I was left with Miss March alone.
She sat looking at the door where John had disappeared,
in extreme surprise, not unmingled with a certain
embarrassment.
“What does he mean, Mr. Fletcher?
Can I have offended him in any way?”
“Indeed, no.”
“Why did he go away?”
But that question, simple as it was
in itself, and most simply put, involved so much,
that I felt I had no right to answer it; while, at
the same time, I had no possible right to use any of
those disguises or prévarications which are always
foolish and perilous, and very frequently wrong.
Nor, even had I desired, was Miss March the woman
to whom one dared offer the like; therefore I said
to her plainly:
“I know the reason. I
would tell you, but I think John would prefer telling
you himself.”
“As he pleases,” returned
Miss March, a slight reserve tempering her frank manner;
but it soon vanished, and she began talking to me in
her usual friendly way, asking me many questions about
the Brithwoods and about Norton Bury. I answered
them freely my only reservation being,
that I took care not to give any information concerning
ourselves.
Soon afterwards, as John did not return,
I took leave of her, and went to our own parlour.
He was not there. He had left
word with little Jack, who met him on the common,
that he was gone a long walk, and should not return
till dinner-time. Dinner-time came, but I had
to dine alone. It was the first time I ever
knew him break even such a trivial promise. My
heart misgave me I spent a miserable day.
I was afraid to go in search of him, lest he should
return to a dreary, empty parlour. Better, when
he did come in, that he should find a cheerful hearth
and me.
Me, his friend and brother, who had
loved him these six years better than anything else
in the whole world. Yet what could I do now?
Fate had taken the sceptre out of my hands I
was utterly powerless; I could neither give him comfort
nor save him pain any more.
What I felt then, in those long, still
hours, many a one has felt likewise; many a parent
over a child, many a sister over a brother, many a
friend over a friend. A feeling natural and universal.
Let those who suffer take it patiently, as the common
lot; let those who win hold the former ties in tenderest
reverence, nor dare to flaunt the new bond cruelly
in the face of the old.
Having said this, which, being the
truth, it struck me as right to say, I will no more
allude to the subject.
In the afternoon there occurred an
incident. A coach-and-four, resplendent in liveries,
stopped at the door; I knew it well, and so did all
Norton Bury. It was empty; but Lady Caroline’s
own maid so I heard afterwards sat
in the rumble, and Lady Caroline’s own black-eyed
Neapolitan page leaped down, bearing a large letter,
which I concluded was for Miss March.
I was glad that John was not at home;
glad that the coach, with all its fine paraphernalia,
was away, empty as it had arrived, before John came
in.
He did not come till it was nearly
dusk. I was at the window, looking at my four
poplar-trees, as they pointed skywards like long fingers
stretching up out of the gloom, when I saw him crossing
the common. At first I was going to meet him
at the gate, but on second thoughts I remained within,
and only stirred up the fire, which could be seen
shining ever so far.
“What a bright blaze!
Nay, you have not waited dinner, I hope?
Tea yes, that’s far better; I have
had such a long walk, and am so tired.”
The words were cheerful, so was the
tone. Too cheerful oh, by far!
The sort of cheerfulness that strikes to a friend’s
heart, like the piping of soldiers as they go away
back from a newly-filled grave.
“Where have you been, John?”
“All over Nunnely Hill.
I must take you there such expansive views.
As Mrs. Tod informed me, quoting some local ballad,
which she said was written by an uncle of hers:
“’There
you may spy
Twenty-three churches
with the glass and the eye.’
Remarkable fact, isn’t it?”
Thus he kept on talking all tea-time,
incessantly, rapidly talking. It was enough to
make one weep.
After tea I insisted on his taking
my arm-chair; saying, that after such a walk, in that
raw day, he must be very cold.
“Not the least quite
the contrary feel my hand.”
It was burning. “But I am tired thoroughly
tired.”
He leaned back and shut his eyes.
Oh, the utter weariness of body and soul that was
written on his face!
“Why did you go out alone?
John, you know that you have always me.”
He looked up, smiling. But the
momentary brightness passed. Alas! I was
not enough to make him happy now.
We sat silent. I knew he would
speak to me in time; but the gates of his heart were
close locked. It seemed as if he dared not open
them, lest the flood should burst forth and overwhelm
us.
At nine o’clock Mrs. Tod came
in with supper. She had always something or
other to say, especially since the late events had
drawn the whole household of Rose Cottage so closely
together; now, she was brim-full of news.
She had been all that evening packing
up for poor dear Miss March; though why she should
call her “poor,” truly, she didn’t
know. Who would have thought Mr. March had such
grand relations? Had we seen Lady Caroline Brithwood’s
coach that came that day? Such a beautiful coach
it was! sent on purpose for Miss March only
she wouldn’t go. “But now she has
made up her mind, poor dear. She is leaving
to-morrow.”
When John heard this he was helping
Mrs. Tod, as usual, to fasten the heavy shutters.
He stood, with his hand on the bolt, motionless, till
the good woman was gone. Then he staggered to
the mantelpiece, and leaned on it with both his elbows,
his hands covering his face.
But there was no disguise now no
attempt to make it. A young man’s first
love not first fancy, but first love in
all its passion, desperation, and pain had
come to him, as it comes to all. I saw him writhing
under it saw, and could not help him.
The next few silent minutes were very bitter to us
both.
Then I said gently, “David!”
“Well?”
“I thought things were so.”
“Yes.”
“Suppose you were to talk to me a little it
might do you good.”
“Another time. Let me go out out
into the air; I’m choking.”
Snatching up his hat, he rushed from me. I did
not dare to follow.
After waiting some time, and listening till all was
quiet in the house,
I could bear the suspense no longer and went out.
I thought I should find him on the
Flat probably in his favourite walk, his
“terrace,” as he called it, where he had
first seen, and must have seen many a day after, that
girlish figure tripping lightly along through the
morning sunshine and morning dew. I had a sort
of instinct that he would be there now; so I climbed
up the shortest way, often losing my footing; for
it was a pitch-dark night, and the common looked as
wide, and black, and still, as a midnight sea.
John was not there; indeed, if he
had been I could scarcely have seen him; I could see
nothing but the void expanse of the Flat, or, looking
down, the broad river of mist that rolled through the
valley, on the other side of which twinkled a few
cottage lights, like unearthly beacons from the farthest
shore of an impassable flood.
Suddenly I remembered hearing Mrs.
Tod say that, on account of its pits and quarries,
the common was extremely dangerous after dark, except
to those who knew it well. In a horrible dread
I called out John’s name but nothing
answered. I went on blindly, desperately shouting
as I went. At length, in one of the Roman
fossés, I stumbled and fell. Some one came,
darting with great leaps through the mist, and lifted
me up.
“Oh! David David!”
“Phineas is that
you? You have come out this bitter night why
did you?”
His tenderness over me, even then,
made me break down. I forgot my manhood, or
else it slipped from me unawares. In the old
Bible language, “I fell on his neck and wept.”
Afterwards I was not sorry for this,
because I think my weakness gave him strength.
I think, amidst the whirl of passion that racked him
it was good for him to feel that the one crowning
cup of life is not inevitably life’s sole sustenance;
that it was something to have a friend and brother
who loved him with a love like Jonathan’s “passing
the love of women.”
“I have been very wrong,”
he kept repeating, in a broken voice; “but I
was not myself. I am better now. Come let
us go home.”
He put his arm round me to keep me
warm, and brought me safely into the house.
He even sat down by the fire to talk with me.
Whatever struggle there had been, I saw it was over,
he looked his own self only so very, very
pale and spoke in his natural voice; ay,
even when mentioning her, which he was the first
to do.
“She goes to-morrow, you are sure, Phineas?”
“I believe so. Shall you see her again?”
“If she desires it.”
“Shall you say anything to her?”
“Nothing. If for a little
while not knowing or not thinking of all
the truth I felt I had strength to remove
all impediments, I now see that even to dream of such
things makes me a fool, or possibly worse a
knave. I will be neither I will be
a man.”
I replied not: how could one
answer such words? calmly uttered, though
each syllable must have been torn out like a piece
of his heart.
“Did she say anything to you?
Did she ask why I left her so abruptly this morning?”
“She did; I said you would probably
tell her the reason yourself.”
“I will. She must no longer
be kept in ignorance about me or my position.
I shall tell her the whole truth save one
thing. She need never know that.”
I guessed by his broken voice what
the “one thing” was; which he
counted as nothing; but which, I think, any true woman
would have counted worth everything the
priceless gift of a good man’s love. Love,
that in such a nature as his, if once conceived, would
last a lifetime. And she was not to know it!
I felt sorry ay, even sorry for Ursula
March.
“Do you not think I am right, Phineas?”
“Perhaps. I cannot say. You are
the best judge.”
“It is right,” said he,
firmly. “There can be no possible hope
for me; nothing remains but silence.”
I did not quite agree with him.
I could not see that to any young man, only twenty
years old, with the world all before him, any love
could be absolutely hopeless; especially to a young
man like John Halifax. But as things now stood
I deemed it best to leave him altogether to himself,
offering neither advice nor opinion. What Providence
willed, through his will, would happen:
for me to interfere either way would be at once idle
and perilous; nay, in some sense, exceedingly wrong.
So I kept my thoughts to myself, and
preserved a total silence.
John broke it talking to
himself as if he had forgotten I was by.
“To think it was she who did
it that first kindness to a poor friendless
boy. I never forgot it never.
It did me more good than I can tell. And that
scar on her poor arm her dear little tender
arm; how this morning I would have given
all the world to ”
He broke off instinctively,
as it were with the sort of feeling every
good man has, that the sacred passion, the inmost tenderness
of his love, should be kept wholly between himself
and the woman he has chosen.
I knew that too; knew that in his
heart had grown up a secret, a necessity, a desire,
stronger than any friendship closer than
the closest bond of brotherly love. Perhaps I
hardly know why I sighed.
John turned round “Phineas,
you must not think because of this which
you will understand for yourself, I hope, one day;
you must not think I could ever think less, or feel
less, about my brother.”
He spoke earnestly, with a full heart.
We clasped hands warmly and silently. Thus
was healed my last lingering pain I was
thenceforward entirely satisfied.
I think we parted that night as we
had never parted before; feeling that the trial of
our friendship the great trial, perhaps,
of any friendship had come and passed,
safely: that whatever new ties might gather
round each, our two hearts would cleave together until
death.
The next morning rose, as I have seen
many a morning rise at Enderley misty and
grey; but oh, so heavenly fair! with a pearly network
of dewy gossamer under foot, and overhead countless
thistle downs flying about, like fairy chariots hurrying
out of sight of the sun, which had only mounted high
enough above the Flat to touch the horizon of hills
opposite, and the tops of my four poplars, leaving
Rose Cottage and the valley below it all in morning
shadow. John called me to go with him on the
common; his voice sounded so cheerful outside my door
that it was with a glad heart I rose and went.
He chose his old walk his
“terrace.” No chance now of meeting
the light figure coming tripping along the level hill.
All that dream was now over. He did not speak
of it nor I. He seemed contented or,
at least, thoroughly calmed down; except that the
sweet composure of his mien had settled into the harder
gravity of manhood. The crisis and climax of
youth had been gone through he never could
be a boy again.
We came to that part of John’s
terrace which overhung the churchyard. Both of
us glanced instinctively down to the heap of loose
red earth the as yet nameless grave.
Some one stood beside it the only one
who was likely to be there.
Even had I not recognized her, John’s
manner would have told me who it was. A deadly
paleness overspread his face its quietness
was gone every feature trembled.
It almost broke my heart to see how deeply this love
had struck its roots down to the very core of his;
twisting them with every fibre of his being.
A love which, though it had sprung up so early, and
come to maturity so fast, might yet be the curse of
his whole existence. Save that no love conceived
virtuously, for a good woman, be it ever so hopeless,
can be rightly considered as a curse.
“Shall we go away?” I
whispered “a long walk to
the other side of the Flat? She will have left
Rose Cottage soon.”
“When?”
“Before noon, I heard. Come, David.”
He suffered me to put my arm in his,
and draw him away for a step or two, then turned.
“I can’t, Phineas, I can’t!
I must look at her again only for
one minute one little minute.”
But he stayed we were standing
where she could not see us till she had
slowly left the grave. We heard the click of
the churchyard gate: where she went afterward
we could not discern.
John moved away. I asked him
if we should take our walk now? But he did not
seem to hear me; so I let him follow his own way perhaps
it might be for good who could tell?
He descended from the Flat, and came
quickly round the corner of the cottage. Miss
March stood there, trying to find one fresh rose among
the fast-withering clusters about what had been our
parlour window and now was hers.
She saw us, acknowledged us, but hurriedly,
and not without some momentary signs of agitation.
“The roses are all gone,” she said rather
sadly.
“Perhaps, higher up, I can reach one shall
I try?”
I marvelled to see that John’s
manner as he addressed her was just like his manner
always with her.
“Thank you that will
do. I wanted to take some away with me I
am leaving Rose Cottage to-day, Mr. Halifax.”
“So I have heard.”
He did not say “sorry to hear.”
I wondered did the omission strike her? But
no she evidently regarded us both as mere
acquaintances, inevitably, perhaps even tenderly,
bound up with this time; and as such, claiming a more
than ordinary place in her regard and remembrance.
No man with common sense or common feeling could for
a moment dare to misinterpret the emotion she showed.
Re-entering the house, she asked us
if we would come in with her; she had a few things
to say to us. And then she again referred gratefully
to our “kindness.”
We all went once more for
the last time into the little parlour.
“Yes I am going away,” said
she, mournfully.
“We hope all good will go with
you always and everywhere.”
“Thank you, Mr. Fletcher.”
It was strange, the grave tone our
intercourse now invariably assumed. We might
have been three old people, who had long fought with
and endured the crosses of the world, instead of two
young men and a young woman, in the very dawn of life.
“Circumstances have fixed my
plans since I saw you yesterday. I am going
to reside for a time with my cousins, the Brithwoods.
It seems best for me. Lady Caroline is very
kind, and I am so lonely.”
She said this not in any complaint,
but as if accepting the fact, and making up her mind
to endure it. A little more fragmentary conversation
passed, chiefly between herself and me John
uttered scarcely a word. He sat by the window,
half shading his face with his hand. Under that
covert, the gaze which incessantly followed and dwelt
on her face oh, had she seen it!
The moments narrowed. Would
he say what he had intended, concerning his position
in the world? Had she guessed or learned anything,
or were we to her simply Mr. Halifax and Mr. Fletcher two
“gentlemen” of Norton Bury? It appeared
so.
“This is not a very long good-bye,
I trust?” said she to me, with something more
than courtesy. “I shall remain at the Mythe
House some weeks, I believe. How long do you
purpose staying at Enderley?”
I was uncertain.
“But your home is in Norton
Bury? I hope I trust, you will allow
my cousin to express in his own house his thanks and
mine for your great kindness during my trouble?”
Neither of us answered. Miss
March looked surprised hurt nay,
displeased; then her eye, resting on John, lost its
haughtiness, and became humble and sweet.
“Mr. Halifax, I know nothing
of my cousin, and I do know you. Will you tell
me candidly, as I know you will whether
there is anything in Mr. Brithwood which you think
unworthy of your acquaintance?”
“He would think me unworthy
of his,” was the low, firm answer.
Miss March smiled incredulously.
“Because you are not very rich? What can
that signify? It is enough for me that my friends
are gentlemen.”
“Mr. Brithwood, and many others,
would not allow my claim to that title.”
Astonished nay, somewhat
more than astonished the young gentlewoman
drew back a little. “I do not quite understand
you.”
“Let me explain, then;”
and her involuntary gesture seeming to have brought
back all honest dignity and manly pride, he faced her,
once more himself. “It is right, Miss
March, that you should know who and what I am, to
whom you are giving the honour of your kindness.
Perhaps you ought to have known before; but here at
Enderley we seemed to be equals friends.”
“I have indeed felt it so.”
“Then you will the sooner pardon
my not telling you what you never asked,
and I was only too ready to forget that
we are not equals that is, society would
not regard us as such and I doubt if even
you yourself would wish us to be friends.”
“Why not?”
“Because you are a gentlewoman and I am a tradesman.”
The news was evidently a shock to
her it could not but be, reared as she
had been. She sat the eye-lashes dropping
over her flushed cheeks perfectly silent.
John’s voice grew firmer prouder no
hesitation now.
“My calling is, as you will
soon hear at Norton Bury, that of a tanner. I
am apprentice to Abel Fletcher Phineas’s
father.”
“Mr. Fletcher!” She looked
up at me a mingled look of kindliness and
pain.
“Ay, Phineas is a little less
beneath your notice than I am. He is rich he
has been well educated; I have had to educate myself.
I came to Norton Bury six years ago a
beggar-boy. No, not quite that for
I never begged! I either worked or starved.”
The earnestness, the passion of his
tone, made Miss March lift her eyes, but they fell
again.
“Yes, Phineas found me in an
alley starving. We stood in the rain,
opposite the mayor’s house. A little girl you
know her, Miss March came to the door,
and threw out to me a bit of bread.”
Now indeed she started. “You was
that you?”
“It was I.”
John paused, and his whole manner
changed into softness, as he resumed. “I
never forgot that little girl. Many a time, when
I was inclined to do wrong, she kept me right the
remembrance of her sweet face and her kindness.”
That face was pressed down against the sofa where
she sat. I think
Miss March was all but weeping.
John continued.
“I am glad to have met her again glad
to have been able to do her some small good in return
for the infinite good she once did me. I shall
bid her farewell now at once and altogether.”
A quick, involuntary turn of the hidden face asked
him “Why?”
“Because,” John answered,
“the world says we are not equals, and it would
neither be for Miss March’s honour nor mine did
I try to force upon it the truth which
I may prove openly one day that we are
equals.”
Miss March looked up at him it
were hard to say with what expression, of pleasure,
or pride, or simple astonishment; perhaps a mingling
of all then her eyelids fell. She
silently offered her hand, first to me and then to
John. Whether she meant it as friendliness, or
as a mere ceremony of adieu, I cannot tell.
John took it as the latter, and rose.
His hand was on the door but he could not
go.
“Miss March,” he said,
“perhaps I may never see you again at
least, never as now. Let me look once more at
that wrist which was hurt.”
Her left arm was hanging over the
sofa the scar being visible enough.
John took the hand, and held it firmly.
“Poor little hand blessed
little hand! May God bless it evermore.”
Suddenly he pressed his lips to the
place where the wound had been a kiss long
and close, such as only a lover’s kiss could
be. Surely she must have felt it known
it.
A moment afterward, he was gone.
That day Miss March departed, and we remained at Enderley
alone.