I am sorry you should take such needless trouble. I do not feel very ill,
but I cannot refuse resolutely: it will be such comfort to know you are in the
house, to see you sometimes in the room; but don't confine yourself on my
account, dear Mrs. Pryor. Fanny nurses me very well.'
Mrs. Pryor - bending over the pale little sufferer - was now smoothing the
hair under her cap, and gently raising her pillow. As she performed these
offices, Caroline, smiling, lifted her face to kiss her.
'Are you free from pain? Are you tolerably at ease?' was inquired in a low,
earnest voice, as the self-elected nurse yielded to the caress.
'But soon your appetite will return: it must return: that is, I pray God it
may!'
In laying her again on the couch, she encircled her in her arms; and while so
doing, by a movement which seemed scarcely voluntary, she drew her to her heart,
and held her close gathered an instant.
'I shall hardly wish to get well, that I may keep you always,' said
Caroline.
Mrs. Pryor did not smile at this speech: over her features ran a tremor,
which for some minutes she was absorbed in repressing.
'You are more used to Fanny than to me,' she remarked, ere long. 'I should
think my attendance must seem strange, officious?'
'No: quite natural, and very soothing. You must have been accustomed to wait
on sick people, ma'am. You move about the room so softly, and you speak so
quietly, and touch me so gently.'
'I am dexterous in nothing, my dear. You will often find me awkward, but
never negligent.'
Negligent, indeed, she was not. From that hour, Fanny and Eliza became
ciphers in the sick room: Mrs. Pryor made it her domain: she performed all its
duties; she lived in it day and night. The patient remonstrated - faintly,
however, from the first, and not at all ere long: loneliness and gloom were now
banished from her bedside; protection and solace sat there instead. She and her
nurse coalesced in wondrous union. Caroline was usually pained to require or
receive much attendance: Mrs. Pryor, under ordinary circumstances, had neither
the habit nor the art of performing little offices of service; but all now
passed with such ease - so naturally, that the patient was as willing to be
cherished as the nurse was bent on cherishing; no sign of weariness in the
latter ever reminded the former that she ought to be anxious. There was, in
fact, no very hard duty to perform; but a hireling might have found it hard.
With all this care, it seemed strange the sick girl did not get well; yet
such was the case: she wasted like any snow-wreath in thaw; she faded like any
flower in drought. Miss Keeldar, on whose thoughts danger or death seldom
intruded, had at first entertained no fears at all for her friend; but seeing
her change and sink from time to time when she paid her visits, alarm clutched
her heart. She went to Mr. Helstone and expressed herself with so much energy
that that gentleman was at last obliged, however unwillingly, to admit the idea
that his niece was ill of something more than a migraine; and when Mrs. Pryor
came and quietly demanded a physician, he said she might send for two if she
liked. One came, but that one was an oracle: he delivered a dark saying of which
the future. was to solve the mystery, wrote some prescriptions, gave some
directions - the whole with an air of crushing authority - pocketed his fee, and
went. Probably, he knew well enough he could do no good; but didn't like to say
so.
Still, no rumour of serious illness got wind in the neighbourhood. At
Hollow's Cottage it was thought that Caroline had only a severe cold, she having
written a note to Hortense to that effect; and Mademoiselle contented herself
with sending two pots of currant jam, a receipt for a tisane, and a note of
advice.
Mrs. Yorke being told that a physician had been summoned', sneered at the
hypochondriac fancies of the rich and idle, who, she said, having nothing but
themselves to think about, must needs send for a doctor if only so much as their
little finger ached.
The 'rich and idle,' represented in the person of Caroline, were meantime
falling fast into a condition of prostration, whose quickly consummated debility
puzzled all who witnessed it, except one; for that one alone reflected how
liable is the undermined structure to sink in sudden ruin.
Sick people often have fancies inscrutable to ordinary attendants, and
Caroline had one which even her tender nurse could not at first explain. On a
certain day in the week, at a certain hour, she would - whether worse or better
- entreat to be taken up and dressed, and suffered to sit in her chair near the
window. This station she would retain till noon was past: whatever degree of
exhaustion or debility her wan aspect betrayed, she still softly put off all
persuasion to seek repose until the church-clock had duly tolled mid-day: the
twelve strokes sounded, she grew docile, and would meekly lie down. Returned to
the couch, she usually buried her face deep in the pillow, and drew the
coverlets close round her, as if to shut out the world and sun, of which she was
tired: more than once, as she thus lay, a slight convulsion shook the sick-bed,
and a faint sob broke the silence round it. These things were not unnoted by
Mrs. Pryor.
One Tuesday morning, as usual, she had asked leave to rise, and now she sat
wrapped in her white dressing-gown, leaning forward in the easy-chair, gazing
steadily and patiently from the lattice. Mrs. Pryor was seated a little behind,
knitting as it seemed, but, in truth, watching her. A change crossed her pale
mournful brow, animating its languor; a light shot into her faded eyes, reviving
their lustre; she half rose and looked earnestly out. Mrs. Pryor, drawing softly
near, glanced over her shoulder. From this window was visible the churchyard,
beyond it the road, and there, riding sharply by, appeared a horseman. The
figure was not yet too remote for recognition; Mrs. Pryor had long sight; she
knew Mr. Moore. Just as an intercepting rising ground concealed him from view,
the clock struck twelve.
Her nurse assisted her to bed: having laid her down and drawn the curtain,
she stood listening near. The little couch trembled, the suppressed sob stirred
the air. A contraction as of anguish altered Mrs. Pryor's features; she wrung
her hands; half a groan escaped her lips. She now remembered that Tuesday was
Whinbury market-day: Mr. Moore must always pass the Rectory on his way thither,
just ere noon of that day.
Caroline wore continually round her neck a slender braid of silk, attached to
which was some trinket. Mrs. Pryor had seen the bit of gold glisten; but had not
yet obtained a fair view of
it. Her patient never parted with it: when dressed it was hidden in her bosom;
as she lay in bed she always held it in her hand. That Tuesday afternoon the
transient doze - more like lethargy than sleep - which sometimes abridged the
long days, had stolen over her: the weather was hot: while turning in febrile
restlessness, she had pushed the coverlets a little aside; Mrs. Pryor bent to
replace them; the small, wasted hand, lying nerveless on the sick girl's breast,
clasped as usual her jealously-guarded treasure: those fingers whose attenuation
it gave pain to see, were now relaxed in sleep: Mrs. Pryor gently disengaged the
braid, drawing out a tiny locket - a slight thing it was, such as it suited her
small purse to purchase:
under its crystal face appeared a curl of black hair - too short and crisp to
have been severed from a female head.
Some agitated movement occasioned a twitch of the silken chain: the sleeper
started and woke. Her thoughts were usually now somewhat scattered on waking;
her look generally wandering. Half-rising, as if in terror, she exclaimed -
'Don't take it from me, Robert! Don't! It is my last comfort - let me keep it. I
never tell any one whose hair it is - I never show it.'
Mrs. Pryor had already disappeared behind the curtain: reclining far back in
a deep arm-chair by the bedside, she was withdrawn from view. Caroline looked
abroad into the chamber: she thought it empty. As her stray ideas returned
slowly, each folding its weak wings on the mind's sad shore, like birds
exhausted, - beholding void, and perceiving silence round her, she believed
herself alone. Collected, she was not yet: perhaps healthy self-possession and
self-control were to be hers no more; perhaps that world the strong and
prosperous live in had already rolled from beneath her feet for ever: so, at
least, it often seemed to herself. In health, she had never been accustomed to
think aloud; but now words escaped her lips unawares.
'Oh! I should see him once more before all is over! Heaven might favour me
thus far?' she cried. 'God grant me a little comfort before I die!' was her
humble petition.
'But he will not know I am ill till I am gone; and he will come when they
have laid me out, and I am senseless, cold, and stiff.
'What can my departed soul feel then? Can it see or know what happens to the
clay? Can spirits, through any medium, communicate with living flesh? Can the
dead at all revisit those they leave? Can they come in the elements? Will
wind, water, fire, lend me a path to Moore?
'Is it for nothing the wind sounds almost articulately sometimes - sings as I
have lately heard it sing at night - or passes the casement sobbing, as if for
sorrow to come? Does nothing, then, haunt it - nothing inspire it?
'Why, it suggested to me words one night: it poured a strain which I could
have written down, only I was appalled, and dared not rise to seek pencil and
paper by the dim watch-light.
'What is that electricity they speak of, whose changes make us well or ill;
whose lack or excess blasts; whose even balance revives? What are all those
influences that are about us in the atmosphere, that keep playing over our
nerves like fingers on stringed instruments, and call forth now a sweet note,
and now a wail-now an exultant swell, and, anon, the saddest cadence?
'Where is the other world? In what will another life consist? Who do I ask?
Have I not cause to think that the hour is hasting but too fast when the veil
must be rent for me? Do I not know the Grand Mystery is likely to burst
prematurely on me? Great Spirit! in whose goodness I confide; whom, as my
Father, I have petitioned night and morning from early infancy, help the weak
creation of Thy hands! Sustain me through the ordeal I dread and must undergo!
Give me strength! Give me patience! Give me - oh! give me faith!'
She fell back on her pillow. Mrs. Pryor found means to steal quietly from
the room: she re-entered it soon after, apparently as composed as if she had
really not overheard this strange soliloquy.
The next day several callers came. It had become known that Miss Helstone was
worse. Mr. Hall and his sister Margaret arrived: both, after they had been in
the sick-room, quitted it in tears; they had found the patient more altered than
they expected. Hortense Moore came. Caroline seemed stimulated by her presence:
she assured her, smiling, she was not dangerously ill; she talked to her in a
low voice, but cheerfully: during her stay, excitement kept up the flush of her
complexion:
she looked better.
'How is Mr. Robert?' asked Mrs. Pryor, as Hortense was preparing to take
leave.
It was then explained that some police intelligence about the rioters of whom
he was in pursuit, had, that morning, called him away to Birmingham, and
probably a fortnight might elapse ere he returned.
'Oh! no. He thought, like me, that she had only a bad cold.' After this
visit, Mrs. Pryor took care not to approach Caroline's couch for above an hour:
she heard her weep, and dared not look on her tears.
As evening closed in, she brought her some tea. Caroline, opening her eyes
from a moment's slumber, viewed her nurse with an unrecognising glance.
'I smelt the honey-suckles in the glen this summer morning,' she said, 'as I
stood at the counting-house window.'
Strange words like these from pallid lips pierce a loving listener's heart
more poignantly than steel. They sound romantic, perhaps, in books: in real
life, they are harrowing.
'I went in to call Robert to breakfast: I have been with him in the garden:
he asked me to go: a heavy dew has refreshed the flowers: the peaches are
ripening.'
'My darling! my darling!' again and again repeated the nurse.
'I thought it was daylight - long after sunrise: it looks dark - is the moon
now set?'
That moon, lately risen, was gazing full and mild upon her: floating in deep
blue space, it watched her unclouded.
'Then it is not morning? I am not at the cottage? Who is this? - I see a
shape at my bedside.'
'It is myself - it is your friend - your nurse - your ---- Lean your head on
my shoulder collect yourself.' (In a lower tone.) 'Oh God, take pity! Give her
life, and me strength! Send me courage - teach me words!'
Some minutes passed in silence. The patient lay mute and passive in the
trembling arms - on the throbbing bosom of the nurse.
'I am better now,' whispered Caroline at last, 'much better - I feel where I
am: this is Mrs. Pryor near me: I was dreaming - I talk when I wake up from
dreams: people often do in illness. How fast your heart beats, ma'am! Do not be
afraid.'
'It is not fear, child; only a little anxiety, which will pass. I have
brought you some tea, Cary; your uncle made it himself. You know he says he can
make a better cup of tea than any housewife can. Taste it. He is concerned to
hear that you eat so little: he would be glad if you had a better appetite.'
'Thank Heaven! I am not always equally miserable, and ill, and hopeless. The
afternoon has been bad since Hortense went: perhaps the evening may be better.
It is a fine night, I think? The moon shines clear.'
'Very fine: a perfect summer night. The old church-tower gleams white almost
as silver.'
'Yes, and the garden also: dew glistens on the foliage.'
'Can you see many long weeds and nettles amongst the graves; or do they look
turfy and flowery?'
'I see closed daisy-heads, gleaming like pearls on some mounds. Thomas has
mown down the dock-leaves and rank grass, and cleared all away.'
'I always like that to be done: it soothes one's mind to see the place in
order: and, I dare say, within the church just now that moonlight shines as
softly as in my room. It will fall through the east window full on the Helstone
monument. When I close my eyes I seem to see poor papa's epitaph in black
letters on white marble. There is plenty of room for other inscriptions
underneath.'
'William Farren came to look after your flowers this morning: he was afraid,
now you cannot tend them yourself, they would be neglected. He has taken two of
your favourite plants home to nurse for you.'
'If I were to make a will, I would leave William all my plants; Shirley my
trinkets - except one, which must not be taken off my neck: and you, ma'am, my
books.' (After a pause.) 'Mrs. Pryor, I feel a longing wish for something.'
No wonder Caroline liked to hear her sing: her voice, even in speaking, was
sweet and silver clear; in song it was almost divine: neither flute nor dulcimer
has tones so pure. But the tone was secondary compared to the expression which
trembled through: a tender vibration from a feeling heart.
The servants in the kitchen, hearing the strain, stole to the stair-foot to
listen: even old Helstone, as he walked in the garden, pondering over the
unaccountable and feeble nature of women, stood still amongst his borders to
catch the mournful melody more distinctly. Why it reminded him of his forgotten
dead wife, he could not tell; nor why it made him more concerned than he had
hitherto been for Caroline's fading girlhood. He was glad to recollect that he
had promised to pay Wynne, the magistrate, a visit that evening. Low spirits
and gloomy thoughts were very much his aversions: when they attacked him he
usually found means to make them march in double-quick time. The hymn followed
him faintly as he crossed the fields: he hastened his customary sharp pace, that
he might get beyond its reach.
Thy word commands our flesh to dust, --
'Return, ye sons of men';
All nations rose from earth at first
And turn to earth again.
A thousand ages in Thy sight
Are like an evening gone
Short as the watch that ends' the night
Before the rising sun.
Time, like an ever-rolling stream,
Bears all its sons away;
They fly, forgotten, as a dream
Dies at the opening day.
Like flowery fields, the nations stand,
Fresh in the morning light
The flowers beneath the mower's hand
Lie withering ere 'tis night.
Our God, our help in ages past, --
Our hope for years to come;
Be Thou our guard while troubles last,
O Father, be our home!
'Now sing a song - a Scottish song,' suggested Caroline when the hymn was
over, - 'Ye banks and braes o' bonny Doon.'
Again Mrs. Pryor obeyed, or essayed to obey. At the close of the first stanza
she stopped: she could get no further: her full heart flowed over.
'You are weeping at the pathos of the air: come here and I will comfort you,'
said Caroline, in a pitying accent. Mrs. Pryor came: she sat down on the edge of
her patient's bed, and allowed the wasted arms to encircle her.
'You often soothe me, let me soothe you,' murmured the young girl, kissing
her cheek. 'I hope,' she added, 'it is not for me you weep?'
'Very much, - very truly, - inexpressibly sometimes: just now I feel as if I
could almost grow to your heart.'
'I will return directly, dear,' remarked Mrs. Pryor, as she laid Caroline
down.
Quitting her, she glided to the door, softly turned the key in the lock,
ascertained that it was fast, and came back. She bent over her. She threw back
the curtain to admit the moonlight more freely. She gazed intently on her
face.
'Then, if you love me,' said she, speaking quickly, with an altered voice:
'if you feel as if - to use your own words - you could 'grow to my heart,' it
will be neither shock nor pain for you to know that that heart is the source
whence yours was filled: that from my veins issued the tide which flows in
yours; that you are mine - my daughter - my own child.'
'It means that, if I have given you nothing else, I at least gave you life;
that I bore you - nursed you; that I am your true mother; no other woman can
claim the title - it is mine.'
'But Mrs. James Helston - but my father's wife, whom I do not remember ever
to have seen, she is my mother?'
'She is your mother: James Helstone was my husband. I say you are mine. I
have proved it. I thought perhaps you were all his, which would have been a
cruel dispensation for me: I find it is not so. God permitted me to be the
parent of my child's mind; it belongs to me: it is my property - my right. These
features are James's own. He had a fine face when he was young, and not altered
by error. Papa, my darling, gave you your blue eyes and soft brown hair: he gave
you the oval of your face and the regularity of your lineaments; the outside he
conferred; but the heart and the brain are mine: the germs are from me, and they
are improved, they are developed to excellence. I esteem and approve my child as
highly as I do most fondly love her.'
'I wish it were as true that the substance and colour of health were restored
to your cheek.'
'My own mother! is she one I can be so fond of as I can of you? People
generally did not like her, so I have been given to understand.'
'They told you that? Well, your mother now tells you, that, not having the
gift to please people generally, for their approbation she does not care: her
thoughts are centred in her child: does that child welcome or reject her?'
'But if you are my mother, the world is all changed to me. Surely I can live
- I should like to recover ----'
'You must recover. You drew life and strength from my breast when you were a
tiny, fair infant, over whose blue eyes I used to weep, fearing I beheld in your
very beauty the sign of qualities that had entered my heart like iron, and
pierced through my soul like a sword. Daughter! we have been long parted: I
return now to cherish you again.'
She held her to her bosom: she cradled her in her arms: she rocked her
softly, as if lulling a young child to sleep.
The offspring nestled to the parent; that parent, feeling the endearment and
hearing the appeal, gathered her closer still. She covered her with noiseless
kisses: she murmured love over her, like a cushat fostering its young.
'Your uncle knows: I told him when I first came to stay with you here.'
'Did you recognise me when we first met at Fieldhead?'
'How could it be otherwise? Mr. and Miss Helstone being announced, I was
prepared to see my child.'
'It was that then which moved you: I saw you disturbed.'
'You saw nothing, Caroline, I can cover my feelings. You can never tell what
an age of strange sensation I lived, during the two minutes that elapsed between
the report of your name and your entrance. You can never tell how your look,
mien, carriage, shook me.'
'I had reason to dread a fair outside, to mistrust a popular bearing, to
shudder before distinction, grace, and courtesy. Beauty and affability had come
in my way when I was recluse, desolate, young, and ignorant: a toil-worn
governess perishing of uncheered labour, breaking down before her time. These,
Caroline, when they smiled on me, I mistook for angels! I followed them home,
and when into their hands I had given without reserve my whole chance of future
happiness, it was my lot to witness a transfiguration on the domestic hearth: to
see the white mask lifted, the bright disguise put away, and opposite me sat
down - O God! I have suffered!'
'It is over, and not fruitlessly. I tried to keep the word of His patience:
He kept me in the days of my anguish. I was afraid with terror - I was
troubled: through great tribulation He brought me through to a salvation
revealed in this last time. My fear had torment - He has cast it out: He has
given me in its stead perfect love. . . . But, Caroline ----'
'I charge you, when you next look on your father's monument, to respect the
name chiselled there. To you he did only good. On you he conferred his whole
treasure of beauties; nor added to them one dark defect. All you derived from
him is excellent. You owe him gratitude. Leave, between him and me, the
settlement of our mutual account: meddle not: God is the arbiter. This world's
laws never came near us - never! They were powerless as a rotten bulrush to
protect me! - impotent as idiot babblings to restrain him! As you said, it is
all over now: the grave lies between us. There he sleeps - in that church! To
his dust I say this night, what I have never said before, 'James, slumber
peacefully! See! your terrible debt is cancelled! Look! I wipe out the long,
black account with my own hand! James, your child atones: this living likeness
of you - this thing with your perfect features - this one good gift you gave me
has nestled affectionately to my heart, and tenderly called me 'mother.'
Husband! rest forgiven!'
'Dearest mother, that is right! Can papa's spirit hear us? Is he comforted
to know that we still love him?'
'I said nothing of love: I spoke of forgiveness. Mind the truth, child - I
said nothing of love! On the threshold of eternity, should he be there to see me
enter, will I maintain that.'
'Oh, child! the human heart can suffer. It can hold more tears than the
ocean holds waters. We never know how deep - how wide it is, till misery begins
to unbind her clouds, and fill it with rushing blackness.'
'Forget!' she said, with the strangest spectre of a laugh. 'The north pole
will rush to the south, and the headlands of Europe be locked into the bays of
Australia ere I forget.'
And the child lulled the parent, as the parent had erst lulled the child. At
last Mrs. Pryor wept: she then grew calmer. She resumed those tender cares
agitation had for a moment suspended. Replacing her daughter on the couch, she
smoothed the pillow, and spread the sheet. The soft hair whose locks were
loosened, she rearranged, the damp brow she refreshed with a cool, fragrant
essence.
'Mamma, let them bring a candle, that I may see you; and tell my uncle to
come into this room by-and-by: I want to hear him say that I am your daughter:
and, mamma, take your supper here; don't leave me for one minute to-night.'
'Oh, Caroline! it is well you are gentle. You will say to me go, and I shall
go; come, and I shall come; do this, and I shall do it. You inherit a certain
manner as well as certain features. It will be always 'mamma' prefacing a
mandate: softly spoken though from you, thank God! Well'(she added, under her
breath), 'he spoke softly too, once, - like a flute breathing tenderness; and
then, when the world was not by to listen, discords that split the nerves and
curdled the blood - sounds to inspire insanity.'
'It seems so natural, mamma, to ask you for this and that. I shall want
nobody but you to be near me, or to do anything for me; but do not let me be
troublesome: check me, if I encroach.'
'You must not depend on me to check you: you must keep guard over yourself. I
have little moral courage: the want of it is my bane. It is that which has made
me an unnatural parent - which has kept me apart from my child during the ten
years which have elapsed since my husband's death left me at liberty to claim
her: it was that which first unnerved my arms and permitted the infant I might
have retained a while longer to be snatched prematurely from their embrace.'
'I let you go as a babe, because you were pretty, and I feared your
loveliness; deeming it the stamp of perversity. They sent me your portrait,
taken at eight years old; that portrait confirmed my fears. Had it shown me a
sunburnt little rustic - a heavy, blunt-featured, commonplace child - I should
have hastened to claim you; but there, under the silver paper, I saw blooming
the delicacy of an aristocratic flower - 'little lady' was written on every
trait. I had too recently crawled from under the yoke of the fine gentleman -
escaped, galled, crushed, paralysed, dying - to dare to encounter his still
finer and most fairy-like representative. My sweet little lady overwhelmed me
with dismay: her air of native elegance froze my very marrow. In my experience I
had not met with truth, modesty, good principle as the concomitants of beauty. A
form so straight and fine, I argued, must conceal a mind warped and cruel. I had
little faith in the power of education to rectify such a mind; or rather, I
entirely misdoubted my own ability to influence it. Caroline, I dared not
undertake to rear you: I resolved to leave you in your uncle's hands. Matthewson
Helstone I knew, if an austere, was an upright man. He and all the world thought
hardly of me for my strange, unmotherly resolve, and I deserved to be
misjudged.'
'It was a name in my mother's family. I adopted it that I might live
unmolested. My married name recalled too vividly my married life: I could not
bear it. Besides, threats were uttered of forcing me to return to bondage: it
could not be; rather a bier for a bed - the grave for a home. My new name
sheltered me: I resumed under its screen my old occupation of teaching. At
first, it scarcely procured me the means of sustaining life; but how savoury was
hunger when I fasted in peace! How safe seemed the darkness and chill of an
unkindled hearth, when no lurid reflection from terror crimsoned its desolation!
How serene was solitude, when I feared not the irruption of violence and
vice.'
'But, mamma, you have been in this neighbourhood before. How did it happen,
that when you re-appeared here with Miss Keeldar, you were not recognised?'
'I only paid a short visit, as a bride, twenty years ago; and then I was very
different to what I am now - slender, almost as slender as my daughter is at
this day: my complexion - my very features are changed; my hair, my style of
dress - everything is altered. You cannot fancy me a slim young person, attired
in scanty drapery of white muslin, with bare arms, bracelets and necklace of
beads, and hair disposed in round Grecian curls above my forehead?'
'You must, indeed, have been different. Mamma, I heard the front door open:
if it is my uncle coming in, just ask him to step upstairs, and let me hear his
assurance that I am truly awake and collected, and not dreaming or
delirious.'
The Rector, of his own accord, was mounting the stairs; and Mrs. Pryor
summoned him to his niece's apartment.
'I think her better; she is disposed to converse - she seems stronger,'
'Good!' said he, brushing quickly into the room. 'Ha, Cary! how do? Did you
drink my cup of tea? I made it for you just as I like it myself.'
'I drank it every drop, uncle: it did me good - it has made me quite alive. I
have a wish for company, so I begged Mrs. Pryor to call you in.'
The respected ecclesiastic looked pleased, and yet embarrassed. He was
willing enough to bestow his company on his sick niece for ten minutes, since it
was her whim to wish it; but what means to employ for her entertainment, he knew
not: he hemmed - he fidgeted.
'You'll be up in a trice,' he observed, by way of saying something. 'The
little weakness will soon pass off; and then you must drink port-wine - a pipe,
if you can - and eat game and oysters: I'll get them for you, if they are to be
had anywhere. Bless me! we'll make you as strong as Samson before we've done
with you.'
'Who is that lady, uncle, standing beside you at the bed-foot?'
'Good God!' he ejaculated. 'She's not wandering - is she, ma'am?'
'I am wandering in a pleasant world,' said Caroline, in a soft, happy voice,
'and I want you to tell me whether it is real or visionary. What lady is that?
Give her a name, uncle?'
'We must have Dr. Rile again, ma'am, or better still, MacTurk: he's less of a
humbug. Thomas must saddle the pony, and go for him.'
'No: I don't want a doctor; mamma shall be my only physician. Now, do you
understand, uncle?'
Mr. Helstone pushed up his spectacles from his nose to his forehead, handled
his snuff-box, and administered to himself a portion of the contents. Thus
fortified, he answered briefly - 'I see daylight. You've told her then,
ma'am?'
'And is it true?' demanded Caroline, rising on her pillow. 'Is she really my
mother?'
'You won't cry, or make any scene, or turn hysterical, if I answer Yes?'
'Cry? I'd cry if you said No. It would be terrible to be disappointed now.
But give her a name: how do you call her?'
'I call this stout lady in a quaint black dress, who looks young enough to
wear much smarter raiment, if she would - I call her Agnes Helstone: she married
my brother James, and is his widow.'
'What a little sceptic it is! Look at her small face, Mrs. Pryor, scarcely
larger than the palm of my hand, alive with acuteness and eagerness.' (To
Caroline.) 'She had the trouble of bringing you into the world at any rate: mind
you show your duty to her by quickly getting well, and repairing the waste of
these cheeks. Heigho! she used to be plump: what she has done with it all, I
can't, for the life of me, divine.'
'If wishing to get well will help me, I shall not be long sick, This morning,
I had no reason and no strength to wish it.'
Fanny here tapped at the door, and said that supper was ready.
'Uncle, if you please, you may send me a little bit of supper - anything you
like, from your own plate. That is wiser than going into hysterics, - is it
not?'
'It is spoken like a sage, Cary: see if I don't cater for you judiciously.
When women are sensible - and, above all, intelligible - I can get on with them.
It is only the vague, superfine sensations, and extremely wire-drawn notions,
that put me about. Let a woman ask me to give her an edible or a wearable - be
the same a roc's egg or the breastplate of Aaron, a share of St. John's locusts
and honey or the leathern girdle about his loins - I can, at least, understand
the demand: but when they pine for they know not what - sympathy - sentiment -
some of these indefinite abstractions - I can't do it: I don't know it; I
haven't got it. Madam, accept my arm.'
Mrs. Pryor signified that she should stay with her daughter that evening.
Helstone, accordingly, left them together. He soon returned, bringing a plate in
his own consecrated hand.
'This is chicken,' he said; 'but we'll have partridge tomorrow. Lift her up,
and put a shawl over her. On my word, I understand nursing. Now, here is the
very same little silver fork you used when you first came to the Rectory: that
strikes me as being what you may call a happy thought - a delicate attention.
Take it, Cary, and munch away cleverly.'
Caroline did her best. Her uncle frowned to see that her powers were so
limited: he prophesied, however, great things for the future; and as she praised
the morsel he had brought, and smiled gratefully in his face, he stooped over
her pillow, kissed her, and said, with a broken, rugged accent - 'Good night,
bairnie! God bless thee!'
Caroline enjoyed such peaceful rest that night, circled by her mother's arms,
and pillowed on her breast, that she forgot to wish for any other stay; and
though more than one feverish dream came to her in slumber, yet, when she woke
up panting, so happy and contented a feeling returned with returning
consciousness, that her agitation was soothed almost as soon as felt.
As to the mother, she spent the night like Jacob at Peniel. Till break of
day, she wrestled with God in earnest prayer.