Chaos is come again. Othello.
That sleep was not unto death.
When James and Mary came simultaneously creeping
to the door in the grey twilight of the morning, they
heard that there had been less pain and more rest,
and gradually throughout the day, there was a diminution
of the dangerous symptoms, till the trembling hope
revived that the patient might be given back again
to life.
James was still sadly aggrieved at
being forbidden the sick-room, and exceedingly envied
Lord Ormersfield’s seat there. He declared,
so that Mary doubted whether it were jest or earnest,
that the Earl only remained there because society
expected it from their relative positions, and that
it must retard poor Fitzjocelyn’s recovery to
be perpetually basilisked by those cold grey eyes.
Mary stood up gallantly for the Earl, who had always
been so kind to her, and, on her mother’s authority,
vouched for his strong though hidden, feelings; to
which Jem replied, ’Aye! he was hiding a strong
fear of being too late for the beginning of the Session.’
‘I do not think it right to impute motives,’
said Mary.
‘I would not, Mary, if I could
help it,’ said James, ’but through the
whole course of my life I have never seen a token that
his lordship is worthy of his son. If he were
an ordinary, practical, common-place block, apt to
support his dignity, he might value him, but all the
grace, peculiarity, and conventionality is a mere burthen
and vexation, utterly wasted.’
Mary knew that she was a common-place
block, and did not wonder at herself for not agreeing
with James, but cherishing a strong conviction that
the father and son would now leave off rubbing against
each other; since no unprejudiced person could doubt
of the strong affection of the father, nor of the
warm gratitude of the son. In spite of the asperity
with which James spoke of the Earl, she was beginning
to like him almost as much as she esteemed him.
This had not been the case in their childhood, when
he used to be praised by the elders for his obedience
to his grandmother and his progress in the Northwold
Grammar School; but was terribly overbearing with
his juniors, and whether he cuffed Louis or led him
into mischief, equally distressed her. Grown
up, he was peculiarly vif, quick and ready, unselfish
in all his ways, and warmly affectionate very
agreeable companion where his sensitiveness was not
wounded, and meriting high honour by his deeper qualities.
Young as he was, he had already relieved his grandmother
from his own maintenance: he had turned to the
utmost account his education at the endowed school
at Northwold; by sheer diligence, had obtained, first
a scholarship and then a fellowship at Oxford; and
now, by practising rigid economy, and spending his
vacations in tuition, he was enabled to send his sister
to a boarding-school. He had stolen a few days
from his pupils on hearing of Fitzjocelyn’s danger,
but was forced to return as soon as the improvement
became confirmed. On the previous day, he asked
Mary to walk with him to the scene of the accident,
and they discussed the cause with more coolness than
they really felt, as they shuddered at the depth of
the fall, and the size of the stones.
James declared it all the fault of
that runaway scamp, young Madison, in whom Louis had
always been deceived, and who had never been seen
since the night of his apparition in the garden.
‘Poor boy! I suppose that
was the reason he ran away,’ said Mary.
’A very good thing, too.
He would never have been anything but a torment to
Louis. I remember telling him he was setting
the stones so as to break the neck of some one!’
’I think it would be of more
use to build them up than to settle how they broke
down,’ said Mary. ‘Do you think we
could manage it safely?’
‘A capital thought!’ cried
James, eagerly, and no sooner said than done.
The two cousins set to work procured some
cement from the bricklayer in the village, and toiled
at their masonry with right good-will as long as light
and time served them, then made an appointment to
meet at half-past six next morning, and finish their
work.
When the rendezvous took place, they
were rejoicing over Mrs. Frost’s report of an
excellent night, and over her own happy looks, from
which James prognosticated that all her fatigue and
watching had done no harm to her vigorous frame, for
which gladness was always the best cordial. It
was a joyous beginning on that spring morning, and
seemed to add fresh sparkles to the dazzling dewdrops,
and double merriment to the blackbirds and thrushes
answering each other far and wide, around, as the
sun drew up the grey veil of morning mist. ’They
all seem holding a feast for his recovery!’
exclaimed Mary, warming for once into poetry, as she
trudged along, leaving green footmarks in the silver
dew.
‘Well they may,’ said
James; ’for who loves them better than he?
I grudge myself this lovely morning, when he is lying
there, and my poor Clara is caged up at that place the
two who would the most enjoy it.’
‘Your going to see her will
be as good as the spring morning.’
‘Poor child! I dread it!’ sighed
Jem.
It was his first voluntary mention
of his sister. He had always turned the conversation
when Mrs. Ponsonby or Mary had tried to inquire for
her, and Mary was glad to lead him on to say more.
’I remember her last when you
were teaching her to run alone, and letting none of
us touch her, because you said she was your child,
and belonged to no one else.’
’I should not be so ungrateful,
now that I am come to the sense of my responsibility
in teaching her to go alone.’
‘But she has Aunt Catherine,’
said Mary, thinking that he was putting the natural
guardian out of the question as much now as in the
days referred to.
’My grandmother never had to
do with any girl before, and does not profess to understand
them. She let Clara be regularly a boy in school,
at first learning the same lessons, and then teaching;
and whatever I tried to impress in the feminine line,
naturally, all went for nothing. She is as wild
as a hare, and has not a particle of a girl about
her!’
‘But she is very young.’
’There it is again! She
grows so outrageously. She is not sixteen, and
there she is taller than granny already. It is
getting quite absurd.’
‘What advice do you want on that head?’
’Seriously, it is a disadvantage,
especially to that sort of girl, who can’t afford
to look like a woman before her time. Well, as
she must probably depend on herself, I looked out
for as good a school as could be had for the means,
and thought I had succeeded, and that she would be
brought into some sort of shape. Granny was ready
to break her heart, but thought it quite right.’
‘Then, does it not answer?’
’That is just what I can’t
tell. You have been used to schools: I wish
you could tell me whether it is a necessary evil, or
Clara’s own idiosyncrasy, or peculiar to the
place.’
‘Whether what is?’
‘Her misery!’
’Misery! Why, there is
nothing of that in her letters to my aunt. There
is not a complaint.’
’She is a brave girl, who spares
granny, when she knows it would be of no use to distress
her. Judge now, there’s the sort of letter
that I get from her.’
Mary read.
’Dearest Jemmy, Write
to me as quick as ever you can, and tell me how Louis
is; and let me come home, or I shall run mad.
It is no good telling me to command my feelings;
I am sure I would if I could, for the girls are more
detestable than ever; but what can one do when one
cannot sleep nor eat? All the screaming and crying
has got into one bump in my throat, because I can’t
get it out in peace. If I could only shy the
inkstand at the English teacher’s head! or get
one moment alone and out of sight! Let me come
home. I could at least run messages; and it
is of no use for me to stay here, for I can’t
learn, and all the girls are looking at me.
If they were but boys, they would have sense! or if
I could but kick them! This will make you angry,
but do forgive me; I can’t help it, for I am
so very unhappy. Louis is as much to me as you
are, and no one ever was so kind; but I know he will
get well I know he will; only if I knew
the pain was better, and could but hear every minute.
You need not come to fetch me; only send me a telegraph,
and one to Miss Brigham. I have money enough
for a second-class ticket, and would come that instant.
If you saw the eyes and heard the whispers of these
girls, I am sure you would. I should laugh at
such nonsense any other time, but now I only ask to
be wretched quietly in a corner.
’Your affectionate,
nearly crazy, sister,
‘Clara
frost Dynevor.’
Mary might well say that there was
nothing more expedient than going to see Clara, and
‘much,’ said poor James, ‘he should
gain by that,’ especially on the head that made
him most uneasy, and on which he could only hint lightly namely,
whether the girls were ’putting nonsense in
her head.’
’If they had done her any harm,
she would never have written such a letter,’
said Mary.
‘True,’ said Jem.
’She is a mere child, and never got that notion
into her head for a moment; but if they put it in,
we are done for! Or if the place were ever so
bad, I can’t remove her now, when granny is thus
occupied. One reason why I made a point of her
going to school was, that I thought doing everything
that Fitzjocelyn did was no preparation for being
a governess.’
’Oh! I hope it will not
come to that! Mr. Oliver Dynevor talks of coming
home in a very few years.’
’So few, that we shall be grey
before he comes. No; Clara and I are not going
to be bound to him for the wealth heaped up while my
grandmother was left in poverty. We mean to be
independent.’
Mary was glad to revert to Clara.
‘I must do the best I can for
her for the present,’ said Jem, ’try
to harden her against the girls, and leave her to
bear it. Poor dear! it makes one’s heart
ache! And to have done it oneself, too!
Then, in the holidays, perhaps, you will help me to
judge. You will be her friend, Mary; there’s
nothing she needs so much. I thought she would
have found one at school but they are not the right
stamp of animal. She has been too much thrown
on Louis; and though he has made a noble thing of
her, that must come to an end, and the sooner the better.’
Certainly, it was a perplexity for
a young elder brother; but there could not but remain
some simple wonder in Mary’s mind whether the
obvious person, Mrs. Frost, had not better have been
left to decide for her granddaughter.
The building operations gave full
occupation to the powers of the two cousins, and in
good time before breakfast, all was successfully completed, a
hand-rail affixed, and the passage cleared out, till
it looked so creditable, as well as solid, that there
was no more to wish for but that Louis should be able
to see their handiwork.
James went away in the better spirits
for having been allowed to shake Louis by the hand
and exchange a few words with him. Mary augured
that it would be the better for Clara and for the
pupils.
All that further transpired from him
was a cheerful letter to Mrs. Frost, speaking of Clara
as perfectly well, and beginning to accommodate herself
to her situation, and from this Mary gathered that
he was better satisfied.
The days brought gradual improvement
to the patient, under Mrs. Frost’s tender nursing,
and his father’s constant assiduity; both of
which, as he revived, seemed to afford him the greatest
pleasure, and were requited with the utmost warmth
and caressing sweetness towards his aunt, and towards
his father with ever-fresh gratitude and delight.
Lord Ormersfield was like another man, in the sick-room,
whence he never willingly absented himself for an
hour.
One day, however, when he was forced
to go to Northwold on business, Louis put on a fit
of coaxing importunity. Nothing would serve him
but some of Jane Beckett’s choice dried pears,
in the corner of the oaken cupboard, the key of which
was in Aunt Kitty’s pocket, and no one must
fetch them for him but Aunt Kitty herself, he was so
absurdly earnest and grave about them, that Jane scolded
him, and Mrs. Frost saw recovery in his arch eyes;
understanding all the time that it was all an excuse
for complimenting Jane, and sending her to air herself,
visit the Faithfull sisters, and inspect the Lady
of Eschalott. So she consented to accompany
Lord Ormersfield, and leave their charge to Mrs. Ponsonby,
who found Louis quite elated at the success of his
manoeuvre so much disposed to talk, and
so solicitous for the good of his nurses, that she
ventured on a bold stroke.
His chamber was nearly as much like
a lumber-room as ever; for any attempt to clear away
or disturb his possessions had seemed, in his half-conscious
condition, to excite and tease him so much, that it
had been at once relinquished. Although the
room was large, it was always too much crowded with
his goods; and the tables and chairs that had been
brought in during his illness, had added to the accumulation
which was the despair of Mrs. Beckett and Mr. Frampton.
Mrs. Ponsonby thought it was time for Louis to make
a sacrifice in his turn, and ventured to suggest that
he was well enough to say where some of his things
might be bestowed; and though he winced, she persevered
in representing how unpleasant it must be to his father
to live in the midst of so much confusion. The
débonnaire expression passed over his face,
as he glanced around, saying, ’You are right.
I never reflected on the stretch of kindness it must
have been. It shall be done. If I lose
everything, it will not be soon that I find it out.’
It evidently cost him a good deal,
and Mrs. Ponsonby proposed that Mary should come and
deal with his treasures; a plan at which he caught
so eagerly, that it was decided that no time was like
the present, and Mary was called. He could move
nothing but his hands; but they were eagerly held
out in welcome: and his eyes glittered with the
bright smile that once she had feared never to see
again. She felt a moisture in her own which made
her glad to turn aside to her task even while he complimented
her with an allusion to the labours of Hercules.
It did not seem uncalled-for, when she began by raising
a huge sheet of paper that had been thrown in desperation
to veil the confusion upon the table, and which proved
to be the Ordnance map of the county, embellished
with numerous streaks of paint. ’The outlines
of the old Saxon wappentakes,’ said Louis:
’I was trying to make them out in blue, and
the Roman roads in red. That mark is spontaneous;
it has been against some paint.’
Which paint was found in dried swamps
in saucers, while cakes of lake and Prussian blue
adhered to the drawing-board.
’The colour-box is probably
in the walnut-press; but I advise you not to irritate
that yet. Let me see that drawing, the design
for the cottages that Frampton nipped in the bud ’
‘How pretty and comfortable
they do look!’ exclaimed Mary, pleased to come
to something that was within her sphere of comprehension.
’If they were but finished!’
’Ah! I thought of them
when I was lying there in the dell! Had they
been allowed to stand where I wanted them, there would
have been no lack of people going home from work;
but, ‘Quite impracticable’ came in my
way, and I had no heart to finish the drawing.’
‘What a pity!’ exclaimed Mary.
’This was Richardson’s
veto, two degrees worse than Frampton’s; and
I shall never be able to abuse Frampton again.
I have seen him in his true light now, and never
was any one more kind and considerate. Ha, Mary,
what’s that?’
‘It looks like a rainbow in convulsions.’
’Now, Mary, did not I tell you
that I could not laugh? It is a diagram to illustrate
the theory of light for Clara.’
‘Does she understand that?’ cried
Mary.
’Clara? She understands
anything but going to school poor child!
Yes, burn that map of the strata, not that it
is to be a painted window whenever I can afford one,
but I never could make money stay with me. I
never could think why ’
The why was evident enough
in the heterogeneous mass crumpled prints,
blank drawing-paper, and maps heaped ruinously over
and under books, stuffed birds, geological specimens,
dislocated microscopes, pieces of Roman pavement,
curiosities innumerable and indescribable; among which
roamed blotting-books, memorandum-books, four pieces
of Indian rubber, three pair of compasses, seven paper-knives,
ten knives, thirteen odd gloves, fifteen pencils,
pens beyond reckoning, a purse, a key, half a poem
on the Siege of Granada, three parts of an essay upon
Spade Husbandry, the dramatis personae of a tragedy
on Queen Brunehault, scores of old letters, and the
dust of three years and a half.
Louis owned that the arrangements
conduced to finding rather than losing, and rejoiced
at the disinterment of his long-lost treasures; but
either he grew weary, or the many fragments, the ghosts
of departed fancies, made him thoughtful; for he became
silent, and only watched and smiled as Mary quietly
and noiselessly completed her reforms, and arranged
table and chairs for the comfort of his father and
aunt. He thanked her warmly, and hoped that
she would pursue her kind task another day, a
permission which she justly esteemed a great testimony
to her having avoided annoying him. It was a
great amusement to him to watch the surprised and
pleased looks of his various nurses as each came in,
and a real gratification to see his father settle himself
with an air of comfort, observing that ’they
were under great obligations to Mary.’
Still, the sight of the arrangements had left a dreary,
dissatisfied feeling with Louis: it might have
been caught from Mary’s involuntary look of
disappointment at each incomplete commencement that
she encountered, the multitude of undertakings
hastily begun, laid aside and neglected nothing
properly carried out. It seemed a mere waste
of life, and dwelt on his spirits, with a weariness
of himself and his own want of steadfastness a
sense of having disappointed her and disappointed
himself, and he sighed so heavily several times, that
his aunt anxiously asked whether he were in pain.
He was, however, so much better, that no one was
to sit up with him at night only his father
would sleep on a bed on the floor. As he bade
him good night, Louis, for the first time, made the
request that he might have his Bible given to him,
as well as his little book; and on his father advising
him not to attempt the effort of reading, he said,
’Thank you; I think I can read my two verses:
I want to take up my old habits.’
‘Have you really kept up this
habit constantly?’ asked his father, with wonder
that Louis did not understand.
’Aunt Catharine taught it to
us, he said. ’I neglected it one half-year
at school; but I grew so uncomfortable, that I began
again.’
The Earl gave the little worn volume,
saying, ’Yes, Louis, there has been a thread
running through your life.’
‘Has there been one thread?’
sadly mused Louis, as he found the weight of the thick
book too much for his weak hands, and his eyes and
head too dizzy and confused for more than one verse:
’I am come that
they might have life,
And that they
might have it more abundantly.’’
The Bible sank in his hands, and he
fell into a slumber so sound and refreshing, that
when he opened his eyes in early morning, he did not
at first realize that he was not awakening to health
and activity, nor why he had an instinctive dread
of moving. He turned his eyes towards the window,
uncurtained, so that he could see the breaking dawn.
The sky, deep blue above, faded and glowed towards
the horizon into gold, redder and more radiant below;
and in the midst, fast becoming merged in the increasing
light, shone the planet Venus, in her pale, calm brilliance.
There was repose and delight in dwelling
on that fair morning sky, and Louis lay dreamily gazing,
while thoughts passed over his mind, more defined
and connected than pain and weakness had as yet permitted.
Since those hours in which he had roused his faculties
to meet with approaching death, he had been seldom
awake to aught but the sensations of the moment, and
had only just become either strong enough, or sufficiently
at leisure for anything like reflection. As he
watched the eastern reddening, he could not but revert
to the feelings with which he had believed himself
at the gate of the City that needs neither sun nor
moon to lighten it, and, for the first time, he consciously
realized that he was restored to this world of life.
The sensation was not unmixed.
His youthful spirit bounded at the prospect of returning
vigour, his warm heart clung round those whom he loved,
and the perception of his numerous faults made him
grateful for a longer probation; but still he had
a sense of having been at the borders of the glorious
Land, and thence turned back to a tedious, doubtful
pilgrimage.
There was much to occasion this state
of mind. His life had been without great troubles,
but with many mortifications; he had never been long
satisfied with himself or his pursuits, his ardour
had only been the prelude to vexation and self-abasement,
and in his station in the world there was little incentive
to exertion. He had a strong sense of responsibility,
with a temperament made up of tenderness, refinement,
and inertness, such as shrank from the career set before
him. He had seen just enough of political life
to destroy any romance of patriotism, and to make
him regard it as little more than party spirit, and
dread the hardening and deadening process on the mind.
He had a dismal experience of his own philanthropy;
and he had a conscience that would not sit down satisfied
with selfish ease, pleasure, or intellectual pursuits.
His smooth, bright, loving temper had made him happy;
but the past was all melancholy, neglect, and futile
enterprise; he had no attaching home no
future visions; and, on the outskirts of manhood,
he shrank back from the turmoil, the temptations, and
the roughness that awaited him nay, from
the mere effort of perseverance, and could almost
have sighed to think how nearly the death-pang had
been over, and the home of Love, Life, and Light had
been won for ever:
’I am come that
they might have life,
And that they
might have it more abundantly.’
The words returned on him, and with
them what his father had said, ’You have had
a thread running through your life.’ He
was in a state between sleeping and waking, when the
confines of reflection and dreaming came very near
together, and when vague impressions, hardly noticed
at the time they were made, began to tell on him without
his own conscious volition. It was to him as
if from that brightening eastern heaven, multitudes
of threads of light were floating hither and thither,
as he had often watched the gossamer undulating in
the sunshine. Some were firm, purely white,
and glistening here and there with rainbow tints as
they tended straight upwards, shining more and more
into the perfect day; but for the most part they were
tangled together in inextricable confusion, intermingled
with many a broken end, like fleeces of cobweb driven
together by the autumn wind, some sailing
aimlessly, or with shattered tangled strands-some white,
some dark, some anchored to mere leaves or sprays,
some tending down to the abyss, but all in such a
perplexed maze that the eye could seldom trace which
were directed up, which downwards, which were of pure
texture, which defiled and stained.
In the abortive, unsatisfactory attempt
to follow out one fluctuating clue, not without whiteness,
and heaving often upwards, but frail, wavering, ravelled,
and tangled, so that scarcely could he find one line
that held together, Louis awoke to find his father
wondering that he could sleep with the sun shining
full on his face.
‘It was hardly quite a dream,’
said Louis, as he related it to Mrs. Frost.
‘It would make a very pretty allegory.’
‘It is too real for that just
now,’ he said. ’It was the moral
of all my broken strands that Mary held up to me yesterday.’
’I hope you are going to do
more than point your moral, my dear. You always
were good at that.’
‘I mean it,’ said Louis,
earnestly. ’I do not believe such an illness ay,
or such a dream can come for nothing.’
So back went his thoughts to the flaws
in his own course; and chiefly he bewailed his want
of sympathy for his father. Material obedience
and submission had been yielded, but, having little
cause to believe himself beloved, his heart had never
been called into action so as to soften the clashings
of two essentially dissimilar characters. Instead
of rebelling, or even of murmuring, he had hid disappointment
in indifference, taken refuge in levity and versatility,
and even consoled himself by sporting with what he
regarded as prejudice or unjust displeasure.
All this cost him much regret and self-reproach at
each proof of the affection so long veiled by reserve.
Never would he have given pain, had he guessed that
his father could feel; but he had grown up to imagine
the whole man made up of politics and conventionalities,
and his new discoveries gave him at least as much contrition
as pleasure.
After long study of the debates, that
morning, his father prepared to write. Louis
asked for the paper, saying his senses would just serve
for the advertisements, but presently he made an exclamation
of surprise at beholding, in full progress, the measure
which had brought Sir Miles Oakstead to Ormersfield,
one of peculiar interest to the Earl. His blank
look of wonder amused Mrs. Ponsonby, but seemed somewhat
to hurt his father.
‘You did not suppose I could
attend to such matters now?’ he said.
‘But I am so much better!’
Fearing that the habit of reserve
would check any exchange of feeling, Mrs. Ponsonby
said, ’Did you fancy your father could not think
of you except upon compulsion?’
‘I beg your pardon, father,’
said Louis, smiling, while a tear rose to his eyes,
’I little thought I was obstructing the business
of the nation. What will Sir Miles do to me?’
‘Sir Miles has written a most
kind and gratifying letter,’ said Lord Ormersfield,
’expressing great anxiety for you, and a high
opinion of your powers.’
Louis had never heard of his own powers,
except for mischief, and the colour returned to his
cheeks, as he listened to the kind and cordial letter,
written in the first shock of the tidings of the accident.
He enjoyed the pleasure it gave his father far more
than the commendation to himself; for he well knew,
as he said, that ’there is something embellishing
in a catastrophe,’ and he supposed ’that
had driven out the rose-coloured pastor.’
‘There is always indulgence
at your age,’ said the Earl. ’You
have created an impression which may be of great importance
to you by-and-by.’
Louis recurred to politics.
The measure was one which approved itself to his mind,
and he showed all the interest which was usually stifled,
by such subjects being forced on him. He was
distressed at detaining his father when his presence
might be essential to the success of his party, and
the Earl could not bear to leave him while still confined
to his bed. The little scene, so calm, and apparently
so cold, seemed to cement the attachment of father
and son, by convincing Louis of the full extent of
his father’s love; and his enthusiasm began to
invest the Earl’s grey head with a perfect halo
of wisdom slighted and affection injured; and the
tenor of his thread of life shone out bright and silvery
before him, spun out of projects of devoting heart
and soul to his father’s happiness, and meriting
his fondness.
The grave Earl was looking through
a magnifying-glass no less powerful. He had not
been so happy since his marriage; the consciousness
of his own cold manner made him grateful for any demonstration
from his son, and the many little graces of look and
manner which Louis had inherited from his mother added
to the charm. The sense of previous injustice
enhanced all his good qualities, and it was easy to
believe him perfect, while nothing was required of
him but to lie still. Day and night did Lord
Ormersfield wait upon him, grudging every moment spent
away from him, and trying to forestall each wish, till
he became almost afraid to express a desire, on account
of the trouble it would cause. Mary found the
Earl one day wandering among the vines in the old
hothouse, in search of a flower, when, to her amusement,
he selected a stiff pert double hyacinth, the special
aversion of his son, who nevertheless received it
most graciously, and would fain have concealed the
headache caused by the scent, until Mrs. Frost privately
abstracted it. Another day, he went, unasked,
to hasten the birdstuffer in finishing the rose-coloured
pastor; and when it came, himself brought it up-stairs,
unpacked it, and set it up where Louis could best admire
its black nodding crest and pink wings; unaware that
to his son it seemed a memento of his own misdeeds a
perpetual lesson against wayward carelessness.
‘It is like a new love,’
said Mrs. Ponsonby; ’but oh! how much depends
upon Louis after his recovery!’
‘You don’t mistrust his goodness now,
mamma!’
’I could not bear to do so.
I believe I was thinking of his father more than
of himself. After having been so much struck
by his religious feeling, I dread nothing so much
as his father finding him deficient in manliness or
strength of character.’