Mrs. Jessop’s drawing-room,
ruddy with fire-light, glittering with delicate wax
candle-light; a few women in pale-coloured gauzy dresses,
a few men, sublime in blue coats, gold buttons, yellow
waistcoats, and smiles this was all I noticed
of the scene, which was quite a novel scene to me.
The doctor’s wife had introduced
us formally to all her guests, as the custom then
was, especially in these small cosy supper-parties.
How they greeted us I do not now remember; no doubt,
with a kind of well-bred formal surprise; but society
was generally formal then. My chief recollection
is of Mrs. Jessop’s saying pointedly and aloud,
though with a smile playing under the corners of her
good little mouth:
“Mr. Halifax, it is kind of
you to come; Lady Caroline Brithwood will be delighted.
She longs to make your acquaintance.”
After that everybody began to talk
with extraordinary civility to Mr. Halifax.
For John, he soon took his place among
them, with that modest self-possession which best
becomes youth. Society’s dangerous waters
accordingly became smooth to him, as to a good swimmer
who knows his own strength, trusts it, and struggles
not.
“Mr. Brithwood and Lady Caroline
will be late,” I overheard the hostess say.
“I think I told you that Miss March ”
But here the door was flung open,
and the missing guests announced. John and I
were in the alcove of the window; I heard his breathing
behind me, but I dared not look at or speak to him.
In truth, I was scarcely calmer than he. For
though it must be clearly understood I never was “in
love” with any woman, still the reflected glamour
of those Enderley days had fallen on me. It
often seems now as if I too had passed the golden
gate, and looked far enough into youth’s Eden
to be able ever after to weep with those that wept
without the doors.
No she was not there.
We both sat down. I know not if I was thankful
or sorry.
I had seldom seen the ’squire
or Lady Caroline. He was a portly young man,
pinched in by tight light-coloured garments.
She was a lady rather past her first youth, but very
handsome still, who floated about, leaving a general
impression of pseudo-Greek draperies, gleaming arms
and shoulders, sparkling jewellery, and equally sparkling
smiles. These smiles seemed to fall just as redundantly
upon the family physician, whom by a rare favour for
so, I suppose, it must have been she was
honouring with a visit, as if worthy Dr. Jessop were
the noblest in the land. He, poor man, was all
bows and scrapes and pretty speeches, in the which
came more than the usual amount of references to the
time which had made his fortune, the day when Her Majesty
Queen Charlotte had done him the honour to be graciously
taken ill in passing through Norton Bury. Mrs.
Jessop seemed to wear her honours as hostess to an
earl’s daughter very calmly indeed. She
performed the ordinary courtesies, and then went over
to talk with Mr. Brithwood. In their conversation
I sought in vain the name of Ursula.
So it ended the sickening
expectation which I had read in the lad’s face
all day. He would not see her perhaps
it was best. Yet my heart bled when I looked
at him. But such thoughts could not be indulged
in now, especially as Mrs. Jessop’s quick eyes
seemed often upon him or me, with an expression that
I could not make out at all, save that in such a good
woman, whom Miss March so well loved, could lurk nothing
evil or unkindly.
So I tried to turn my attention to
the Brithwoods. One could not choose but look
at her, this handsome Lady Caroline, whom half Norton
Bury adored, the other half pursed up their lips at
the mention of but these were of the number
she declined to “know.” All that
she did know all that came within her influence,
were irresistibly attracted, for to please seemed
a part of her nature. To-night nearly every one
present stole gradually into the circle round her;
men and women alike charmed by the fascination of
her ripe beauty, her lively manner, her exquisite
smile and laugh.
I wondered what John thought of Lady
Caroline Brithwood. She could not easily see
him, even though her acute glance seemed to take in
everything and everybody in the room. But on
her entrance John had drawn back a little, and our
half-dozen of fellow-guests, who had been conversing
with him, crept shyly out of his way; as if, now the
visible reality appeared, they were aghast at the
great gulf that lay between John Halifax the tanner
and the Brithwoods of the Mythe. A few even
looked askance at our hostess, as though some terrible
judgment must fall upon poor ignorant Mrs. Jessop,
who had dared to amalgamate such opposite ranks.
So it came to pass, that while everybody
gathered round the Brithwoods John and I stood alone,
and half concealed by the window.
Very soon I heard Lady Caroline’s loud whisper;
“Mrs. Jessop, my good friend,
one moment. Where is your ‘jeune heros,’
‘l’homme du peuple?’ I
do not see him. Does he wear clouted shoes and
woollen stockings? Has he a broad face and turned-up
nose, like your ’paysans Anglais’?”
“Judge for yourself, my lady he
stands at your elbow. Mr. Halifax, let me present
you to Lady Caroline Brithwood.”
If Lord Luxmore’s fair daughter
ever looked confounded in her life she certainly did
at this minute.
“Lui? Mon dieu!
Lui!” And her shrug of amazement was stopped,
her half-extended hand drawn back. No, it was
quite impossible to patronise John Halifax.
He bowed gravely, she made a gracious
curtsey; they met on equal terms, a lady and gentleman.
Soon her lively manner returned.
She buckled on her spurs for a new conquest, and
left the already vanquished gentilities of Norton Bury
to amuse themselves as they best might.
“I am enchanted to meet you,
Mr. Halifax; I adore ‘lé peuple.’
Especially” with a sly glance at her
husband, who, with Tory Dr. Jessop, was vehemently
exalting Mr. Pitt and abusing the First Consul, Bonaparte “especially
lé peuple Francais. Me comprenez vous?”
“Madame, je vous comprends.”
Her ladyship looked surprised.
French was not very common among the honest trading
class, or indeed any but the higher classes in England.
“But,” John continued,
“I must dissent from Lady Caroline Brithwood,
if she mingles the English people with ‘lé
peuple Francais.’ They are a very
different class of beings.”
“Ah, ca ira,
ca ira” she laughed, humming
beneath her breath a few notes out of that terrible
song. “But you know French let
us talk in that language; we shall horrify no one
then.”
“I cannot speak it readily; I am chiefly self-taught.”
“The best teaching. Mon
dieu! Truly you are made to be ’un hero’ just
the last touch of grace that a woman’s hand gives had
you ever a woman for your friend? and you
would be complete. But I cannot flatter plain,
blunt honesty for me. You must you
shall be ’l’homme du peuple.’
Were you born such? Who were your parents?”
I saw John hesitate; I knew how rarely
he ever uttered those names written in the old Bible how
infinitely sacred they were to him. Could he
blazon them out now, to gratify this woman’s
idle curiosity?
“Madam,” he said, gravely,
“I was introduced to you simply as John Halifax.
It seems to me that, so long as I do no discredit
to it, the name suffices to the world.”
“Ah I see! I
see!” But he, with his downcast eyes, did not
detect the meaning smile that just flashed in hers
was changed into a tone of soft sympathy. “You
are right; rank is nothing a cold, glittering
marble, with no soul under. Give me the rich
flesh-and-blood life of the people. Liberte fraternité égalité.
I would rather be a gamin in Paris streets than my
brother William at Luxmore Hall.”
Thus talked she, sometimes in French,
sometimes in English, the young man answering little.
She only threw her shining arts abroad the more;
she seemed determined to please. And Nature fitted
her for it. Even if not born an earl’s
daughter, Lady Caroline would have been everywhere
the magic centre of any society wherein she chose to
move. Not that her conversation was brilliant
or deep, but she said the most frivolous things in
a way that made them appear witty; and the grand art,
to charm by appearing charmed, was hers in perfection.
She seemed to float altogether upon and among the
pleasantnesses of life; pain, either endured or inflicted,
was to her an impossibility.
Thus her character struck me on this
first meeting, and thus, after many years, it strikes
me still. I look back upon what she appeared
that evening lovely, gay, attractive in
the zenith of her rich maturity. What her old
age was the world knows, or thinks it knows.
But Heaven may be more merciful I cannot
tell. Whatever is now said of her, I can only
say, “Poor Lady Caroline!”
It must have indicated a grain of
pure gold at the bottom of the gold-seeming dross,
that, from the first moment she saw him, she liked
John Halifax.
They talked a long time. She
drew him out, as a well-bred woman always can draw
out a young man of sense. He looked pleased;
he conversed well. Had he forgotten? No;
the restless wandering of his eyes at the slightest
sound in the room told how impossible it was he should
forget. Yet he comported himself bravely, and
I was proud that Ursula’s kindred should see
him as he was.
“Lady Caroline” (her ladyship
turned, with a slightly bored expression, to her intrusive
hostess), “I fear we must give up all expectation
of our young friend to-night.”
“I told you so. Post-travelling
is very uncertain, and the Bath roads are not good.
Have you ever visited Bath, Mr. Halifax?”
“But she is surely long on the
road,” pursued Mrs. Jessop, rather anxiously.
“What attendants had she?”
“Her own maid, and our man Laplace.
Nay, don’t be alarmed, excellent and faithful
gouvernante! I assure you your fair ex-pupil
is quite safe. The furore about her has considerably
abated since the heiress-hunters at Bath discovered
the melancholy fact that Miss March ”
“Pardon me,” interrupted
the other; “we are among strangers. I assure
you I am quite satisfied about my dear child.”
“What a charming thing is affectionate
fidelity,” observed her ladyship, turning once
more to John, with a sweet, lazy dropping of the eyelids.
The young man only bowed. They
resumed their conversation at least, she
did, talking volubly; satisfied with monosyllabic answers.
It was now almost supper-time held
a glorious hour at Norton Bury parties. People
began to look anxiously to the door.
“Before we adjourn,” said
Lady Caroline, “I must do what it will be difficult
to accomplish after supper;” and for the first
time a sharp, sarcastic tone jarred in her smooth
voice. “I must introduce you especially
to my husband. Mr. Brithwood?”
“Madam.” He lounged
up to her. They were a diverse pair. She,
in her well-preserved beauty, and Gallic artificial
grace he, in his coarse, bloated youth,
coarser and worse than the sensualism of middle age.
“Mr. Brithwood, let me introduce
you to a new friend of mine.”
The ’squire bowed, rather awkwardly;
proving the truth of what Norton Bury often whispered,
that Richard Brithwood was more at home with grooms
than gentlemen.
“He belongs to this your town you
must have heard of him, perhaps met him.”
“I have more than had the pleasure
of meeting Mr. Brithwood, but he has doubtless forgotten
it.”
“By Jove! I have. What might your
name be, sir?”
“John Halifax.”
“What, Halifax the tanner?”
“The same.”
“Phew!” He began a low whistle,
and turned on his heel.
John changed colour a little.
Lady Caroline laughed a thoughtless, amused
laugh, with a pleasant murmur of “Bête!” “Anglais!”
Nevertheless, she whispered to her husband
“Mon ami you forget; I have introduced
you to this gentleman.”
“Gentleman indeed! Pooh! rubbish!
Lady Caroline I’m busy talking.”
“And so are we, most pleasantly.
I only called you as a matter of form, to ratify
my invitation. Mr. Halifax will, I hope, dine
with us next Sunday?”
“The devil he will!”
“Richard you hurt
me!” with a little scream, as she
pushed his rough fingers from her arm, so soft, and
round, and fair.
“Madam, you must be crazy.
The young man is a tradesman a tanner.
Not fit for my society.”
“Precisely; I invite him for my own.”
But the whispers and responses were
alike unheeded by their object. For, at the doorway,
entering with Mrs. Jessop, was a tall girl in deep
mourning. We knew her we both knew
her our dream at Enderley our
Nut-browne Mayde.
John was near to the door their
eyes met. She bowed he returned it.
He was very pale. For Miss March, her face and
neck were all in a glow. Neither spoke, nor
offered more than this passing acknowledgment, and
she moved on.
She came and sat down beside me, accidentally,
I believe; but when she saw me she held out her hand.
We exchanged a word or two her manner
was unaltered; but she spoke hurriedly, and her fingers
had their old nervous twitch. She said this
meeting was to her “unexpected,” but “she
was very glad to see me.”
So she sat, and I looked sideways
at her dropped eyes her forehead with its
coronet of chestnut curls. How would he bear
the sight he of whose heart mine was the
mere faint echo? Yet truly an echo, repeating
with cruel faithfulness every throb.
He kept his position, a little aloof
from the Brithwoods, who were holding a slight altercation though
more of looks than words. John heeded them not.
I was sure, though he had never looked directly towards
us, that he had heard every syllable Miss March said
to me.
The ’squire called across the
room, in a patronising tone: “My good
fellow that is, ahem! I say, young
Halifax?”
“Were you addressing me, Mr. Brithwood?”
“I was. I want a quiet word or two between
ourselves.”
“Certainly.”
They stood face to face. The
one seemed uncomfortable, the other was his natural
self a little graver, perhaps, as if he
felt what was coming, and prepared to meet it, knowing
in whose presence he had to prove himself what
Richard Brithwood, with all his broad acres, could
never be a gentleman.
Few could doubt that fact, who looked
at the two young men, as all were looking now.
“On my soul, it’s awkward I’ll
call at the tan-yard and explain.”
“I had rather you would explain here.”
“Well then, though it’s
a confounded unpleasant thing to say and
I really wish I had not been brought into such a position you’ll
not heed my wife’s nonsense?”
“I do not understand you.”
“Come, it’s no use running
to cover in that way. Let’s be open and
plain. I mean no offence. You may be a
very respectable young man for aught I know, still
rank is rank. Of course Doctor Jessop asks whom
he likes to his house and, by George!
I’m always civil to everybody but
really, in spite of my lady’s likings, I can’t
well invite you to my table!”
“Nor could I humiliate myself
by accepting any such invitation.”
He said the words distinctly, so that
the whole circle might have heard, and was turning
away, when Mr. Brithwood fired up as an
angry man does in a losing game.
“Humiliate yourself! What
do you mean, sir? Wouldn’t you be only
too thankful to crawl into the houses of your betters,
any how, by hook or by crook? Ha! ha!
I know you would. It’s always the way with
you common folk, you rioters, you revolutionists.
By the Lord! I wish you were all hanged.”
The young blood rose fiercely in John’s
cheek, but he restrained himself. “Sir,
I am neither a rioter nor a revolutionist.”
“But you are a tradesman?
You used to drive Fletcher’s cart of skins.”
“I did.”
“And are you not I
remember you now the very lad, the tanner’s
lad, that once pulled us ashore from the eger Cousin
March and me?”
I heard a quick exclamation beside
me, and saw Ursula listening intently I
had not noticed how intently till now. Her eyes
were fixed on John, waiting for his answer.
It came.
“Your memory is correct; I was that lad.”
“Thank’ee for it too.
Lord! what a jolly life I should have missed!
You got no reward, though. You threw away the
guinea I offered you; come, I’ll make it twenty
guineas to-morrow.”
The insult was too much. “Sir,
you forget that whatever we may have been, to-night
we meet as equals.”
“Equals!”
“As guests in the same house most
certainly for the time being, equals.”
Richard Brithwood stared, literally
dumb with fury. The standers-by were dumb
too, though such fracas were then not uncommon even
in drawing-rooms, and in women’s presence, especially
with men of Mr. Brithwood’s stamp. His
wife seemed quite used to it. She merely shrugged
her shoulders and hummed a note or two of “Ca
ira.” It irritated the husband beyond
all bounds.
“Hold your tongue, my lady.
What, because a ’prentice-lad once saved my
life, and you choose to patronise him as you do many
another vagabond, with your cursed liberty and equality,
am I to have him at my table, and treat him as a gentleman?
By , madam, never!”
He spoke savagely, and loud.
John was silent; he had locked his hands together
convulsively; but it was easy to see that his blood
was at boiling heat, and that, did he once slip the
leash of his passions, it would go hard with Richard
Brithwood.
The latter came up to him with clenched
fist. “Now mark me, you you
vagabond!”
Ursula March crossed the room, and
caught his arm, her eyes gleaming fire.
“Cousin, in my presence this
gentleman shall be treated as a gentleman. He
was kind to my father.”
“Curse your father!”
John’s right hand burst free; he clutched the
savage by the shoulder.
“Be silent. You had better.”
Brithwood shook off the grasp, turned
and struck him; that last fatal insult, which offered
from man to man, in those days, could only be wiped
out with blood.
John staggered. For a moment
he seemed as if he would have sprung on his adversary
and felled him to the ground but he
did it not.
Some one whispered, “He won’t
fight. He is a Quaker.”
“No!” he said, and stood
erect; though he was ghastly pale, and his voice sounded
hoarse and strange “But I am a Christian.
I shall not return blow for blow.”
It was a new doctrine; foreign to
the practice, if familiar to the ear, of Christian
Norton Bury. No one answered him; all stared
at him; one or two sheered off from him with contemptuous
smiles. Then Ursula March stretched out her
friendly hand. John took it, and grew calm in
a moment.
There arose a murmur of “Mr. Brithwood is going.”
“Let him go!” Miss March cried, anger
still glowing in her eyes.
“Not so it is not
right. I will speak to him. May I?”
John softly unclosed her detaining hand, and went
up to Mr. Brithwood. “Sir, there is no
need for you to leave this house I am leaving
it. You and I shall not meet again if I can
help it.”
His proud courtesy, his absolute dignity
and calmness, completely overwhelmed his blustering
adversary; who gazed open-mouthed, while John made
his adieu to his host and to those he knew. The
women gathered round him woman’s
instinct is usually true. Even Lady Caroline,
amid a flutter of regrets, declared she did not believe
there was a man in the universe who would have borne
so charmingly such a “degradation.”
At the word Miss March fired up.
“Madam,” she said, in her impetuous young
voice, “no insult offered to a man can ever degrade
him; the only real degradation is when he degrades
himself.”
John, passing out at the doorway,
caught her words. As he quitted the room no
crowned victor ever wore a look more joyful, more proud.
After a minute we followed him; the
Doctor’s wife and I. But now the pride and
joy had both faded.
“Mrs. Jessop, you see I am right,”
he murmured. “I ought not to have come
here. It is a hard world for such as I. I shall
never conquer it never.”
“Yes you will.”
And Ursula stood by him, with crimsoned cheek, and
eyes no longer flashing, but fearless still.
Mrs. Jessop put her arm round the
young girl. “I also think you need not
dread the world, Mr. Halifax, if you always act as
you did tonight; though I grieve that things should
have happened thus, if only for the sake of this,
my child.”
“Have I done any harm? oh! tell
me, have I done any harm?”
“No!” cried Ursula, with
the old impetuosity kindling anew in every feature
of her noble face. “You have but showed
me what I shall remember all my life that
a Christian only can be a true gentleman.”
She understood him he felt
she did; understood him as, if a man be understood
by one woman in the world, he and she too is
strong, safe, and happy. They grasped hands
once more, and gazed unhesitatingly into each other’s
eyes. All human passion for the time being set
aside, these two recognized each in the other one
aim, one purpose, one faith; something higher than
love, something better than happiness. It must
have been a blessed moment for both.
Mrs. Jessop did not interfere.
She had herself known what true love was, if, as
gossips said, she had kept constant to our worthy doctor
for thirty years. But still she was a prudent
woman, not unused to the world.
“You must go now,” she
said, laying her hand gently on John’s arm.
“I am going. But she what will
she do?”
“Never mind me. Jane will
take care of me,” said Ursula, winding her arms
round her old governess, and leaning her cheek down
on Mrs. Jessop’s shoulder.
We had never seen Miss March show
fondness, that is, caressing fondness, to any one
before. It revealed her in a new light; betraying
the depths there were in her nature; infinite depths
of softness and of love.
John watched her for a minute; a long,
wild, greedy minute, then whispered hoarsely to me,
“I must go.”
We made a hasty adieu, and went out
together into the night the cold, bleak
night, all blast and storm.