The Rivals
Lady Ongar sat alone, long into the
night, when Harry Clavering had left her. She
sat there long, getting up occasionally from her seat,
once or twice attempting to write at her desk, looking
now and then at a paper or two, and then at a small
picture which she had, but passing the long hours
in thinking in long, sad, solitary thoughts.
What should she do with herself with herself,
her title, and her money? Would it be still well
that she should do something, that she should make
some attempt; or should she, in truth, abandon all,
as the arch-traitor did, and acknowledge that for
her foot there could no longer be a resting-place
on the earth? At six-and-twenty, with youth, beauty
and wealth at her command, must she despair?
But her youth had been stained, her beauty had lost
its freshness, and as for her wealth, had she not stolen
it? Did not the weight of the theft sit so heavy
on her, that her brightest thought was one which prompted
her to abandon it?
As to that idea of giving up her income
and her house, and calling herself again Julia Brabazon,
though there was something in the poetry of it which
would now and again for half an hour relieve her, yet
she hardly proposed such a course to herself as a
reality. The world in which she had lived had
taught her to laugh at romance, to laugh at it even
while she liked its beauty; and she would tell herself
that for such a one as her to do such a thing as this,
would be to insure for herself the ridicule of all
who knew her name. What would Sir Hugh say, and
her sister? What Count Pateroff and the faithful
Sophie? What all the Ongar tribe, who would reap
the rich harvest of her insanity? These latter
would offer to provide her a place in some convenient
asylum, and the others would all agree that such would
be her fitting destiny. She could bear the idea
of walking forth, as she had said, penniless into
the street, without a crust; but she could not bear
the idea of being laughed at when she got there.
To her, in her position, her only
escape was by marriage. It was the solitude of
her position which maddened her: its solitude,
or the necessity of breaking that solitude by the
presence of those who were odious to her. Whether
it were better to be alone, feeding on the bitterness
of her own thoughts, or to be comforted by the fulsome
flatteries and odious falsenesses of Sophie Gordeloup,
she could not tell. She hated herself for her
loneliness, but she hated herself almost worse for
submitting herself to the society of Sophie Gordeloup.
Why not give all that she possessed to Harry Clavering herself,
her income, her rich pastures and horses and oxen,
and try whether the world would not be better to her
when she had done so.
She had learned to laugh at romance,
but still she believed in love. While that bargain
was going on as to her settlement, she had laughed
at romance, and had told herself that in this world
worldly prosperity was everything. Sir Hugh then
had stood by her with truth, for he had well understood
the matter, and could enter into it with zest.
Lord Ongar, in his state of health, had not been in
a position to make close stipulations as to the dower
in the event of his proposed wife becoming a widow.
“No, no; we wont stand that,” Sir Hugh
had said to the lawyers. “We all hope,
of course, that Lord Ongar may live long; no doubt
he’ll turn over a new leaf and die at ninety.
But in such a case as this the widow must not be fettered.”
The widow had not been fettered, and Julia had been
made to understand the full advantage of such an arrangement.
But still she had believed in love when she had bade
farewell to Harry in the garden. She had told
herself then, even then, that she would have better
liked to have taken him and his love if
only she could have afforded it. He had not dreamed
that in leaving him she had gone from him to her room,
and taken out his picture the same that
she had with her now in Bolton Street and
had kissed it, bidding him farewell there with a passion
which she could not display in his presence. And
she had thought of his offer about the money over
and over again. “Yes,” she would
say, “that man loved me. He would have given
me all he had to relieve me, though nothing was to
come to him in return.” She had, at any
rate been loved once; and she almost wished that she
had taken the money, that she might now have an opportunity
of repaying it.
And she was again free, and her old
lover was again by her side. Had that fatal episode
in her life been so fatal that she must now regard
herself as tainted and unfit for him? There was
no longer anything to separate them anything
of which she was aware, unless it was that. And
as for his love did he not look and speak
as though he loved her still? Had he not pressed
her hand passionately, and kissed it, and once more
called her Julia? How should it be that he should
not love her? In such a case as his, love might
have been turned to hatred or to enmity; but it was
not so with him. He called himself her friend.
How could there be friendship between them without
love?
And then she thought how much with
her wealth she might do for him. With all his
early studies and his talent, Harry Clavering was not
the man, she thought, to make his way in the world
by hard work; but with such an income as she could
give him, he might shine among the proud ones of his
nation. He should go into Parliament, and do great
things. He should be lord of all. It should
all be his without a word of reserve. She had
been mercenary once, but she would atone for that now
by open-handed, undoubting generosity. She herself
had learned to hate the house and fields and widespread
comforts of Ongar Park. She had walked among it
all alone, and despised. But it would be a glory
to her to see him go forth, with Giles at his heels,
boldly giving his orders, changing this and improving
that. He would be rebuked for no errors, let him
do with Enoch Gubby and the rest of them what he pleased!
And then the parson’s wife would be glad enough
to come to her, and the house would be full of smiling
faces. And it might be that God would be good
to her, and that she would have treasures, as other
women had them, and that the flavor would come back
to the apples, and, that the ashes would cease to grate
between her teeth.
She loved him, and why should it not
be so? She could go before God’s altar
with him without disgracing herself with a lie.
She could put her hand in his, and swear honestly
that she would worship him and obey him. She
had been dishonest; but if he would pardon her for
that, could she not reward him richly for such pardon?
And it seemed to her that he had pardoned her.
He had forgiven it all and was gracious to her coming
at her beck and call, and sitting with her as though
he liked her presence. She was woman enough to
understand this, and she knew that he liked it.
Of course he loved her. How could it be otherwise?
But yet he spoke nothing to her of
his love. In the old days there had been with
him no bashfulness of that kind. He was not a
man to tremble and doubt before a woman. In those
old days he had bean ready enough so ready,
that she had wondered that one who had just come from
his books should know so well how to make himself
master of a girl’s heart. Nature had given
him that art, as she does give it to some, withholding
it from many. But now he sat near her, dropping
once and again half words of love, hearing her references
to the old times; and yet he said nothing.
But how was he to speak of love to
one who was a widow but of four months’ standing?
And with what face could he now again ask for her
hand, knowing that it had been filled so full since
last it was refused to him? It was thus she argued
to herself when she excused him in that he did not
speak to her. As to her widowhood, to herself
it was a thing of scorn. Thinking of it, she
cast her weepers from her, and walked about the room,
scorning the hypocrisy of her dress. It needed
that she should submit herself to this hypocrisy before
the world; but he might know for had she
not told him? that the clothes she wore
were no index of her feeling or of her heart.
She had been mean enough, base enough, vile enough,
to sell herself to that wretched lord. Mean, base,
and vile she had been, and she now confessed it; but
she was not false enough to pretend that she mourned
the man as a wife mourns. Harry might have seen
enough to know, have understood enough to perceive,
that he need not regard her widowhood.
And as to her money! if that were
the stumbling-block, might it not be well that the
first overture should come from her? Could she
not find words to tell him that it might all be his?
Could she not say to him, “Harry Clavering,
all this is nothing in my hands. Take it into
your hands, and it will prosper.” Then,
it was that she went to her desk, and attempted to
write to him. She did write to him a completed
note, offering herself and all that was hers for his
acceptance. In doing so, she strove hard to be
honest and yet not over bold; to be affectionate and
yet not unfeminine. Long she sat, holding her
head with one hand, while the other attempted to use
the pen which would not move over the paper.
At length, quickly it flew across the sheet, and a
few lines were there for her to peruse.
“Harry Clavering,” she
had written, “I know I am doing what men and
women say no woman should do. You may, perhaps,
say so of me now; but if you do, I know you so well,
that I do not fear that others will be able to repeat
it. Harry, I have never loved any one but you.
Will you be my husband? You well know that I
should not make you this offer if I did not intend
that everything I have should be yours. It will
be pleasant to me to feel that I can make some reparation
for the evil I have done. As for love, I have
never loved any one but you. You yourself must
know that well. Yours, altogether, if you will
have it so Julia.”
She took the letter with her back
across the room to her seat by the fire, and took
with her at the same time the little portrait; and
there she sat, looking at the one and reading the
other. At last she slowly folded the note up
into a thin wisp of paper, and, lighting the end of
it, watched it till every shred of it was burnt to
an ash. “If he wants me,” she said,
“he can come and take me as other
men do.” It was a fearful attempt, that
which she had thought of making. How could she
have looked him in the face again had his answer to
her been a refusal?
Another hour went by before she took
herself to her bed, during which her cruelly used
maiden was waiting for her half asleep in the chamber
above; and during that time she tried to bring herself
to some steady resolve. She would remain in London
for the coming months, so that he might come to her
if he pleased. She would remain there, even though
she were subject to the daily attacks of Sophie Gordeloup.
She hardly knew why, but in part she was afraid of
Sophie. She had done nothing of which Sophie
knew the secret. She had no cause to tremble because
Sophie might be offended. The woman had seen
her in some of her saddest moments, and could indeed
tell of indignities which would have killed some women.
But these she had borne, and had not disgraced herself
in the bearing of them. But still she was afraid
of Sophie, and felt that she could not bring herself
absolutely to dismiss her friend from her house.
Nevertheless, she would remain; because Harry Clavering
was in London and could come to her there. To
her house at Ongar Park she would never go again,
unless she went as his wife. The place had become
odious to her. Bad as was her solitude in London,
with Sophie Gordeloup to break it, and, perhaps, with
Sophie’s brother to attack her, it was not so
bad as the silent desolation of Ongar Park. Never
again would she go there, unless she went there, in
triumph as Harry’s wife. Having
so far resolved, she took herself at last to her room,
and dismissed her drowsy Phoebe to her rest.
And now the reader must be asked to
travel down at once into the country, that he may
see how Florence Burton passed the same evening at
Clavering Rectory. It was Florence’s last
night there, and on the following morning she was
to return to her father’s house at Stratton.
Florence had not as yet received her unsatisfactory
letter from Harry. That was to arrive on the
following morning. At present she was, as regarded
her letters, under the influence of that one which
had been satisfactory in so especial a degree.
Not that the coming letter the one now
on its route was of a nature to disturb
her comfort permanently, or to make her in any degree
unhappy. “Dear fellow; he must be careful,
he is overworking himself.” Even the unsatisfactory
letter would produce nothing worse than this from
her; but now, at the moment of which I am writing,
she was in a paradise of happy thoughts.
Her visit to Clavering had been in
every respect successful. She had been liked
by every one, and every one in return had been liked
by her. Mrs. Clavering had treated her as though
she were a daughter. The Rector had made her
pretty presents, had kissed her, and called her his
child. With Fanny she had formed a friendship
which was to endure for ever, let destiny separate
them how it might. Dear Fanny! She had had
a wonderful interview respecting Fanny on this very
day, and was at this moment disquieting her mind because
she could not tell her friend what had happened without
a breach of confidence! She had learned a great
deal at Clavering, though in most matters of learning
she was a better instructed woman than they were whom
she had met. In general knowledge and in intellect
she was Fanny’s superior, though Fanny Clavering
was no fool; but Florence, when she came thither,
had lacked something which living in such a house
had given to her; or, I should rather say, something
had been given to her of which she would greatly feel
the want, if it could be again taken from her.
Her mother was as excellent a woman as had ever sent
forth a family of daughters into the world, and I
do not know that any one ever objected to her as being
ignorant, or specially vulgar; but the house in Stratton
was not like Clavering Rectory in the little ways
of living, and this Florence Burton had been clever
enough to understand. She knew that a sojourn
under such a roof; with such a woman as Mrs. Clavering,
must make her fitter to be Harry’s wife; and,
therefore, when they pressed her to come again in the
Autumn, she said that she thought she would.
She could understand, too, that Harry was different
in many things from the men who had married her sisters,
and she rejoiced that it was so. Poor Florence!
Had he been more like them it might have been safer
for her.
But we must return for a moment to
the wonderful interview which has been mentioned.
Florence, during her sojourn at Clavering, had become
intimate with Mr. Saul, as well as with Fanny.
She had given herself for the time heartily to the
schools, and matters had so far progressed with her
that Mr. Saul had on one occasion scolded her soundly.
“It’s a great sign that he thinks well
of you,” Fanny had said. “It was the
only sign he ever gave me, before he spoke to me in
that sad strain.” On the afternoon of this,
her last day at Clavering, she had gone over to Cumberly
Green with Fanny, to say farewell to the children,
and walked back by herself; as Fanny had not finished
her work. When she was still about half a mile
from the Rectory, she met Mr. Saul, who was on his
way out to the Green.
“I knew I should meet you,”
he said, “so that I might say good-by.”
“Yes, indeed, Mr. Saul for
I am going, in truth, to-morrow.”
“I wish you were staying.
I wish you were going to remain with us. Having
you here is very pleasant, and you do more good here,
perhaps, than you will elsewhere.”
“I will not allow that.
You forget that I have a father and mother.”
“Yes; and you will have a husband soon.”
“No, not soon; some day, perhaps,
if all goes well. But I mean to be back here
often before that. I mean to be here in October,
just for a little visit, if mamma can spare.”
“Miss Burton,” he said,
speaking in a very serious tone . All his
tones were serious, but that which he now adopted
was more solemn than usual. “I wish to
consult you on a certain matter, if you can give me
five minutes of your time.”
“To consult me, Mr. Saul?”
“Yes, Miss Burton. I am
hard pressed at present, and I know no one else of
whom I can ask a certain question, if I cannot ask
it of you. I think that you will answer me truly,
if you answer me at all. I do not think you would
flatter me, or tell me an untruth.”
“Flatter you! How could I flatter you?”
“By telling me ;
but I must ask you my question first. You and
Fanny Clavering are dear friends now. You tell
each other everything.”
“I do not know,” said
Florence, doubting as to what she might best say,
but guessing something of that which was coming.
“She will have told you, perhaps,
that I asked her to be my wife. Did she ever
tell you that?” Florence looked into his face
for a few moments without answering him, not knowing
how to answer such a question. “I know
that she has told you,” said he. “I
can see that it is so.”
“She has told me,” said Florence.
“Why should she not? How
could she be with you so many hours, and not tell
you that of which she could hardly fail to have the
remembrance often present with her. If I were
gone from here, if I were not before her eyes daily,
it might be otherwise; but seeing me as she does from
day to day, of course she has spoken of me to her friend.”
“Yes, Mr. Saul; she has told me of it.”
“And now, will you tell me whether I may hope.”
“Mr. Saul!”
“I want you to betray no secret,
but I ask you for your advice. Can I hope that
she will ever return my love?”
“How am I to answer you?”
“With the truth. Only with the truth.”
“I should say that she thinks that you have
forgotten it.”
“Forgotten it! No, Miss
Burton; she cannot think that. Do you believe
that men or women can forget such things as that?
Can you ever forget her brother? Do you think
people ever forget when they have loved? No, I
have not forgotten her. I have not forgotten that
walk which we had down this lane together. There
are things which men never forget.” Then
he paused for an answer.
Florence was by nature steady and
self-collected, and she at once felt that she was
bound to be wary before she gave him any answer.
She had half fancied once or twice that Fanny thought
more of Mr. Saul than she allowed even herself to
know. And Fanny, when she had spoken of the impossibility
of such a marriage, had always based the impossibility
on the fact that people should not marry without the
means of living a reason which to Florence,
with all her prudence, was not sufficient. Fanny
might wait as she also intended to wait. Latterly,
too, Fanny had declared more than once to Florence
her conviction that Mr. Saul’s passion had been
a momentary insanity which had altogether passed away;
and in these declarations Florence had half fancied
that she discovered some tinge of regret. If
it were so, what was she now to say to Mr. Saul?
“You think then, Miss Burton,”
he continued, “that I have no chance of success?
I ask the question because if I felt certain that this
was so quite certain I should be wrong
to remain here. It has been my first and only
parish, and I could not leave it without bitter sorrow.
But if I were to remain here hopelessly, I should
become unfit for my work. I am becoming so, and
shall be better away.”
“But why ask me, Mr. Saul?”
“Because I think that you can tell me.”
“But why not ask herself? Who can tell
you so truly as she can do?”
“You would not advise me to
do that if you were sure that she would reject me?”
“That is what I would advise.”
“I will take your advice, Miss
Burton. Now, good-by, and may God bless you.
You say you will be here in the Autumn; but before
the Autumn I shall probably have left Clavering.
If so our farewells will be for very long, but I shall
always remember our pleasant intercourse here.”
Then he went on toward Cumberly Green; and Florence,
as she walked into the vicarage grounds was thinking
that no girl had ever been loved by a more single-hearted,
pure-minded gentleman than Mr. Saul.
As she sat alone in her bed-room,
five or six hours after this interview, she felt some
regret that she should leave Clavering without a word
to Fanny on the subject. Mr. Saul had exacted
no promise of secresy from her; he was not a man to
exact such promises. But she felt not the less
that she would be betraying confidence to speak, and
it might even be that her speaking on the matter would
do more harm than good. Her sympathies were doubtless
with Mr. Saul, but she could not therefore say that
she, thought Fanny ought to accept his love. It
would be best to say nothing of the matter, and to
allow Mr. Saul to fight his own battle.
Then she turned to her own matters,
and there she found that everything was pleasant.
How good the world had been to her to give her such
a lover as Harry Clavering! She owned with all
her heart the excellence of being in love when a girl
might be allowed to call such a man her own.
She could not but make comparisons between him and
Mr. Saul, though she knew that she was making them
on points that were hardly worthy of her thoughts.
Mr. Saul was plain, uncouth, with little that was bright
about him except the brightness of his piety.
Harry was like the morning star. He looked and
walked and spoke as though he were something more godlike
than common men. His very voice created joy, and
the ring of his laughter was to Florence as the music
of the heavens. What woman would not have loved
Harry Clavering? Even Julia Brabazon a
creature so base that she had sold herself to such
a thing as Lord Ongar for money and a title, but so
grand in her gait and ways, so Florence had been told,
that she seemed to despise the earth on which she trod even
she had loved him. Then as Florence thought of
what Julia Brabazon might have had and of what she
had lost, she wondered that there could be women born
so sadly vicious.
But that woman’s vice had given
her her success, her joy, her great triumph!
It was surely not for her to deal hardly with the faults
of Julia Brabazon for her who was enjoying
all the blessings of which those faults had robbed
the other! Julia Brabazon had been her very good
friend.
But why had this perfect lover come
to her, to one so small, so trifling, so little in
the world’s account as she, and given to her
all the treasure of his love? Oh, Harry dear
Harry! what could she do for him that would be a return
good enough for such great goodness? Then she
took out his last letter, that satisfactory letter,
that letter that had been declared to be perfect,
and read it and read it again. No; she did not
want Fanny or any one else to tell her that he was
true. Honesty and truth were written on every
line of his face, were to be heard in every tone of
his voice, could be seen in every sentence that came
from his hand. Dear Harry; dearest Harry!
She knew well that he was true.
Then she also sat down and wrote to
him, on that her last night beneath his father’s
roof wrote to him when she had nearly prepared
herself for her bed; and honestly, out of her full
heart, thanked him for his love. There was no
need that she should be coy with him now, for she was
his own. “Dear Harry, when I think of all
that you have done for me in loving me and choosing
me for your wife, I know that I can never pay you
all that I owe you.”
Such were the two rival claimants
for the hand of Harry Clavering.