“Festina lente celerity
should be contempered with
cunctation.” SIR
THOMAS BROWNE.
Gwendolen, we have seen, passed her
time abroad in the new excitement of gambling, and
in imagining herself an empress of luck, having brought
from her late experience a vague impression that in
this confused world it signified nothing what any
one did, so that they amused themselves. We have
seen, too, that certain persons, mysteriously symbolized
as Grapnell & Co., having also thought of reigning
in the realm of luck, and being also bent on amusing
themselves, no matter how, had brought about a painful
change in her family circumstances; whence she had
returned home carrying with her, against
her inclination, a necklace which she had pawned and
some one else had redeemed.
While she was going back to England,
Grandcourt was coming to find her; coming, that is,
after his own manner not in haste by express
straight from Diplow to Leubronn, where she was understood
to be; but so entirely without hurry that he was induced
by the presence of some Russian acquaintances to linger
at Baden-Baden and make various appointments with
them, which, however, his desire to be at Leubronn
ultimately caused him to break. Grandcourt’s
passions were of the intermittent, flickering kind:
never flaming out strongly. But a great deal
of life goes on without strong passion: myriads
of cravats are carefully tied, dinners attended, even
speeches made proposing the health of august personages
without the zest arising from a strong desire.
And a man may make a good appearance in high social
positions may be supposed to know the classics,
to have his reserves on science, a strong though repressed
opinion on politics, and all the sentiments of the
English gentleman, at a small expense of vital energy.
Also, he may be obstinate or persistent at the same
low rate, and may even show sudden impulses which
have a false air of daemonic strength because they
seem inexplicable, though perhaps their secret lies
merely in the want of regulated channels for the soul
to move in good and sufficient ducts of
habit without which our nature easily turns to mere
ooze and mud, and at any pressure yields nothing but
a spurt or a puddle.
Grandcourt had not been altogether
displeased by Gwendolen’s running away from
the splendid chance he was holding out to her.
The act had some piquancy for him. He liked to
think that it was due to resentment of his careless
behavior in Cardell Chase, which, when he came to
consider it, did appear rather cool. To have brought
her so near a tender admission, and then to have walked
headlong away from further opportunities of winning
the consent which he had made her understand him to
be asking for, was enough to provoke a girl of spirit;
and to be worth his mastering it was proper that she
should have some spirit. Doubtless she meant
him to follow her, and it was what he meant too.
But for a whole week he took no measures toward starting,
and did not even inquire where Miss Harleth was gone.
Mr. Lush felt a triumph that was mingled with much
distrust; for Grandcourt had said no word to him about
her, and looked as neutral as an alligator; there was
no telling what might turn up in the slowly-churning
chances of his mind. Still, to have put off a
decision was to have made room for the waste of Grandcourt’s
energy.
The guests at Diplow felt more curiosity
than their host. How was it that nothing more
was heard of Miss Harleth? Was it credible that
she had refused Mr. Grandcourt? Lady Flora Hollis,
a lively middle-aged woman, well endowed with curiosity,
felt a sudden interest in making a round of calls
with Mrs. Torrington, including the rectory, Offendene,
and Quetcham, and thus not only got twice over, but
also discussed with the Arrowpoints, the information
that Miss Harleth was gone to Leubronn, with some
old friends, the Baron and Baroness von Langen; for
the immediate agitation and disappointment of Mrs.
Davilow and the Gascoignes had resolved itself into
a wish that Gwendolen’s disappearance should
not be interpreted as anything eccentric or needful
to be kept secret. The rector’s mind, indeed,
entertained the possibility that the marriage was
only a little deferred, for Mrs. Davilow had not dared
to tell him of the bitter determination with which
Gwendolen had spoken. And in spite of his practical
ability, some of his experience had petrified into
maxims and quotations. Amaryllis fleeing desired
that her hiding-place should be known; and that love
will find out the way “over the mountain and
over the wave” may be said without hyperbole
in this age of steam. Gwendolen, he conceived,
was an Amaryllis of excellent sense but coquettish
daring; the question was whether she had dared too
much.
Lady Flora, coming back charged with
news about Miss Harleth, saw no good reason why she
should not try whether she could electrify Mr. Grandcourt
by mentioning it to him at the table; and in doing
so shot a few hints of a notion having got abroad
that he was a disappointed adorer. Grandcourt
heard with quietude, but with attention; and the next
day he ordered Lush to bring about a decent reason
for breaking up the party at Diplow by the end of
another week, as he meant to go yachting to the Baltic
or somewhere it being impossible to stay
at Diplow as if he were a prisoner on parole, with
a set of people whom he had never wanted. Lush
needed no clearer announcement that Grandcourt was
going to Leubronn; but he might go after the manner
of a creeping billiard-ball and stick on the way.
What Mr. Lush intended was to make himself indispensable
so that he might go too, and he succeeded; Gwendolen’s
repulsion for him being a fact that only amused his
patron, and made him none the less willing to have
Lush always at hand.
This was how it happened that Grandcourt
arrived at the Czarina on the fifth day after
Gwendolen had left Leubronn, and found there his uncle,
Sir Hugo Mallinger, with his family, including Deronda.
It is not necessarily a pleasure either to the reigning
power or the heir presumptive when their separate
affairs a touch of gout, say,
in the one, and a touch of willfulness in the other happen
to bring them to the same spot. Sir Hugo was
an easy-tempered man, tolerant both of differences
and defects; but a point of view different from his
own concerning the settlement of the family estates
fretted him rather more than if it had concerned Church
discipline or the ballot, and faults were the less
venial for belonging to a person whose existence was
inconvenient to him. In no case could Grandcourt
have been a nephew after his own heart; but as the
presumptive heir to the Mallinger estates he was the
sign and embodiment of a chief grievance in the baronet’s
life the want of a son to inherit the lands,
in no portion of which had he himself more than a
life-interest. For in the ill-advised settlement
which his father, Sir Francis, had chosen to make
by will, even Diplow with its modicum of land had been
left under the same conditions as the ancient and
wide inheritance of the two Toppings Diplow,
where Sir Hugo had lived and hunted through many a
season in his younger years, and where his wife and
daughters ought to have been able to retire after
his death.
This grievance had naturally gathered
emphasis as the years advanced, and Lady Mallinger,
after having had three daughters in quick succession,
had remained for eight years till now that she was
over forty without producing so much as another girl;
while Sir Hugo, almost twenty years older, was at
a time of life when, notwithstanding the fashionable
retardation of most things from dinners to marriages,
a man’s hopefulness is apt to show signs of
wear, until restored by second childhood.
In fact, he had begun to despair of
a son, and this confirmation of Grandcourt’s
interest in the estates certainly tended to make his
image and presence the more unwelcome; but, on the
other hand, it carried circumstances which disposed
Sir Hugo to take care that the relation between them
should be kept as friendly as possible. It led
him to dwell on a plan which had grown up side by
side with his disappointment of an heir; namely, to
try and secure Diplow as a future residence for Lady
Mallinger and her daughters, and keep this pretty bit
of the family inheritance for his own offspring in
spite of that disappointment. Such knowledge
as he had of his nephew’s disposition and affairs
encouraged the belief that Grandcourt might consent
to a transaction by which he would get a good sum
of ready money, as an equivalent for his prospective
interest in the domain of Diplow and the moderate
amount of land attached to it. If, after all,
the unhoped-for son should be born, the money would
have been thrown away, and Grandcourt would have been
paid for giving up interests that had turned out good
for nothing; but Sir Hugo set down this risk as nil,
and of late years he had husbanded his fortune so
well by the working of mines and the sale of leases
that he was prepared for an outlay.
Here was an object that made him careful
to avoid any quarrel with Grandcourt. Some years
before, when he was making improvements at the Abbey,
and needed Grandcourt’s concurrence in his felling
an obstructive mass of timber on the demesne, he had
congratulated himself on finding that there was no
active spite against him in his nephew’s peculiar
mind; and nothing had since occurred to make them hate
each other more than was compatible with perfect politeness,
or with any accommodation that could be strictly mutual.
Grandcourt, on his side, thought his
uncle a superfluity and a bore, and felt that the
list of things in general would be improved whenever
Sir Hugo came to be expunged. But he had been
made aware through Lush, always a useful medium, of
the baronet’s inclinations concerning Diplow,
and he was gratified to have the alternative of the
money in his mind: even if he had not thought
it in the least likely that he would choose to accept
it, his sense of power would have been flattered by
his being able to refuse what Sir Hugo desired.
The hinted transaction had told for something among
the motives which had made him ask for a year’s
tenancy of Diplow, which it had rather annoyed Sir
Hugo to grant, because the excellent hunting in the
neighborhood might decide Grandcourt not to part with
his chance of future possession; a man
who has two places, in one of which the hunting is
less good, naturally desiring a third where it is
better. Also, Lush had thrown out to Sir Hugo
the probability that Grandcourt would woo and win Miss
Arrowpoint, and in that case ready money might be less
of a temptation to him. Hence, on this unexpected
meeting at Leubronn, the baronet felt much curiosity
to know how things had been going on at Diplow, was
bent on being as civil as possible to his nephew,
and looked forward to some private chat with Lush.
Between Deronda and Grandcourt there
was a more faintly-marked but peculiar relation, depending
on circumstances which have yet to be made known.
But on no side was there any sign of suppressed chagrin
on the first meeting at the table d’hote,
an hour after Grandcourt’s arrival; and when
the quartette of gentlemen afterward met on the terrace,
without Lady Mallinger, they moved off together to
saunter through the rooms, Sir Hugo saying as they
entered the large saal
“Did you play much at Baden, Grandcourt?”
“No; I looked on and betted a little with some
Russians there.”
“Had you luck?”
“What did I win, Lush?”
“You brought away about two hundred,”
said Lush.
“You are not here for the sake of the play,
then?” said Sir Hugo.
“No; I don’t care about
play now. It’s a confounded strain,”
said Grandcourt, whose diamond ring and demeanor,
as he moved along playing slightly with his whisker,
were being a good deal stared at by rouged foreigners
interested in a new milord.
“The fact is, somebody should
invent a mill to do amusements for you, my dear fellow,”
said Sir Hugo, “as the Tartars get their praying
done. But I agree with you; I never cared for
play. It’s monotonous knits
the brain up into meshes. And it knocks me up
to watch it now. I suppose one gets poisoned
with the bad air. I never stay here more than
ten minutes. But where’s your gambling beauty,
Deronda? Have you seen her lately?”
“She’s gone,” said Deronda, curtly.
“An uncommonly fine girl, a
perfect Diana,” said Sir Hugo, turning to Grandcourt
again. “Really worth a little straining
to look at her. I saw her winning, and she took
it as coolly as if she had known it all beforehand.
The same day Deronda happened to see her losing like
wildfire, and she bore it with immense pluck.
I suppose she was cleaned out, or was wise enough
to stop in time. How do you know she’s gone?”
“Oh, by the Visitor-list,”
said Deronda, with a scarcely perceptible shrug.
“Vandernoodt told me her name was Harleth, and
she was with the Baron and Baroness von Langen.
I saw by the list that Miss Harleth was no longer
there.”
This held no further information for
Lush than that Gwendolen had been gambling. He
had already looked at the list, and ascertained that
Gwendolen had gone, but he had no intention of thrusting
this knowledge on Grandcourt before he asked for it;
and he had not asked, finding it enough to believe
that the object of search would turn up somewhere or
other.
But now Grandcourt had heard what
was rather piquant, and not a word about Miss Harleth
had been missed by him. After a moment’s
pause he said to Deronda
“Do you know those people the Langens?”
“I have talked with them a little
since Miss Harleth went away. I knew nothing
of them before.”
“Where is she gone do you know?”
“She is gone home,” said
Deronda, coldly, as if he wished to say no more.
But then, from a fresh impulse, he turned to look markedly
at Grandcourt, and added, “But it is possible
you know her. Her home is not far from Diplow:
Offendene, near Winchester.”
Deronda, turning to look straight
at Grandcourt, who was on his left hand, might have
been a subject for those old painters who liked contrasts
of temperament. There was a calm intensity of
life and richness of tint in his face that on a sudden
gaze from him was rather startling, and often made
him seem to have spoken, so that servants and officials
asked him automatically, “What did you say, sir?”
when he had been quite silent. Grandcourt himself
felt an irritation, which he did not show except by
a slight movement of the eyelids, at Deronda’s
turning round on him when he was not asked to do more
than speak. But he answered, with his usual drawl,
“Yes, I know her,” and paused with his
shoulder toward Deronda, to look at the gambling.
“What of her, eh?” asked
Sir Hugo of Lush, as the three moved on a little way.
“She must be a new-comer at Offendene. Old
Blenny lived there after the dowager died.”
“A little too much of her,”
said Lush, in a low, significant tone; not sorry to
let Sir Hugo know the state of affairs.
“Why? how?” said the baronet.
They all moved out of the salon into an airy
promenade.
“He has been on the brink of
marrying her,” Lush went on. “But
I hope it’s off now. She’s a niece
of the clergyman Gascoigne at
Pennicote. Her mother is a widow with a brood
of daughters. This girl will have nothing, and
is as dangerous as gunpowder. It would be a foolish
marriage. But she has taken a freak against him,
for she ran off here without notice, when he had agreed
to call the next day. The fact is, he’s
here after her; but he was in no great hurry, and between
his caprice and hers they are likely enough not to
get together again. But of course he has lost
his chance with the heiress.”
Grandcourt joining them said, “What
a beastly den this is! a worse hole than
Baden. I shall go back to the hotel.”
When Sir Hugo and Deronda were alone, the baronet
began
“Rather a pretty story.
That girl has something in her. She must be worth
running after has de l’imprévu.
I think her appearance on the scene has bettered my
chance of getting Diplow, whether the marriage comes
off or not.”
“I should hope a marriage like
that would not come off,” said Deronda, in a
tone of disgust.
“What! are you a little touched
with the sublime lash?” said Sir Hugo, putting
up his glasses to help his short sight in looking at
his companion. “Are you inclined to run
after her?”
“On the contrary,” said
Deronda, “I should rather be inclined to run
away from her.”
“Why, you would easily cut out
Grandcourt. A girl with her spirit would think
you the finer match of the two,” said Sir Hugo,
who often tried Deronda’s patience by finding
a joke in impossible advice. (A difference of taste
in jokes is a great strain on the affections.)
“I suppose pedigree and land
belong to a fine match,” said Deronda, coldly.
“The best horse will win in
spite of pedigree, my boy. You remember Napoleon’s
mot Je suis un ancêtre” said
Sir Hugo, who habitually undervalued birth, as men
after dining well often agree that the good of life
is distributed with wonderful equality.
“I am not sure that I want to
be an ancestor,” said Deronda. “It
doesn’t seem to me the rarest sort of origination.”
“You won’t run after the
pretty gambler, then?” said Sir Hugo, putting
down his glasses.
“Decidedly not.”
This answer was perfectly truthful;
nevertheless it had passed through Deronda’s
mind that under other circumstances he should have
given way to the interest this girl had raised in
him, and tried to know more of her. But his history
had given him a stronger bias in another direction.
He felt himself in no sense free.