After Louie’s wedding Henrietta
went to stay with an aunt, her father’s eldest
sister, almost a generation older than he was.
She lived in a little white house in the country,
with a green verandah and French windows. She
was a kind, nice old lady, not well off, a humble
great-aunt to the whole village. Children continually
came to eat her mulberries; girls were found places;
sick people were sent jelly, and there was always
a great deal of sewing and knitting for poor friends.
She did her best to make the visit
pass cheerfully; she had some little scheme of pleasure
for each day, and so many people came and went that,
though not exciting, the life could not possibly be
called dull.
Henrietta did not know whether Mrs.
Symons had mentioned her trouble to her aunt; she
hoped not. Now that the first shock was over,
she had become sensitive on the subject, and did not
wish to speak about it. From a little speech
her aunt made, it is possible that Mrs. Symons had
said something.
One day as they sat talking comfortably
and confidentially over the fire, the conversation
turned on her aunt’s past days. She had
been left motherless, the eldest of a large family,
when she was nineteen or twenty. It was evidently
her duty to devote herself to the younger ones, and
when a man presented himself whom she loved and by
whom she was loved, she felt that she could not be
spared from home.
Henrietta saw that she was bracing
herself to say something. At last out it came:
“You know, my dear, I think
in spite of I mean that there are many
things besides though when one has hoped still
life can be very happy, very peaceful, without.
Why, there is this garden, and there are those three
darling little children next door.”
Henrietta knew that this unanalysable
sentence was meant to comfort her. She felt grateful,
but she was not comforted. Her aunt’s life
was the sweetest and happiest possible for old age,
but could she at twenty settle down to devising treats
for other people’s children, or sewing garments
for the poor? It made her feel sick and dismal
to think of it. Besides, their circumstances
were not similar. Her aunt, fortified by the
spirit of self-sacrifice, had resigned what she loved,
but she had the reward of being the most necessary
member of her circle. Henrietta had had no scope
for self-sacrifice, for she had never had anything
to give up. In fact she envied her aunt, for
she realized now that Mr. Dockerell could never have
cared for her. And far from being the most necessary
member of her family, her difficulty was to squeeze
into a place at all.
The visit came to an end. She
went home, and regular life began again. Since
one ordinary young man had been attracted to her when
she was twenty, there seemed no reason why other ordinary
men should not continue to be attracted. As he
had been in love with marrying rather than with her,
so she had been in love with being loved rather than
with him. She would have accepted almost any
pleasant young man, provided he had had the supreme
merit of caring for her. But the inscrutable fate
which rules these matters, decreed that it was not
to be. No other suitor presented himself.
For one thing, she went to fewer parties
now. After Louie’s marriage, Mrs. Symons,
who had worked hard in the good cause of finding husbands,
began to flag. Henrietta was not so gratifying
to take out as Louie had been, particularly as her
complexion went off early, and without her complexion
she had nothing to fall back on. So Mrs. Symons
gave herself up to the luxury of bad health, and said
she could not stand late hours. When Henrietta
did go out, her experience made her feel that she was
unlikely to please; and though no one can define what
produces attractiveness, it is safe to say that one
of the most necessary elements is to believe oneself
attractive.
Mr. Symons had not hitherto taken
great interest in his daughters, but when Minna and
Louie were married, he became fonder of them.
He was one of those men whose good opinion of a woman
is much strengthened if confirmed by another man.
His daughters’ husbands had confirmed his opinion
in the most satisfactory way by marrying them, whereas
his good opinion of Henrietta, far from being confirmed,
had been rather weakened. Minna and Louie’s
virtues, husbands, and houses were often extolled
now, and there was nothing to extol in her. Henrietta
felt this continually. Her parents did not speak
to her of her misfortunes; she was left alone, which
is perhaps what most girls would have liked best.
Not so Henrietta.
The three years after Louie’s
marriage were the most miserable of Henrietta’s
life. If she did not go out to parties, what was
she to do? The housekeeping? The housekeeping,
as in many cases, was not nearly enough to provide
her mother with occupation. It certainly could
not be divided into occupation for two. Nursing
her mother? Her mother much preferred that Ellen,
on whom she had become very dependent, should do what
was necessary, and for companionship she had all she
wanted in her husband. He was away for several
hours in the day however, and during his absence Henrietta
did drive out with her mother, read to her, and sit
with her, and as they were so much together and shared
the small events of the country town, they were to
a certain extent drawn together. But Mrs. Symons
always treated Henrietta de haut en bas, and
snubbed her when she thought necessary, as if she had
been a child of ten, so that Henrietta was constrained
and a little timid with her. There was the suggestion
of a feeling that Mrs. Symons was to be pitied for
having Henrietta still on her hands. If Henrietta
had refused to be snubbed, there would have been none
of that suggestion. Evelyn was still away at
school. There were a certain number of girls of
Henrietta’s age whom she saw from time to time,
but as her mother did not wish to be disturbed by
entertaining, they were not asked to the house, and
therefore did not ask Henrietta to theirs. Besides,
she was sensitive, thinking, truly, that they were
discussing her misfortune, and did not want to see
them.
In addition to the poignancy of disappointment,
of present dulness and aimlessness, Henrietta realized
forcibly, though perhaps not forcibly enough for the
truth, that the years between eighteen and thirty were
her marrying years, which, slowly as they passed from
the point of view of her happiness, went only too
fast, when she considered that once gone they could
never come back, and that as they fled, they took her
chances with them.
Fifty years ago the large majority
of the girls of her class married early, and the years
of home life after school were arranged on the supposition
that they were a short period of preparation for marriage.
It did not matter to Minna and Louie that they had
no interests to fill their days, that their life had
been nothing but parties and intervals of waiting
for parties, because it had only lasted four or five
years. It had done what it was intended to do,
it had settled them very comfortably with husbands.
But with Henrietta, the condition which was meant
to be temporary, seemed spreading itself out to be
permanent, and with the parties taken away, she was
hard put to it to fill up her days. She longed
inexpressibly for school, for its restrictions, its
monotony and variety. And to think that when
she had the luck to be there, she had counted the
days to being a young lady. When she remembered
how she had almost wept at Miss Arundel’s description
of Joan of Arc, her mouth watered for lessons.
As for Miss Arundel herself, she hungered and thirsted
after her.
At last she had a happy thought; she
decided that she would read Italian, read Dante.
Miss Arundel had taught her Italian, and she would
write to Miss Arundel, and ask her to recommend a good
translation. She remembered that Miss Arundel
and Mrs. Marston had occasionally had favourite old
pupils to stay with them. She imagined how one
letter might lead to another, and how at last Miss
Arundel might invite her to stay too. She wrote
her letter with great care and great delight, constantly
changing her words, for none seemed good enough for
Miss Arundel, and making a fair copy, as if it were
an exercise to be sent up for correction.
Miss Arundel received the letter,
read it through, came to the signature, and could
not for the life of her remember who Henrietta Symons
was. So many girls had passed through her hands,
and she lived in the present rather than the past.
A teacher was ill, she was very busy, the letter slipped
her memory. One evening it came into her head,
and she asked her sister, “By the by, who was
Henrietta Symons?”
“I recollect the name perfectly,”
said Mrs. Marston. “Let me see; yes, now
I know. There were three of them, one was Minnie,
I believe, and I think Etta had a bad headache at
the picnic. It was a blazing day that year, the
hottest I ever remember, and I had to come back early
with her.”
“Of course; I remember now,”
said Miss Arundel. “A girl with very marked
eyebrows.” And she wrote back a postcard,
“Tr. of D.’s D. C. Carey, 2 vols.,
Ward and Linsell. M. Arundel.”
The postcard made Henrietta inclined
to back out of Dante. But by this time she had
arranged to read with a neighbour, Carrie Bostock,
so she had to make a start. They did start, but
as they neither understood the Italian, nor the translation,
nor the notes, they found continual excuses for not
reading, till Carrie boldly suggested “I Promessi
Sposi,” which went much better. They
did not read for long, however, for Carrie became
engaged, it seemed to Henrietta that everybody she
knew was becoming engaged, and Carrie considered her
engagement an occupation which gave her no time for
anything else, certainly no time for Italian.
Henrietta found she did not read by
herself. The two years away from school made
it difficult to start. Perhaps it may seem strange
that a girl who had been so eager at school, should
not care to work by herself at home. But when
there are no competitors and no Miss Arundel, work
loses much of its zest for everyone except the real
student, who is rarely to be found among men, still
more rarely among women. And the last thing Henrietta
would ever be was unusual.
Clever, interesting schoolgirls are
not at all uncommon, though not so general as clever,
interesting children. But there are few who remain
clever and interesting when they grow up. Uninspiring
surroundings, and contact with life, or mere accumulation
of years, take something away. Or perhaps it
simply is that when they are grown up they are judged
by a more severe standard. Miss Arundel had been
disappointed again and again. But she would not
have been surprised that Henrietta let everything
go, for she had always observed in her an unfortunate
strain of weakness.
Besides being weak, Henrietta was
always affected by the people she was with, and the
atmosphere of home life was not encouraging to study.
“Reading Italian, my dear?” her mother
would say. “Oh, can’t you find anything
better to do than that? Surely there must be some
mending;” while her father advised her, through
her mother, “not to become too clever; it was
a great pity for a girl to get too clever.”
After all, there seemed no earthly
reason why she should read Italian; it gave no pleasure
to herself or to anyone else. So she spent most
of the long leisure hours sitting by the window and
thinking. She often said to herself the verse
of a poem then just published by Christina Rossetti.
She had seen it on a visit, copied it out, and learned
it:
“Downstairs I laugh
and sport and jest with all,
But in my
solitary room above
I turn my face in silence
to the wall:
My heart
is breaking for a little love.”
It did not quite apply to Henrietta,
for she was not sporting and jesting downstairs with
anyone, but that verse was the greatest comfort to
her of those dreary years. The writer must
have been through it all, she thought; she knows what
it is. Not to be alone, to have someone, though
an unknown one, who could share it, lightened her
burden, when she was in a mood that it should be lightened.
She made up verses too, and wrote
them in a pretty album she bought for the purpose.
They relieved her heart a little at any
rate it was a distraction to think of the rhymes.
She would have shown them to Carrie, if she had had
the slightest encouragement, but as Carrie gave no
encouragement, there was no one to see them.
“While Nature op’ed
her lavish hand
And fairest flowers
displayed,
’Twas his to taste
of sunny joys,
’Twas mine to
sit in shade.
“Oh, talk not to me
of a lasting devotion!
It shrivels, it ceases,
it fades and it dies.
In the heart of a man
’tis a fleeting emotion;
Alas, in a woman eternal
it lies!”
A poet would have said that anyone
capable of writing that was incapable of feeling,
but he would have been wrong.
Sometimes Henrietta used to have a
phantom lover like the phantom friend of her childhood,
but now had she more or less imagination
as a child? she could not bear it.
She imagined the phantom, and then she wanted him
so intensely that she had to forget him. The aspect
of certain days would be connected with some peculiarly
mournful moments. She wondered which was the
most depressing, the dark setting in at four o’clock
and leaving her seven hours of drawing-room fancy work
(for it disturbed her mother if she went to bed before
eleven), or the summer sun that would not go down.
If only some kind stroke of misfortune
had taken away all Mr. Symons’ money. Disagreeable
poverty would have been a great comfort to her.
She would have been forced to make an effort; not
to brood and concentrate herself on her misery.
But Mr. Symons, on the contrary, continued to get
richer, and throughout her fairly long, dull life,
Henrietta was always cursed with her tidy little income.
But interminable as the time seemed,
it passed. It passed, so that reading her old
journal with the record of her happy month, she found
that it had all happened five years ago, and was beginning
to be forgotten. She felt as if it had not happened
to her, but to some ordinary girl who had ordinary
prosperity. At the same time her lot did not
seem so bitter as it had done; she had become used
to it. Though she herself hardly realized it,
and certainly could not have said when the change
had come, she was not now particularly unhappy.
It was an alleviation that her mother was more of
an invalid, so that some of the responsibilities of
the household devolved on her, and her mother leaned
on her a little. She was certainly not the prop
of the house, or the lodestar to which they all turned
for guidance, none of the satisfactory things women
are called in poetry, but she was not such an odd-man-out
as she had been.