For nearly three years Lady Caroline
lived in our house if that miserable existence
of hers could be called living bedridden,
fallen into second childhood:
“Pleased with
a rattle, tickled with a straw;”
oblivious to both past and present,
recognising none of us, and taking no notice of anybody,
except now and then of Edwin’s little daughter,
baby Louise.
We knew that all our neighbours talked
us over, making far more than a nine days’ wonder
of the “very extraordinary conduct” of
Mr. and Mrs. Halifax. That even good Lady Oldtower
hesitated a little before she suffered her tribe of
fair daughters to visit under the same roof where
lay, quite out of the way, that poor wreck of womanhood,
which would hardly have tainted any woman now.
But in process of time the gossip ceased of itself;
and when, one summer day, a small decent funeral moved
out of our garden gate to Enderley churchyard, all
the comment was:
“Oh! is she dead? What
a relief it must be! How very kind of Mr. and
Mrs. Halifax!”
Yes, she was dead, and had “made
no sign,” either of repentance, grief, or gratitude.
Unless one could consider as such a moment’s
lightening before death, which Maud declared she saw
in her Maud, who had tended her with a
devotedness which neither father nor mother forbade,
believing that a woman cannot too soon learn womanhood’s
best “mission” usefulness,
tenderness, and charity. Miss Halifax was certain
that a few minutes before the last minute, she saw
a gleam of sense in the filmy eyes, and stooping down,
had caught some feeble murmur about “William poor
William!”
She did not tell me this; she spoke
of it to no one but her mother, and to her briefly.
So the wretched life, once beautiful and loveful,
was now ended, or perhaps born in some new sphere
to begin again its struggle after the highest beauty,
the only perfect love. What are we that we should
place limits to the infinite mercy of the Lord and
Giver of Life, unto whom all life returns?
We buried her and left her poor Lady Caroline!
No one interfered with us, and we
appealed to no one. In truth, there was no one
unto whom we could appeal. Lord Luxmore, immediately
after his father’s funeral, had disappeared,
whither, no one knew except his solicitor; who treated
with and entirely satisfied the host of creditors,
and into whose hands the sole debtor, John Halifax,
paid his yearly rent. Therewith, he wrote several
times to Lord Luxmore; but the letters were simply
acknowledged through the lawyer: never answered.
Whether in any of them John alluded to Lady Caroline
I do not know; but I rather think not, as it would
have served no purpose and only inflicted pain.
No doubt, her brother had long since believed her
dead, as we and the world had done.
In that same world one man, even a
nobleman, is of little account. Lord Ravenel
sank in its wide waste of waters, and they closed over
him. Whether he were drowned or saved was of
small moment to any one. He was soon forgotten everywhere
except at Beechwood; and sometimes it seemed as if
he were even forgotten there. Save that in our
family we found it hard to learn this easy, convenient
habit to forget.
Hard, though seven years had passed
since we saw Guy’s merry face, to avoid missing
it keenly still. The mother, as her years crept
on, oftentimes wearied for him with a yearning that
could not be told. The father, as Edwin became
engrossed in his own affairs, and Walter’s undecided
temperament kept him a boy long after boyhood, often
seemed to look round vaguely for an eldest son’s
young strength to lean upon, often said anxiously,
“I wish Guy were at home.”
Yet still there was no hint of his
coming; better he never came at all than came against
his will, or came to meet the least pain, the shadow
of disgrace. And he was contented and prosperous
in the western world, leading an active and useful
life, earning an honourable name. He had taken
a partner, he told us; there was real friendship between
them, and they were doing well; perhaps might make,
in a few years, one of those rapid fortunes which
clever men of business do make in America, and did
especially at that time.
He was also eager and earnest upon
other and higher cares than mere business; entered
warmly into his father’s sympathy about many
political measures now occupying men’s minds.
A great number of comparative facts concerning the
factory children in England and America; a mass of
evidence used by Mr. Fowell Buxton in his arguments
for the abolition of slavery; and many other things,
originated in the impulsive activity, now settled
into mature manly energy, of Mr. Guy Halifax, of Boston,
U.S. “our Guy.”
“The lad is making a stir in
the world,” said his father one day, when we
had read his last letter. “I shall not
wonder if when he comes home a deputation from his
native Norton Bury were to appear, requesting him
to accept the honour of representing them in Parliament.
He would suit them at least, as regards
the canvassing and the ladies a great deal
better than his old father eh, love?”
Mrs. Halifax smiled, rather unwillingly,
for her husband referred to a subject which had cost
her some pain at the time. After the Reform
Bill passed, many of our neighbours, who had long desired
that one of John’s high character, practical
knowledge, and influence in the town, should be its
M.P., and were aware that his sole objection to entering
the House was the said question of Reform, urged him
very earnestly to stand for Norton Bury.
To everybody’s surprise, and
none more than our own, he refused.
Publicly he assigned no reason for
this except his conviction that he could not discharge
as he ought, and as he would once have done, duties
which he held so sacred and indispensable. His
letter, brief and simple, thanking his “good
neighbours,” and wishing them “a younger
and worthier” member, might be found in some
old file of the Norton Bury Herald still. Even
the Norton Bury Mercury, in reprinting it, commented
on its touching honesty and brevity, and concluding
his political career was ended with it condescended
to bestow on Mr. Halifax the usual obituary line
“We could have
better spared a better man.”
When his family, and even his wife,
reasoned with him, knowing that to enter Parliament
had long been his thought, nay, his desire, and perhaps
herself taking a natural pride in the idea of seeing
M.P. M.P. of a new and unbribed House of
Commons after his well-beloved name; to
us and to her he gave no clearer motive for his refusal
than to the electors of Norton Bury.
“But you are not old, John,”
I argued with him one day; “you possess to the
full the mens sana in corpore sano.
No man can be more fitted than yourself to serve
his country, as you used to say it might be served,
and you yourself might serve it, after Reform was gained.”
He smiled, and jocularly thanked me for my good opinion.
“Nay, such service is almost
your duty; you yourself once thought so too.
Why have you changed your mind?”
“I have not changed my mind,
but circumstances have changed my actions. As
for duty duty begins at home. Believe
me, I have thought well over the subject. Brother,
we will not refer to it again.”
I saw that something in the matter
pained him, and obeyed his wish. Even when, a
few days after, perhaps as some compensation for the
mother’s disappointment, he gave this hint of
Guy’s taking his place and entering Parliament
in his room.
For any one nay, his own
son to take John’s place, to stand
in John’s room, was not a pleasant thought,
even in jest; we let it pass by unanswered, and John
himself did not recur to it.
Thus time went on, placidly enough;
the father and mother changed into grandfather and
grandmother, and little Maud into Auntie Maud.
She bore her new honours and fulfilled her new duties
with great delight and success. She had altered
much of late years: at twenty was as old as
many a woman of thirty in all the advantages
of age. She was sensible, active, resolute, and
wise; sometimes thoughtful, or troubled with fits
of what in any less wholesome temperament would have
been melancholy; but as it was, her humours only betrayed
themselves in some slight restlessness or irritability,
easily soothed by a few tender words or a rush out
to Edwin’s, and a peaceful coming back to that
happy home, whose principal happiness she knew that
she, the only daughter, made.
She more than once had unexceptionable
chances of quitting it; for Miss Halifax possessed
plenty of attractions, both outwardly and inwardly,
to say nothing of her not inconsiderable fortune.
But she refused all offers, and to the best of our
knowledge was a free-hearted damsel still. Her
father and mother seemed rather glad of this than
otherwise. They would not have denied her any
happiness she wished for; still it was evidently a
relief to them that she was slow in choosing it; slow
in quitting their arms of love to risk a love untried.
Sometimes, such is the weakness of parental humanity,
I verily believe they looked forward with complacency
to the possibility of her remaining always Miss Halifax.
I remember one day, when Lady Oldtower was suggesting half
jest, half earnest “better any marriage
than no marriage at all;” Maud’s father
replied, very seriously
“Better no marriage, than any
marriage that is less than the best.”
“How do you mean?”
“I believe,” he said,
smiling, “that somewhere in the world every man
has his right wife, every woman her right husband.
If my Maud’s come he shall have her.
If not, I shall be well content to see her a happy
old maid.”
Thus after many storms, came this
lull in our lives; a season of busy yet monotonous
calm, I have heard say that peace itself,
to be perfect, ought to be monotonous. We had
enough of it to satisfy our daily need; we looked
forward to more of it in time to come, when Guy should
be at home, when we should see safely secured the futures
of all the children, and for ourselves a green old
age,
“Journeying in
long serenity away.”
A time of heavenly calm which
as I look back upon it grows heavenlier still!
Soft summer days and autumn afternoons, spent under
the beech-wood, or on the Flat. Quiet winter
evenings, all to ourselves Maud and her
mother working, Walter drawing. The father sitting
with his back to the lamp its light making
a radiance over his brow and white bald crown, and
as it thrilled through the curls behind, restoring
somewhat of the youthful colour to his fading hair.
Nay, the old youthful ring of his voice I caught at
times, when he found something funny in his book and
read it out loud to us; or laying it down, sat talking
as he liked to talk about things speculative, philosophical,
or poetical things which he had necessarily
let slip in the hurry and press of his business life,
in the burthen and heat of the day; but which now,
as the cool shadows of evening were drawing on, assumed
a beauty and a nearness, and were again caught up by
him precious as the dreams of his youth.
Happy, happy time sunshiny
summer, peaceful winter we marked neither
as they passed; but now we hold both in
a sacredness inexpressible a foretaste
of that Land where there is neither summer nor winter,
neither days nor years.
The first break in our repose came
early in the new year. There had been no Christmas
letter from Guy, and he never once in all his wanderings
had missed writing home at Christmas time. When
the usual monthly mail came in, and no word from him a
second month, and yet nothing, we began to wonder
about his omission less openly to cease
scolding him for his carelessness. Though over
and over again we still eagerly brought up instances
of the latter “Guy is such a thoughtless
boy about his correspondence.”
Gradually, as his mother’s cheek
grew paler, and his father more anxious-eyed, more
compulsorily cheerful, we gave up discussing publicly
the many excellent reasons why no letters should come
from Guy. We had written, as usual, by every
mail. By the last by the March mail,
I saw that in addition to the usual packet for Mr.
Guy Halifax his father, taking another
precautionary measure, had written in business form
to “Messrs. Guy Halifax and Co.”
Guy had always, “just like his carelessness!”
omitted to give the name of his partner; but addressed
thus, in case of any sudden journey or illness of Guy’s,
the partner, whoever he was, would be sure to write.
In May nay, it was on May
day, I remember, for we were down in the mill-meadows
with Louise and her little ones going a-maying there
came in the American mail.
It brought a large packet all
our letters of this year sent back again, directed
in a strange hand, to “John Halifax, Esquire,
Beechwood,” with the annotation, “By Mr.
Guy Halifax’s desire.”
Among the rest though the
sickening sight of them had blinded even his mother
at first, so that her eye did not catch it, was one
that explained most satisfactorily explained,
we said the reason they were thus returned.
It was a few lines from Guy himself, stating that
unexpected good fortune had made him determine to come
home at once. If circumstances thwarted this
intention, he would write without fail; otherwise
he should most likely sail by an American merchantman the
“Stars-and-Stripes.”
“Then he is coming home. On his way home!”
And the mother, as with one shaking
hand she held fast the letter, with the other steadied
herself by the rail of John’s desk I
guessed now why he had ordered all the letters to
be brought first to his counting-house. “When
do you think we shall see Guy?”
At thought of that happy sight, her
bravery broke down. She wept heartily and long.
John sat still, leaning over the front
of his desk. By his sigh, deep and glad, one
could tell what a load was lifted off the father’s
heart at the prospect of his son’s return.
“The liners are only a month
in sailing; but this is a barque most likely, which
takes longer time. Love, show me the date of
the boy’s letter.”
She looked for it herself. It was in January!
The sudden fall from certainty to
uncertainty the wild clutch at that which
hardly seemed a real joy until seen fading down to
a mere hope, a chance, a possibility who
has not known all this?
I remember how we all stood, mute
and panic-struck, in the dark little counting-house.
I remember seeing Louise, with her children in the
door-way, trying to hush their laughing, and whispering
to them something about “poor Uncle Guy.”
John was the first to grasp the unspoken
dread, and show that it was less than at first appeared.
“We ought to have had this letter
two months ago; this shows how often delays occur we
ought not to be surprised or uneasy at anything.
Guy does not say when the ship was to sail she
may be on her voyage still. If he had but given
the name of her owners! But I can write to Lloyd’s
and find out everything. Cheer up, mother.
Please God, you shall have that wandering, heedless
boy of yours back before long.”
He replaced the letters in their enclosure held
a general consultation, into which he threw a passing
gleam of faint gaiety, as to whether being ours we
had a right to burn them, or whether having passed
through the post-office they were not the writer’s
but the owner’s property, and Guy could claim
them, with all their useless news, on his arrival
in England. This was finally decided, and the
mother, with faint smile, declared that nobody should
touch them; she would put them under lock and key
“till Guy came home.”
Then she took her husband’s
arm; and the rest of us followed them as they walked
slowly up the hill to Beechwood.
But after that day Mrs. Halifax’s
strength decayed. Not suddenly, scarcely perceptibly;
not with any outward complaint, except what she jested
over as “the natural weakness of old age;”
but there was an evident change. Week by week
her long walks shortened; she gave up her village
school to me; and though she went about the house still
and insisted on keeping the keys, gradually, “just
for the sake of practice,” the domestic surveillance
fell into the hands of Maud.
An answer arrived from Lloyd’s:
the “Stars-and-Stripes” was an American
vessel, probably of small tonnage and importance, was
the under-writers knew nothing of it.
More delay more suspense.
The summer days came but not Guy.
No news of him not a word not
a line.
His father wrote to America pursuing
inquiries in all directions. At last some tangible
clue was caught. The “Stars-and-Stripes”
had sailed, had been spoken with about the Windward
Isles and never heard of afterwards.
Still, there was a hope. John
told the hope first, before he ventured to speak of
the missing ship, and even then had to break the news
gently, for the mother had grown frail and weak, and
could not bear things as she used to do. She
clung as if they had been words of life or death to
the ship-owner’s postscript “that
they had no recollection of the name of Halifax; there
might have been such a gentleman on board they
could not say. But it was not probable; for the
‘Stars-and-Stripes’ was a trading vessel,
and had not good accommodation for passengers.”
Then came week after week I
know not how they went by one never does,
afterwards. At the time they were frightfully
vivid, hour by hour; we rose each morning, sure that
some hope would come in the course of the day; we
went to bed at night, heavily, as if there were no
such thing as hope in the world. Gradually,
and I think that was the worst consciousness of all,
our life of suspense became perfectly natural; and
everything in and about the house went on as usual,
just as though we knew quite well what
the Almighty Father alone knew! where our
poor lad was, and what had become of him. Or
rather, as if we had settled in the certainty, which
perhaps the end of our own lives alone would bring
us, that he had slipped out of life altogether, and
there was no such being as Guy Halifax under this
pitiless sun.
The mother’s heart was breaking.
She made no moan, but we saw it in her face.
One morning it was the morning after John’s
birthday, which we had made a feint of keeping, with
Grace Oldtower, the two little grandchildren, Edwin
and Louise she was absent at breakfast and
dinner; she had not slept well, and was too tired to
rise. Many days following it happened the same;
with the same faint excuse, or with no excuse at all.
How we missed her about the house! ay,
changed as she had been. How her husband wandered
about, ghost-like, from room to room! could
not rest anywhere, or do anything. Finally, he
left our company altogether, and during the hours
that he was at home rarely quitted for more than a
few minutes the quiet bed-chamber, where, every time
his foot entered it, the poor pale face looked up and
smiled.
Ay, smiled; for I noticed, as many
another may have done in similar cases, that when
her physical health definitely gave way, her mental
health returned. The heavy burthen was lighter;
she grew more cheerful, more patient; seemed to submit
herself to the Almighty will, whatever it might be.
As she lay on her sofa in the study, where one or
two evenings John carried her down, almost as easily
as he used to carry little Muriel, his wife would
rest content with her hand in his, listening to his
reading, or quietly looking at him, as though her lost
son’s face, which a few weeks since she said
haunted her continually, were now forgotten in his
father’s. Perhaps she thought the one she
should soon see while the other
“Phineas,” she whispered
one day, when I was putting a shawl over her feet,
or doing some other trifle that she thanked me for, “Phineas,
if anything happens to me, you will comfort John!”
Then first I began seriously to contemplate
a possibility, hitherto as impossible and undreamed
of as that the moon should drop out of the height
of heaven What would the house be without
the mother?
Her children never suspected this,
I saw; but they were young. For her husband
I could not understand John.
He, so quick-sighted; he who meeting any sorrow looked
steadily up at the Hand that smote him, knowing neither
the coward’s dread nor the unbeliever’s
disguise of pain surely he must see what
was impending. Yet he was as calm as if he saw
it not. Calm, as no man could be contemplating
the supreme parting between two who nearly all their
lives had been not two, but one flesh.
Yet I had once heard him say that
a great love, and only that, makes parting easy.
Could it be that this love of his, which had clasped
his wife so firmly, faithfully, and long, fearlessly
clasped her still, by its own perfectness assured
of its immortality?
But all the while his human love clung
about her, showing itself in a thousand forms of watchful
tenderness. And hers clung to him, closely,
dependently; she let herself be taken care of, ruled
and guided, as if with him she found helplessness
restful and submission sweet. Many a little
outward fondness, that when people have been long married
naturally drops into disuse, was revived again; he
would bring her flowers out of the garden, or new
books from the town; and many a time, when no one
noticed, I have seen him stoop and press his lips upon
the faded hand, where the wedding-ring hung so loosely; his
own for so many years, his own till the dust claimed
it, that well-beloved hand!
Ay, he was right. Loss, affliction,
death itself, are powerless in the presence of such
a love as theirs.
It was already the middle of July.
From January to July six months!
Our neighbours without and there were many
who felt for us never asked now, “Is
there any news of Mr. Guy?” Even pretty Grace
Oldtower pretty still, but youthful no longer only
lifted her eyes inquiringly as she crossed our doorway,
and dropped them again with a hopeless sigh.
She had loved us all, faithfully and well, for a great
many years.
One night, when Miss Oldtower had
just gone home after staying with us the whole day Maud
and I sat in the study by ourselves, where we generally
sat now. The father spent all his evenings up-stairs.
We could hear his step overhead as he crossed the
room or opened the window, then drew his chair back
to its constant place by his wife’s bedside.
Sometimes there was a faint murmur of reading or talk;
then long silence.
Maud and I sat in silence too.
She had her own thoughts I mine.
Perhaps they were often one and the same: perhaps for
youth is youth after all they may have
diverged widely. Hers were deep, absorbed thoughts,
at any rate, travelling fast fast as her
needle travelled; for she had imperceptibly fallen
into her mother’s ways and her mother’s
work.
We had the lamp lit, but the windows
were wide open; and through the sultry summer night
we could hear the trickle of the stream and the rustle
of the leaves in the beech-wood. We sat very
still, waiting for nothing, expecting nothing; in
the dull patience which always fell upon us about
this hour the hour before bed-time, when
nothing more was to be looked for but how best to
meet another dreary day.
“Maud, was that the click of the front gate
swinging?”
“No, I told Walter to lock it
before he went to bed. Last night it disturbed
my mother.”
Again silence. So deep that
the maid’s opening the door made us both start.
“Miss Halifax there’s
a gentleman wanting to see Miss Halifax.”
Maud sprung up in her chair, breathless.
“Any one you know, is it?”
“No, Miss.”
“Show the gentleman in.”
He stood already in the doorway, tall,
brown, bearded. Maud just glanced at him, then
rose, bending stiffly, after the manner of Miss Halifax
of Beechwood.
“Will you be seated? My father ”
“Maud, don’t you know me? Where’s
my mother? I am Guy.”