All this time Mr Longestaffe was necessarily
detained in London while the three ladies of his family
were living forlornly at Caversham. He had taken
his younger daughter home on the day after his visit
to Lady Monogram, and in all his intercourse with
her had spoken of her suggested marriage with Mr Brehgert
as a thing utterly out of the question. Georgiana
had made one little fight for her independence at
the Jermyn Street Hotel. ‘Indeed, papa,
I think it’s very hard,’ she said.
’What’s hard? I think
a great many things are hard; but I have to bear them.’
‘You can do nothing for me.’
’Do nothing for you! Haven’t
you got a home to live in, and clothes to wear, and
a carriage to go about in, and books to
read if you choose to read them? What do you
expect?’
‘You know, papa, that’s nonsense.’
‘How do you dare to tell me that what I say
is nonsense?’
’Of course there’s a house
to live in and clothes to wear; but what’s to
be the end of it? Sophia, I suppose, is going
to be married.’
’I am happy to say she is, to
a most respectable young man and a thorough gentleman.’
‘And Dolly has his own way of going on.’
‘You have nothing to do with Adolphus.’
’Nor will he have anything to
do with me. If I don’t marry what’s
to become of me? It isn’t that Mr Brehgert
is the sort of man I should choose.’
‘Do not mention his name to me.’
’But what am I to do? You
give up the house in town, and how am I to see people?
It was you sent me to Mr Melmotte.’
‘I didn’t send you to Mr Melmotte.’
’It was at your suggestion I
went there, papa. And of course I could only
see the people he had there. I like nice people
as well as anybody.’
‘There’s no use talking any more about
it.’
’I don’t see that.
I must talk about it, and think about it too.
If I can put up with Mr Brehgert I don’t see
why you and mamma should complain.’
‘A Jew!’
’People don’t think about
that as they used to, papa. He has a very fine
income, and I should always have a house in ’
Then Mr Longestaffe became so furious
and loud, that he stopped her for that time.
‘Look here,’ he said, ’if you mean
to tell me that you will marry that man without my
consent, I can’t prevent it. But you shall
not marry him as my daughter. You shall be turned
out of my house, and I will never have your name pronounced
in my presence again. It is disgusting, degrading, disgraceful!’
And then he left her.
On the next morning before he started
for Caversham he did see Mr Brehgert; but he told
Georgiana nothing of the interview, nor had she the
courage to ask him. The objectionable name was
not mentioned again in her father’s hearing,
but there was a sad scene between herself, Lady Pomona,
and her sister. When Mr Longestaffe and his younger
daughter arrived, the poor mother did not go down into
the hall to meet her child, from whom she
had that morning received the dreadful tidings about
the Jew. As to these tidings she had as yet heard
no direct condemnation from her husband. The
effect upon Lady Pomona had been more grievous even
than that made upon the father. Mr Longestaffe
had been able to declare immediately that the proposed
marriage was out of the question, that nothing of
the kind should be allowed, and could take upon himself
to see the Jew with the object of breaking off the
engagement. But poor Lady Pomona was helpless
in her sorrow. If Georgiana chose to marry a
Jew tradesman she could not help it. But such
an occurrence in the family would, she felt, be to
her as though the end of all things had come.
She could never again hold up her head, never go into
society, never take pleasure in her powdered footmen.
When her daughter should have married a Jew, she didn’t
think that she could pluck up the courage to look
even her neighbours Mrs Yeld and Mrs Hepworth in the
face. Georgiana found no one in the hall to meet
her, and dreaded to go to her mother. She first
went with her maid to her own room, and waited there
till Sophia came to her. As she sat pretending
to watch the process of unpacking, she strove to regain
her courage. Why need she be afraid of anybody?
Why, at any rate, should she be afraid of other females?
Had she not always been dominant over her mother and
sister? ‘Oh, Georgey,’ said Sophia,
’this is wonderful news!’
’I suppose it seems wonderful
that anybody should be going to be married except
yourself.’
‘No; but such a very odd match!’
’Look here, Sophia. If
you don’t like it, you need not talk about it.
We shall always have a house in town, and you will
not. If you don’t like to come to us, you
needn’t. That’s about all.’
‘George wouldn’t let me go there at all,’
said Sophia.
’Then George had
better keep you at home at Toodlam. Where’s
mamma? I should have thought somebody might have
come and met me to say a word to me, instead of allowing
me to creep into the house like this.’
’Mamma isn’t at all well;
but she’s up in her own room. You mustn’t
be surprised, Georgey, if you find mamma very very
much cut up about this.’ Then Georgiana
understood that she must be content to stand all alone
in the world, unless she made up her mind to give up
Mr Brehgert.
‘So I’ve come back,’
said Georgiana, stooping down and kissing her mother.
‘Oh, Georgiana; oh, Georgiana!’
said Lady Pomona, slowly raising herself and covering
her face with one of her hands. ’This is
dreadful. It will kill me. It will indeed.
I didn’t expect it from you.’
‘What is the good of all that, mamma?’
’It seems to me that it can’t
be possible. It’s unnatural. It’s
worse than your wife’s sister. I’m
sure there’s something in the Bible against
it. You never would read your Bible, or you wouldn’t
be going to do this.’
’Lady Julia Start has done just
the same thing, and she goes everywhere.’
’What does your papa say?
I’m sure your papa won’t allow it.
If he’s fixed about anything, it’s about
the Jews. An accursed race; think of
that, Georgiana; expelled from Paradise.’
‘Mamma, that’s nonsense.’
’Scattered about all over the
world, so that nobody knows who anybody is. And
it’s only since those nasty Radicals came up
that they have been able to sit in Parliament.’
‘One of the greatest judges
in the land is a Jew,’ said Georgiana, who had
already learned to fortify her own case.
’Nothing that the Radicals can
do can make them anything else but what they are.
I’m sure that Mr Whitstable, who is to be your
brother-in-law, will never condescend to speak to him.’
Now if there was anybody whom Georgiana
Longestaffe had despised from her youth upwards it
was George Whitstable. He had been a laughing-stock
to her when they were children, had been regarded as
a lout when he left school, and had been her common
example of rural dullness since he had become a man.
He certainly was neither beautiful nor bright; but
he was a Conservative squire born of Tory parents.
Nor was he rich; having but a moderate income,
sufficient to maintain a moderate country house and
no more. When first there came indications that
Sophia intended to put up with George Whitstable, the
more ambitious sister did not spare the shafts of
her scorn. And now she was told that George Whitstable
would not speak to her future husband! She was
not to marry Mr Brehgert lest she should bring disgrace,
among others, upon George Whitstable! This was
not to be endured.
’Then Mr Whitstable may keep
himself at home at Toodlam and not trouble his head
at all about me or my husband. I’m sure
I shan’t trouble myself as to what a poor creature
like that may think about me. George Whitstable
knows as much about London as I do about the moon.’
‘He has always been in county
society,’ said Sophia, ’and was staying
only the other day at Lord Cantab’s.’
‘Then there were two fools together,’
said Georgiana, who at this moment was very unhappy.
’Mr Whitstable is an excellent
young man, and I am sure he will make your sister
happy; but as for Mr Brehgert, I can’t
bear to have his name mentioned in my hearing.’
’Then, mamma, it had better
not be mentioned. At any rate it shan’t
be mentioned again by me.’ Having so spoken,
Georgiana bounced out of the room and did not meet
her mother and sister again till she came down into
the drawing-room before dinner.
Her position was one very trying both
to her nerves and to her feelings. She presumed
that her father had seen Mr Brehgert, but did not
in the least know what had passed between them.
It might be that her father had been so decided in
his objection as to induce Mr Brehgert to abandon
his intention, and if this were so, there
could be no reason why she should endure the misery
of having the Jew thrown in her face. Among them
all they had made her think that she would never become
Mrs Brehgert. She certainly was not prepared to
nail her colours upon the mast and to live and die
for Brehgert. She was almost sick of the thing
herself. But she could not back out of it so as
to obliterate all traces of the disgrace. Even
if she should not ultimately marry the Jew, it would
be known that she had been engaged to a Jew, and
then it would certainly be said afterwards that the
Jew had jilted her. She was thus vacillating in
her mind, not knowing whether to go on with Brehgert
or to abandon him. That evening Lady Pomona retired
immediately after dinner, being ‘far from well.’
It was of course known to them all that Mr Brehgert
was her ailment. She was accompanied by her elder
daughter, and Georgiana was left with her father.
Not a word was spoken between them. He sat behind
his newspaper till he went to sleep, and she found
herself alone and deserted in that big room.
It seemed to her that even the servants treated her
with disdain. Her own maid had already given her
notice. It was manifestly the intention of her
family to ostracise her altogether. Of what service
would it be to her that Lady Julia Goldsheiner should
be received everywhere, if she herself were to be
left without a single Christian friend? Would
a life passed exclusively among the Jews content even
her lessened ambition? At ten o’clock she
kissed her father’s head and went to bed.
Her father grunted less audibly than usual under the
operation. She had always given herself credit
for high spirits, but she began to fear that her courage
would not suffice to carry her through sufferings such
as these.
On the next day her father returned
to town, and the three ladies were left alone.
Great preparations were going on for the Whitstable
wedding. Dresses were being made and linen marked,
and consultations held, from all which
things Georgiana was kept quite apart. The accepted
lover came over to lunch, and was made as much of as
though the Whitstables had always kept a town house.
Sophy loomed so large in her triumph and happiness,
that it was not to be borne. All Caversham treated
her with a new respect. And yet if Toodlam was
a couple of thousand a year, it was all it was: and
there were two unmarried sisters! Lady Pomona
went half into hysterics every time she saw her younger
daughter, and became in her way a most oppressive parent.
Oh, heavens; was Mr Brehgert with his two
houses worth all this? A feeling of intense regret
for the things she was losing came over her. Even
Caversham, the Caversham of old days which she had
hated, but in which she had made herself respected
and partly feared by everybody about the place, had
charms for her which seemed to her delightful now that
they were lost for ever. Then she had always considered
herself to be the first personage in the house, superior
even to her father; but now she was decidedly
the last.
Her second evening was worse even
than the first. When Mr Longestaffe was not at
home the family sat in a small dingy room between the
library and the dining-room, and on this occasion the
family consisted only of Georgiana. In the course
of the evening she went upstairs and calling her sister
out into the passage demanded to be told why she was
thus deserted. ‘Poor mamma is very ill,’
said Sophy.
‘I won’t stand it if I’m
to be treated like this,’ said Georgiana.
‘I’ll go away somewhere.’
’How can I help it, Georgey?
It’s your own doing. Of course you must
have known that you were going to separate yourself
from us.’
On the next morning there came a dispatch
from Mr Longestaffe, of what nature Georgey
did not know as it was addressed to Lady Pomona.
But one enclosure she was allowed to see. ‘Mamma,’
said Sophy, ’thinks you ought to know how Dolly
feels about it.’ And then a letter from
Dolly to his father was put into Georgey’s hands.
The letter was as follows:
My dear father,
Can it be true that Georgey is thinking
of marrying that horrid vulgar Jew, old Brehgert?
The fellows say so; but I can’t believe it.
I’m sure you wouldn’t let her. You
ought to lock her up.
Yours affectionately,
A. Longestaffe.
Dolly’s letters made his father
very angry, as, short as they were, they always contained
advice or instruction, such as should come from a
father to a son, rather than from a son to a father.
This letter had not been received with a welcome.
Nevertheless the head of the family had thought it
worth his while to make use of it, and had sent it
to Caversham in order that it might be shown to his
rebellious daughter.
And so Dolly had said that she ought
to be locked up! She’d like to see somebody
do it! As soon as she had read her brother’s
epistle she tore it into fragments and threw it away
in her sister’s presence. ’How can
mamma be such a hypocrite as to pretend to care what
Dolly says? Who doesn’t know that he’s
an idiot? And papa has thought it worth his while
to send that down here for me to see! Well, after
that I must say that I don’t much care what
papa does.’
’I don’t see why Dolly
shouldn’t have an opinion as well as anybody
else,’ said Sophy.
’As well as George Whitstable?
As far as stupidness goes they are about the same.
But Dolly has a little more knowledge of the world.’
‘Of course we all know, Georgiana,’
rejoined the elder sister, ’that for cuteness
and that kind of thing one must look among the commercial
classes, and especially among a certain sort.’
‘I’ve done with you all,’
said Georgey, rushing out of the room. ’I’ll
have nothing more to do with any one of you.’
But it is very difficult for a young
lady to have done with her family! A young man
may go anywhere, and may be lost at sea; or come and
claim his property after twenty years. A young
man may demand an allowance, and has almost a right
to live alone. The young male bird is supposed
to fly away from the paternal nest. But the daughter
of a house is compelled to adhere to her father till
she shall get a husband. The only way in which
Georgey could ‘have done’ with them all
at Caversham would be by trusting herself to Mr Brehgert,
and at the present moment she did not know whether
Mr Brehgert did or did not consider himself as engaged
to her.
That day also passed away with ineffable
tedium. At one time she was so beaten down by
ennui that she almost offered her assistance to her
sister in reference to the wedding garments. In
spite of the very bitter words which had been spoken
in the morning she would have done so had Sophy afforded
her the slightest opportunity. But Sophy was
heartlessly cruel in her indifference. In her
younger days she had had her bad things, and now, with
George Whitstable by her side, she meant
to have good things, the goodness of which was infinitely
enhanced by the badness of her sister’s things.
She had been so greatly despised that the charm of
despising again was irresistible. And she was
able to reconcile her cruelty to her conscience by
telling herself that duty required her to show implacable
resistance to such a marriage as this which her sister
contemplated. Therefore Georgiana dragged out
another day, not in the least knowing what was to be
her fate.