“Philistia, be thou glad of me!”
Grandcourt having made up his mind
to marry Miss Harleth, showed a power of adapting
means to ends. During the next fortnight there
was hardly a day on which by some arrangement or other
he did not see her, or prove by emphatic attentions
that she occupied his thoughts. His cousin, Mrs.
Torrington, was now doing the honors of his house,
so that Mrs. Davilow and Gwendolen could be invited
to a large party at Diplow in which there were many
witnesses how the host distinguished the dowerless
beauty, and showed no solicitude about the heiress.
The world I mean Mr. Gascoigne and all
the families worth speaking of within visiting distance
of Pennicote felt an assurance on the subject
which in the rector’s mind converted itself into
a resolution to do his duty by his niece and see that
the settlements were adequate. Indeed the wonder
to him and Mrs. Davilow was that the offer for which
so many suitable occasions presented themselves had
not been already made; and in this wonder Grandcourt
himself was not without a share. When he had
told his resolution to Lush he had thought that the
affair would be concluded more quickly, and to his
own surprise he had repeatedly promised himself in
a morning that he would to-day give Gwendolen the
opportunity of accepting him, and had found in the
evening that the necessary formality was still unaccomplished.
This remarkable fact served to heighten his determination
on another day. He had never admitted to himself
that Gwendolen might refuse him, but heaven
help us all! we are often unable to act
on our certainties; our objection to a contrary issue
(were it possible) is so strong that it rises like
a spectral illusion between us and our certainty; we
are rationally sure that the blind worm can not bite
us mortally, but it would be so intolerable to be
bitten, and the creature has a biting look we
decline to handle it.
He had asked leave to have a beautiful
horse of his brought for Gwendolen to ride. Mrs.
Davilow was to accompany her in the carriage, and
they were to go to Diplow to lunch, Grandcourt conducting
them. It was a fine mid-harvest time, not too
warm for a noonday ride of five miles to be delightful;
the poppies glowed on the borders of the fields, there
was enough breeze to move gently like a social spirit
among the ears of uncut corn, and to wing the shadow
of a cloud across the soft gray downs; here the sheaves
were standing, there the horses were straining their
muscles under the last load from a wide space of stubble,
but everywhere the green pasture made a broader setting
for the corn-fields, and the cattle took their rest
under wide branches. The road lay through a bit
of country where the dairy-farms looked much as they
did in the days of our forefathers where
peace and permanence seemed to find a home away from
the busy change that sent the railway train flying
in the distance.
But the spirit of peace and permanence
did not penetrate poor Mrs. Davilow’s mind so
as to overcome her habit of uneasy foreboding.
Gwendolen and Grandcourt cantering in front of her,
and then slackening their pace to a conversational
walk till the carriage came up with them again, made
a gratifying sight; but it served chiefly to keep up
the conflict of hopes and fears about her daughter’s
lot. Here was an irresistible opportunity for
a lover to speak and put an end to all uncertainties,
and Mrs. Davilow could only hope with trembling that
Gwendolen’s decision would be favorable.
Certainly if Rex’s love had been repugnant to
her, Mr. Grandcourt had the advantage of being in
complete contrast with Rex; and that he had produced
some quite novel impression on her seemed evident
in her marked abstinence from satirical observations,
nay, her total silence about his characteristics,
a silence which Mrs. Davilow did not dare to break.
“Is he a man she would be happy with?” was
a question that inevitably arose in the mother’s
mind. “Well, perhaps as happy as she would
be with any one else or as most other women
are” was the answer with which she
tried to quiet herself; for she could not imagine Gwendolen
under the influence of any feeling which would make
her satisfied in what we traditionally call “mean
circumstances.”
Grandcourt’s own thought was
looking in the same direction: he wanted to have
done with the uncertainty that belonged to his not
having spoken. As to any further uncertainty well,
it was something without any reasonable basis, some
quality in the air which acted as an irritant to his
wishes.
Gwendolen enjoyed the riding, but
her pleasure did not break forth in girlish unpremeditated
chat and laughter as it did on that morning with Rex.
She spoke a little, and even laughed, but with a lightness
as of a far-off echo: for her too there was some
peculiar quality in the air not, she was
sure, any subjugation of her will by Mr. Grandcourt,
and the splendid prospects he meant to offer her; for
Gwendolen desired every one, that dignified gentleman
himself included, to understand that she was going
to do just as she liked, and that they had better
not calculate on her pleasing them. If she chose
to take this husband, she would have him know that
she was not going to renounce her freedom, or according
to her favorite formula, “not going to do as
other women did.”
Grandcourt’s speeches this morning
were, as usual, all of that brief sort which never
fails to make a conversational figure when the speaker
is held important in his circle. Stopping so soon,
they give signs of a suppressed and formidable ability
so say more, and have also the meritorious quality
of allowing lengthiness to others.
“How do you like Criterion’s
paces?” he said, after they had entered the
park and were slacking from a canter to a walk.
“He is delightful to ride.
I should like to have a leap with him, if it would
not frighten mamma. There was a good wide channel
we passed five minutes ago. I should like to
have a gallop back and take it.”
“Pray do. We can take it together.”
“No, thanks. Mamma is so timid if
she saw me it might make her ill.”
“Let me go and explain. Criterion would
take it without fail.”
“No indeed you
are very kind but it would alarm her too
much. I dare take any leap when she is not by;
but I do it and don’t tell her about it.”
“We can let the carriage pass and then set off.”
“No, no, pray don’t think
of it any more: I spoke quite randomly,”
said Gwendolen; she began to feel a new objection
to carrying out her own proposition.
“But Mrs. Davilow knows I shall take care of
you.”
“Yes, but she would think of
you as having to take care of my broken neck.”
There was a considerable pause before
Grandcourt said, looking toward her, “I should
like to have the right always to take care of you.”
Gwendolen did not turn her eyes on
him; it seemed to her a long while that she was first
blushing, and then turning pale, but to Grandcourt’s
rate of judgment she answered soon enough, with the
lightest flute-tone and a careless movement of the
head, “Oh, I am not sure that I want to be taken
care of: if I chose to risk breaking my neck,
I should like to be at liberty to do it.”
She checked her horse as she spoke,
and turned in her saddle, looking toward the advancing
carriage. Her eyes swept across Grandcourt as
she made this movement, but there was no language
in them to correct the carelessness of her reply.
At that very moment she was aware that she was risking
something not her neck, but the possibility
of finally checking Grandcourt’s advances, and
she did not feel contented with the possibility.
“Damn her!” thought Grandcourt,
as he too checked his horse. He was not a wordy
thinker, and this explosive phrase stood for mixed
impressions which eloquent interpreters might have
expanded into some sentences full of an irritated
sense that he was being mystified, and a determination
that this girl should not make a fool of him.
Did she want him to throw himself at her feet and
declare that he was dying for her? It was not
by that gate that she could enter on the privileges
he could give her. Or did she expect him to write
his proposals? Equally a delusion. He would
not make his offer in any way that could place him
definitely in the position of being rejected.
But as to her accepting him, she had done it already
in accepting his marked attentions: and anything
which happened to break them off would be understood
to her disadvantage. She was merely coquetting,
then?
However, the carriage came up, and
no further tete-a-tete could well occur before
their arrival at the house, where there was abundant
company, to whom Gwendolen, clad in riding-dress, with
her hat laid aside, clad also in the repute of being
chosen by Mr. Grandcourt, was naturally a centre of
observation; and since the objectionable Mr. Lush
was not there to look at her, this stimulus of admiring
attention heightened her spirits, and dispersed, for
the time, the uneasy consciousness of divided impulses
which threatened her with repentance of her own acts.
Whether Grandcourt had been offended or not there was
no judging: his manners were unchanged, but Gwendolen’s
acuteness had not gone deeper than to discern that
his manners were no clue for her, and because these
were unchanged she was not the less afraid of him.
She had not been at Diplow before
except to dine; and since certain points of view from
the windows and the garden were worth showing, Lady
Flora Hollis proposed after luncheon, when some of
the guests had dispersed, and the sun was sloping
toward four o’clock, that the remaining party
should make a little exploration. Here came frequent
opportunities when Grandcourt might have retained Gwendolen
apart, and have spoken to her unheard. But no!
He indeed spoke to no one else, but what he said was
nothing more eager or intimate than it had been in
their first interview. He looked at her not less
than usual; and some of her defiant spirit having
come back, she looked full at him in return, not caring rather
preferring that his eyes had no expression
in them.
But at last it seemed as if he entertained
some contrivance. After they had nearly made
the tour of the grounds, the whole party stopped by
the pool to be amused with Fetch’s accomplishment
of bringing a water lily to the bank like Cowper’s
spaniel Beau, and having been disappointed in his
first attempt insisted on his trying again.
Here Grandcourt, who stood with Gwendolen
outside the group, turned deliberately, and fixing
his eyes on a knoll planted with American shrubs,
and having a winding path up it, said languidly
“This is a bore. Shall we go up there?”
“Oh, certainly since
we are exploring,” said Gwendolen. She was
rather pleased, and yet afraid.
The path was too narrow for him to
offer his arm, and they walked up in silence.
When they were on the bit of platform at the summit,
Grandcourt said
“There is nothing to be seen
here: the thing was not worth climbing.”
How was it that Gwendolen did not
laugh? She was perfectly silent, holding up the
folds of her robe like a statue, and giving a harder
grasp to the handle of her whip, which she had snatched
up automatically with her hat when they had first
set off.
“What sort of a place do you prefer?”
said Grandcourt.
“Different places are agreeable
in their way. On the whole, I think, I prefer
places that are open and cheerful. I am not fond
of anything sombre.”
“Your place of Offendene is too sombre.”
“It is, rather.”
“You will not remain there long, I hope.”
“Oh, yes, I think so. Mamma likes to be
near her sister.”
Silence for a short space.
“It is not to be supposed that
you will always live there, though Mrs. Davilow
may.”
“I don’t know. We
women can’t go in search of adventures to
find out the North-West Passage or the source of the
Nile, or to hunt tigers in the East. We must
stay where we grow, or where the gardeners like to
transplant us. We are brought up like the flowers,
to look as pretty as we can, and be dull without complaining.
That is my notion about the plants; they are often
bored, and that is the reason why some of them have
got poisonous. What do you think?” Gwendolen
had run on rather nervously, lightly whipping the
rhododendron bush in front of her.
“I quite agree. Most things
are bores,” said Grandcourt, his mind having
been pushed into an easy current, away from its intended
track. But, after a moment’s pause, he
continued in his broken, refined drawl
“But a woman can be married.”
“Some women can.”
“You, certainly, unless you are obstinately
cruel.”
“I am not sure that I am not
both cruel and obstinate.” Here Gwendolen
suddenly turned her head and looked full at Grandcourt,
whose eyes she had felt to be upon her throughout
their conversation. She was wondering what the
effect of looking at him would be on herself rather
than on him.
He stood perfectly still, half a yard
or more away from her; and it flashed through her
mind what a sort of lotus-eater’s stupor had
begun in him and was taking possession of her.
Then he said
“Are you as uncertain about
yourself as you make others about you?”
“I am quite uncertain about
myself; I don’t know how uncertain others may
be.”
“And you wish them to understand
that you don’t care?” said Grandcourt,
with a touch of new hardness in his tone.
“I did not say that,”
Gwendolen replied, hesitatingly, and turning her eyes
away whipped the rhododendron bush again. She
wished she were on horseback that she might set off
on a canter. It was impossible to set off running
down the knoll.
“You do care, then,” said
Grandcourt, not more quickly, but with a softened
drawl.
“Ha! my whip!” said Gwendolen,
in a little scream of distress. She had let it
go what could be more natural in a slight
agitation? and but this seemed
less natural in a gold-handled whip which had been
left altogether to itself it had gone with
some force over the immediate shrubs, and had lodged
itself in the branches of an azalea half-way down
the knoll. She could run down now, laughing prettily,
and Grandcourt was obliged to follow; but she was
beforehand with him in rescuing the whip, and continued
on her way to the level ground, when she paused and
looked at Grandcourt with an exasperating brightness
in her glance and a heightened color, as if she had
carried a triumph, and these indications were still
noticeable to Mrs. Davilow when Gwendolen and Grandcourt
joined the rest of the party.
“It is all coquetting,”
thought Grandcourt; “the next time I beckon she
will come down.”
It seemed to him likely that this
final beckoning might happen the very next day, when
there was to be a picnic archery meeting in Cardell
Chase, according to the plan projected on the evening
of the ball.
Even in Gwendolen’s mind that
result was one of two likelihoods that presented themselves
alternately, one of two decisions toward which she
was being precipitated, as if they were two sides of
a boundary-line, and she did not know on which she
should fall. This subjection to a possible self,
a self not to be absolutely predicted about, caused
her some astonishment and terror; her favorite key
of life doing as she liked seemed
to fail her, and she could not foresee what at a given
moment she might like to do. The prospect of marrying
Grandcourt really seemed more attractive to her than
she had believed beforehand that any marriage could
be: the dignities, the luxuries, the power of
doing a great deal of what she liked to do, which
had now come close to her, and within her choice to
secure or to lose, took hold of her nature as if it
had been the strong odor of what she had only imagined
and longed for before. And Grandcourt himself?
He seemed as little of a flaw in his fortunes as a
lover and husband could possibly be. Gwendolen
wished to mount the chariot and drive the plunging
horses herself, with a spouse by her side who would
fold his arms and give her his countenance without
looking ridiculous. Certainly, with all her perspicacity,
and all the reading which seemed to her mamma dangerously
instructive, her judgment was consciously a little
at fault before Grandcourt. He was adorably quiet
and free from absurdities he would be a
husband to suit with the best appearance a woman could
make. But what else was he? He had been
everywhere, and seen everything. That was desirable,
and especially gratifying as a preamble to his supreme
preference for Gwendolen Harleth. He did not
appear to enjoy anything much. That was not necessary:
and the less he had of particular tastes, or desires,
the more freedom his wife was likely to have in following
hers. Gwendolen conceived that after marriage
she would most probably be able to manage him thoroughly.
How was it that he caused her unusual
constraint now? that she was less daring
and playful in her talk with him than with any other
admirer she had known? That absence of demonstrativeness
which she was glad of, acted as a charm in more senses
than one, and was slightly benumbing. Grandcourt
after all was formidable a handsome lizard
of a hitherto unknown species, not of the lively,
darting kind. But Gwendolen knew hardly anything
about lizards, and ignorance gives one a large range
of probabilities. This splendid specimen was probably
gentle, suitable as a boudoir pet: what may not
a lizard be, if you know nothing to the contrary?
Her acquaintance with Grandcourt was such that no
accomplishment suddenly revealed in him would have
surprised her. And he was so little suggestive
of drama, that it hardly occurred to her to think
with any detail how his life of thirty-six years had
been passed: in general, she imagined him always
cold and dignified, not likely ever to have committed
himself. He had hunted the tiger had
he ever been in love or made love? The one experience
and the other seemed alike remote in Gwendolen’s
fancy from the Mr. Grandcourt who had come to Diplow
in order apparently to make a chief epoch in her destiny perhaps
by introducing her to that state of marriage which
she had resolved to make a state of greater freedom
than her girlhood. And on the whole she wished
to marry him; he suited her purpose; her prevailing,
deliberate intention was, to accept him.
But was she going to fulfill her deliberate
intention? She began to be afraid of herself,
and to find out a certain difficulty in doing as she
liked. Already her assertion of independence in
evading his advances had been carried farther than
was necessary, and she was thinking with some anxiety
what she might do on the next occasion.
Seated according to her habit with
her back to the horses on their drive homeward, she
was completely under the observation of her mamma,
who took the excitement and changefulness in the expression
of her eyes, her unwonted absence of mind and total
silence, as unmistakable signs that something unprecedented
had occurred between her and Grandcourt. Mrs.
Davilow’s uneasiness determined her to risk some
speech on the subject: the Gascoignes were to
dine at Offendene, and in what had occurred this morning
there might be some reason for consulting the rector;
not that she expected him anymore than herself to
influence Gwendolen, but that her anxious mind wanted
to be disburdened.
“Something has happened, dear?”
she began, in a tender tone of question.
Gwendolen looked round, and seeming
to be roused to the consciousness of her physical
self, took off her gloves and then her hat, that the
soft breeze might blow on her head. They were
in a retired bit of the road, where the long afternoon
shadows from the bordering trees fell across it and
no observers were within sight. Her eyes continued
to meet her mother’s, but she did not speak.
“Mr. Grandcourt has been saying
something? Tell me, dear.” The
last words were uttered beseechingly.
“What am I to tell you, mamma?” was the
perverse answer.
“I am sure something has agitated
you. You ought to confide in me, Gwen. You
ought not to leave me in doubt and anxiety.”
Mrs. Davilow’s eyes filled with tears.
“Mamma, dear, please don’t
be miserable,” said Gwendolen, with pettish
remonstrance. “It only makes me more so.
I am in doubt myself.”
“About Mr. Grandcourt’s
intentions?” said Mrs. Davilow, gathering determination
from her alarms.
“No; not at all,” said
Gwendolen, with some curtness, and a pretty little
toss of the head as she put on her hat again.
“About whether you will accept him, then?”
“Precisely.”
“Have you given him a doubtful answer?”
“I have given him no answer at all.”
“He has spoken so that you could not
misunderstand him?”
“As far as I would let him speak.”
“You expect him to persevere?”
Mrs. Davilow put this question rather anxiously, and
receiving no answer, asked another: “You
don’t consider that you have discouraged him?”
“I dare say not.”
“I thought you liked him, dear,” said
Mrs. Davilow, timidly.
“So I do, mamma, as liking goes.
There is less to dislike about him than about most
men. He is quiet and distingue.”
Gwendolen so far spoke with a pouting sort of gravity;
but suddenly she recovered some of her mischievousness,
and her face broke into a smile as she added “Indeed
he has all the qualities that would make a husband
tolerable battlement, veranda, stable, etc.,
no grins and no glass in his eye.”
“Do be serious with me for a
moment, dear. Am I to understand that you mean
to accept him?”
“Oh, pray, mamma, leave me to
myself,” said Gwendolen, with a pettish distress
in her voice.
And Mrs. Davilow said no more.
When they got home Gwendolen declared
that she would not dine. She was tired, and would
come down in the evening after she had taken some
rest. The probability that her uncle would hear
what had passed did not trouble her. She was
convinced that whatever he might say would be on the
side of her accepting Grandcourt, and she wished to
accept him if she could. At this moment she would
willingly have had weights hung on her own caprice.
Mr. Gascoigne did hear not
Gwendolen’s answers repeated verbatim, but a
softened generalized account of them. The mother
conveyed as vaguely as the keen rector’s questions
would let her the impression that Gwendolen was in
some uncertainty about her own mind, but inclined on
the whole to acceptance. The result was that the
uncle felt himself called on to interfere; he did
not conceive that he should do his duty in witholding
direction from his niece in a momentous crisis of this
kind. Mrs. Davilow ventured a hesitating opinion
that perhaps it would be safer to say nothing Gwendolen
was so sensitive (she did not like to say willful).
But the rector’s was a firm mind, grasping its
first judgments tenaciously and acting on them promptly,
whence counter-judgments were no more for him than
shadows fleeting across the solid ground to which
he adjusted himself.
This match with Grandcourt presented
itself to him as a sort of public affair; perhaps
there were ways in which it might even strengthen the
establishment. To the rector, whose father (nobody
would have suspected it, and nobody was told) had
risen to be a provincial corn-dealer, aristocratic
heirship resembled regal heirship in excepting its
possessor from the ordinary standard of moral judgments,
Grandcourt, the almost certain baronet, the probable
peer, was to be ranged with public personages, and
was a match to be accepted on broad general grounds
national and ecclesiastical. Such public personages,
it is true, are often in the nature of giants which
an ancient community may have felt pride and safety
in possessing, though, regarded privately, these born
éminences must often have been inconvenient and
even noisome. But of the future husband personally
Mr. Gascoigne was disposed to think the best.
Gossip is a sort of smoke that comes from the dirty
tobacco-pipes of of those who diffuse it: it proves
nothing but the bad taste of the smoker. But
if Grandcourt had really made any deeper or more unfortunate
experiments in folly than were common in young men
of high prospects, he was of an age to have finished
them. All accounts can be suitably wound up when
a man has not ruined himself, and the expense may
be taken as an insurance against future error.
This was the view of practical wisdom; with reference
to higher views, repentance had a supreme moral and
religious value. There was every reason to believe
that a woman of well-regulated mind would be happy
with Grandcourt.
It was no surprise to Gwendolen on
coming down to tea to be told that her uncle wished
to see her in the dining-room. He threw aside
the paper as she entered and greeted her with his
usual kindness. As his wife had remarked, he
always “made much” of Gwendolen, and her
importance had risen of late. “My dear,”
he said, in a fatherly way, moving a chair for her
as he held her hand, “I want to speak to you
on a subject which is more momentous than any other
with regard to your welfare. You will guess what
I mean. But I shall speak to you with perfect
directness: in such matters I consider myself
bound to act as your father. You have no objection,
I hope?”
“Oh dear, no, uncle. You
have always been very kind to me,” said Gwendolen,
frankly. This evening she was willing, if it were
possible, to be a little fortified against her troublesome
self, and her resistant temper was in abeyance.
The rector’s mode of speech always conveyed
a thrill of authority, as of a word of command:
it seemed to take for granted that there could be
no wavering in the audience, and that every one was
going to be rationally obedient.
“It is naturally a satisfaction
to me that the prospect of a marriage for you advantageous
in the highest degree has presented itself
so early. I do not know exactly what has passed
between you and Mr. Grandcourt, but I presume there
can be little doubt, from the way in which he has
distinguished you, that he desires to make you his
wife.”
Gwendolen did not speak immediately,
and her uncle said with more emphasis
“Have you any doubt of that yourself, my dear?”
“I suppose that is what he has
been thinking of. But he may have changed his
mind to-morrow,” said Gwendolen.
“Why to-morrow? Has he
made advances which you have discouraged?”
“I think he meant he
began to make advances but I did not encourage
them. I turned the conversation.”
“Will you confide in me so far
as to tell me your reasons?”
“I am not sure that I had any
reasons, uncle.” Gwendolen laughed rather
artificially.
“You are quite capable of reflecting,
Gwendolen. You are aware that this is not a trivial
occasion, and it concerns your establishment for life
under circumstances which may not occur again.
You have a duty here both to yourself and your family.
I wish to understand whether you have any ground for
hesitating as to your acceptance of Mr. Grandcourt.”
“I suppose I hesitate without
grounds.” Gwendolen spoke rather poutingly,
and her uncle grew suspicious.
“Is he disagreeable to you personally?”
“No.”
“Have you heard anything of
him which has affected you disagreeably?” The
rector thought it impossible that Gwendolen could have
heard the gossip he had heard, but in any case he
must endeavor to put all things in the right light
for her.
“I have heard nothing about
him except that he is a great match,” said Gwendolen,
with some sauciness; “and that affects me very
agreeably.”
“Then, my dear Gwendolen, I
have nothing further to say than this: you hold
your fortune in your own hands a fortune
such as rarely happens to a girl in your circumstances a
fortune in fact which almost takes the question out
of the range of mere personal feeling, and makes your
acceptance of it a duty. If Providence offers
you power and position especially when
unclogged by any conditions that are repugnant to
you your course is one of responsibility,
into which caprice must not enter. A man does
not like to have his attachment trifled with:
he may not be at once repelled these things
are matters of individual disposition. But the
trifling may be carried too far. And I must point
out to you that in case Mr. Grandcourt were repelled
without your having refused him without
your having intended ultimately to refuse him, your
situation would be a humiliating and painful one.
I, for my part, should regard you with severe disapprobation,
as the victim of nothing else than your own coquetry
and folly.”
Gwendolen became pallid as she listened
to this admonitory speech. The ideas it raised
had the force of sensations. Her resistant courage
would not help her here, because her uncle was not
urging her against her own resolve; he was pressing
upon her the motives of dread which she already felt;
he was making her more conscious of the risks that
lay within herself. She was silent, and the rector
observed that he had produced some strong effect.
“I mean this in kindness, my
dear.” His tone had softened.
“I am aware of that, uncle,”
said Gwendolen, rising and shaking her head back,
as if to rouse herself out of painful passivity.
“I am not foolish. I know that I must be
married some time before it is too late.
And I don’t see how I could do better than marry
Mr. Grandcourt. I mean to accept him, if possible.”
She felt as if she were reinforcing herself by speaking
with this decisiveness to her uncle.
But the rector was a little startled
by so bare a version of his own meaning from those
young lips. He wished that in her mind his advice
should be taken in an infusion of sentiments proper
to a girl, and such as are presupposed in the advice
of a clergyman, although he may not consider them
always appropriate to be put forward. He wished
his niece parks, carriages, a title everything
that would make this world a pleasant abode; but he
wished her not to be cynical to be, on the
contrary, religiously dutiful, and have warm domestic
affections.
“My dear Gwendolen,” he
said, rising also, and speaking with benignant gravity,
“I trust that you will find in marriage a new
fountain of duty and affection. Marriage is the
only true and satisfactory sphere of a woman, and
if your marriage with Mr. Grandcourt should be happily
decided upon, you will have, probably, an increasing
power, both of rank and wealth, which may be used
for the benefit of others. These considerations
are something higher than romance! You are fitted
by natural gifts for a position which, considering
your birth and early prospects, could hardly be looked
forward to as in the ordinary course of things; and
I trust that you will grace it, not only by those
personal gifts, but by a good and consistent life.”
“I hope mamma will be the happier,”
said Gwendolen, in a more cheerful way, lifting her
hands backward to her neck and moving toward the door.
She wanted to waive those higher considerations.
Mr. Gascoigne felt that he had come
to a satisfactory understanding with his niece, and
had furthered her happy settlement in life by furthering
her engagement to Grandcourt. Meanwhile there
was another person to whom the contemplation of that
issue had been a motive for some activity, and who
believed that he, too, on this particular day had
done something toward bringing about a favorable decision
in his sense which happened to be
the reverse of the rector’s.
Mr. Lush’s absence from Diplow
during Gwendolen’s visit had been due, not to
any fear on his part of meeting that supercilious young
lady, or of being abashed by her frank dislike, but
to an engagement from which he expected important
consequences. He was gone, in fact, to the Wanchester
station to meet a lady, accompanied by a maid and two
children, whom he put into a fly, and afterward followed
to the hotel of the Golden Keys, in that town.
An impressive woman, whom many would turn to look
at again in passing; her figure was slim and sufficiently
tall, her face rather emaciated, so that its sculpturesque
beauty was the more pronounced, her crisp hair perfectly
black, and her large, anxious eyes what we call black.
Her dress was soberly correct, her age, perhaps, physically
more advanced than the number of years would imply,
but hardly less than seven-and-thirty. An uneasy-looking
woman: her glance seemed to presuppose that the
people and things were going to be unfavorable to
her, while she was, nevertheless, ready to meet them
with resolution. The children were lovely a
dark-haired girl of six or more, a fairer boy of five.
When Lush incautiously expressed some surprise at
her having brought the children, she said, with a
sharp-toned intonation
“Did you suppose I should come
wandering about here by myself? Why should I
not bring all four if I liked?”
“Oh, certainly,” said
Lush, with his usual fluent nonchalance.
He stayed an hour or so in conference
with her, and rode back to Diplow in a state of mind
that was at once hopeful and busily anxious as to
the execution of the little plan on which his hopefulness
was based. Grandcourt’s marriage to Gwendolen
Harleth would not, he believed, be much of a good
to either of them, and it would plainly be fraught
with disagreeables to himself. But now he felt
confident enough to say inwardly, “I will take,
nay, I will lay odds that the marriage will never
happen.”