“Il est plus
aise de connoitre l’homme en general
que de connoitre un
homme en particulier. LA
ROCHEFOUCAULD.”
An hour after Grandcourt had left,
the important news of Gwendolen’s engagement
was known at the rectory, and Mr. and Mrs. Gascoigne,
with Anna, spent the evening at Offendene.
“My dear, let me congratulate
you on having created a strong attachment,”
said the rector. “You look serious, and
I don’t wonder at it: a lifelong union
is a solemn thing. But from the way Mr. Grandcourt
has acted and spoken I think we may already see some
good arising out of our adversity. It has given
you an opportunity of observing your future husband’s
delicate liberality.”
Mr. Gascoigne referred to Grandcourt’s
mode of implying that he would provide for Mrs. Davilow a
part of the love-making which Gwendolen had remembered
to cite to her mother with perfect accuracy.
“But I have no doubt that Mr.
Grandcourt would have behaved quite as handsomely
if you had not gone away to Germany, Gwendolen, and
had been engaged to him, as you no doubt might have
been, more than a month ago,” said Mrs. Gascoigne,
feeling that she had to discharge a duty on this occasion.
“But now there is no more room for caprice; indeed,
I trust you have no inclination to any. A woman
has a great debt of gratitude to a man who perseveres
in making her such an offer. But no doubt you
feel properly.”
“I am not at all sure that I
do, aunt,” said Gwendolen, with saucy gravity.
“I don’t know everything it is proper to
feel on being engaged.”
The rector patted her shoulder and
smiled as at a bit of innocent naughtiness, and his
wife took his behavior as an indication that she was
not to be displeased. As for Anna, she kissed
Gwendolen and said, “I do hope you will be happy,”
but then sank into the background and tried to keep
the tears back too. In the late days she had been
imagining a little romance about Rex how
if he still longed for Gwendolen her heart might be
softened by trouble into love, so that they could
by-and-by be married. And the romance had turned
to a prayer that she, Anna, might be able to rejoice
like a good sister, and only think of being useful
in working for Gwendolen, as long as Rex was not rich.
But now she wanted grace to rejoice in something else.
Miss Merry and the four girls, Alice with the high
shoulders, Bertha and Fanny the whisperers, and Isabel
the listener, were all present on this family occasion,
when everything seemed appropriately turning to the
honor and glory of Gwendolen, and real life was as
interesting as “Sir Charles Grandison.”
The evening passed chiefly in decisive remarks from
the rector, in answer to conjectures from the two
elder ladies. According to him, the case was
not one in which he could think it his duty to mention
settlements: everything must, and doubtless would
safely be left to Mr. Grandcourt.
“I should like to know exactly
what sort of places Ryelands and Gadsmere are,”
said Mrs. Davilow.
“Gadsmere, I believe, is a secondary
place,” said Mr. Gascoigne; “But Ryelands
I know to be one of our finest seats. The park
is extensive and the woods of a very valuable order.
The house was built by Inigo Jones, and the ceilings
are painted in the Italian style. The estate is
said to be worth twelve thousand a year, and there
are two livings, one a rectory, in the gift of the
Grandcourts. There may be some burdens on the
land. Still, Mr. Grandcourt was an only child.”
“It would be most remarkable,”
said Mrs. Gascoigne, “if he were to become Lord
Stannery in addition to everything else. Only
think: there is the Grandcourt estate, the Mallinger
estate, and the baronetcy, and the peerage,” she
was marking off the items on her fingers, and paused
on the fourth while she added, “but they say
there will be no land coming to him with the peerage.”
It seemed a pity there was nothing for the fifth finger.
“The peerage,” said the
rector, judiciously, “must be regarded as a
remote chance. There are two cousins between the
present peer and Mr. Grandcourt. It is certainly
a serious reflection how death and other causes do
sometimes concentrate inheritances on one man.
But an excess of that kind is to be deprecated.
To be Sir Mallinger Grandcourt Mallinger I
suppose that will be his style with corresponding
properties, is a valuable talent enough for any man
to have committed to him. Let us hope it will
be well used.”
“And what a position for the
wife, Gwendolen!” said Mrs. Gascoigne; “a
great responsibility indeed. But you must lose
no time in writing to Mrs. Mompert, Henry. It
is a good thing that you have an engagement of marriage
to offer as an excuse, else she might feel offended.
She is rather a high woman.”
“I am rid of that horror,”
thought Gwendolen, to whom the name of Mompert had
become a sort of Mumbo-jumbo. She was very silent
through the evening, and that night could hardly sleep
at all in her little white bed. It was a rarity
in her strong youth to be wakeful: and perhaps
a still greater rarity for her to be careful that her
mother should not know of her restlessness. But
her state of mind was altogether new: she who
had been used to feel sure of herself, and ready to
manage others, had just taken a decisive step which
she had beforehand thought that she would not take nay,
perhaps, was bound not to take. She could not
go backward now; she liked a great deal of what lay
before her; and there was nothing for her to like if
she went back. But her resolution was dogged
by the shadow of that previous resolve which had at
first come as the undoubting movement of her whole
being. While she lay on her pillow with wide-open
eyes, “looking on darkness which the blind do
see,” she was appalled by the idea that she was
going to do what she had once started away from with
repugnance. It was new to her that a question
of right or wrong in her conduct should rouse her
terror; she had known no compunction that atoning caresses
and presents could not lay to rest. But here had
come a moment when something like a new consciousness
was awaked. She seemed on the edge of adopting
deliberately, as a notion for all the rest of her life,
what she had rashly said in her bitterness, when her
discovery had driven her away to Leubronn: that
it did not signify what she did; she had only to amuse
herself as best she could. That lawlessness, that
casting away of all care for justification, suddenly
frightened her: it came to her with the shadowy
array of possible calamity behind it calamity
which had ceased to be a mere name for her; and all
the infiltrated influences of disregarded religious
teaching, as well as the deeper impressions of something
awful and inexorable enveloping her, seemed to concentrate
themselves in the vague conception of avenging power.
The brilliant position she had longed for, the imagined
freedom she would create for herself in marriage, the
deliverance from the dull insignificance of her girlhood all
immediately before her; and yet they had come to her
hunger like food with the taint of sacrilege upon
it, which she must snatch with terror. In the
darkness and loneliness of her little bed, her more
resistant self could not act against the first onslaught
of dread after her irrevocable decision. That
unhappy-faced woman and her children Grandcourt
and his relations with her kept repeating
themselves in her imagination like the clinging memory
of a disgrace, and gradually obliterated all other
thought, leaving only the consciousness that she had
taken those scenes into her life. Her long wakefulness
seemed a delirium; a faint, faint light penetrated
beside the window-curtain; the chillness increased.
She could bear it no longer, and cried “Mamma!”
“Yes, dear,” said Mrs.
Davilow, immediately, in a wakeful voice.
“Let me come to you.”
She soon went to sleep on her mother’s
shoulder, and slept on till late, when, dreaming of
a lit-up ball-room, she opened her eyes on her mother
standing by the bedside with a small packet in her
hand.
“I am sorry to wake you, darling,
but I thought it better to give you this at once.
The groom has brought Criterion; he has come on another
horse, and says he is to stay here.”
Gwendolen sat up in bed and opened
the packet. It was a delicate enameled casket,
and inside was a splendid diamond ring with a letter
which contained a folded bit of colored paper and these
words:
Pray wear this ring when I come at twelve
in sign of our betrothal. I enclose a check
drawn in the name of Mr. Gascoigne, for immediate
expenses. Of course Mrs. Davilow will remain
at Offendene, at least for some time. I hope,
when I come, you will have granted me an early day,
when you may begin to command me at a shorter distance.
Yours devotedly,
H. M. GRANDCOURT.
The check was for five hundred pounds,
and Gwendolen turned it toward her mother, with the
letter.
“How very kind and delicate!”
said Mrs. Davilow, with much feeling. “But
I really should like better not to be dependent on
a son-in-law. I and the girls could get along
very well.”
“Mamma, if you say that again,
I will not marry him,” said Gwendolen, angrily.
“My dear child, I trust you
are not going to marry only for my sake,” said
Mrs. Davilow, depreciatingly.
Gwendolen tossed her head on the pillow
away from her mother, and let the ring lie. She
was irritated at this attempt to take away a motive.
Perhaps the deeper cause of her irritation was the
consciousness that she was not going to marry solely
for her mamma’s sake that she was
drawn toward the marriage in ways against which stronger
reasons than her mother’s renunciation were
yet not strong enough to hinder her. She had
waked up to the signs that she was irrevocably engaged,
and all the ugly visions, the alarms, the arguments
of the night, must be met by daylight, in which probably
they would show themselves weak. “What I
long for is your happiness, dear,” continued
Mrs. Davilow, pleadingly. “I will not say
anything to vex you. Will you not put on the ring?”
For a few moments Gwendolen did not
answer, but her thoughts were active. At last
she raised herself with a determination to do as she
would do if she had started on horseback, and go on
with spirit, whatever ideas might be running in her
head.
“I thought the lover always
put on the betrothal ring himself,” she said
laughingly, slipping the ring on her finger, and looking
at it with a charming movement of her head. “I
know why he has sent it,” she added, nodding
at her mamma.
“Why?”
“He would rather make me put
it on than ask me to let him do it. Aha! he is
very proud. But so am I. We shall match each other.
I should hate a man who went down on his knees, and
came fawning on me. He really is not disgusting.”
“That is very moderate praise, Gwen.”
“No, it is not, for a man,”
said Gwendolen gaily. “But now I must get
up and dress. Will you come and do my hair, mamma,
dear,” she went on, drawing down her mamma’s
face to caress it with her own cheeks, “and
not be so naughty any more as to talk of living in
poverty? You must bear to be made comfortable,
even if you don’t like it. And Mr. Grandcourt
behaves perfectly, now, does he not?”
“Certainly he does,” said
Mrs. Davilow, encouraged, and persuaded that after
all Gwendolen was fond of her betrothed. She herself
thought him a man whose attentions were likely to
tell on a girl’s feeling. Suitors must
often be judged as words are, by the standing and the
figure they make in polite society: it is difficult
to know much else of them. And all the mother’s
anxiety turned not on Grandcourt’s character,
but on Gwendolen’s mood in accepting him.
The mood was necessarily passing through
a new phase this morning. Even in the hour of
making her toilet, she had drawn on all the knowledge
she had for grounds to justify her marriage. And
what she most dwelt on was the determination, that
when she was Grandcourt’s wife, she would urge
him to the most liberal conduct toward Mrs. Glasher’s
children.
“Of what use would it be to
her that I should not marry him? He could have
married her if he liked; but he did not like.
Perhaps she is to blame for that. There must
be a great deal about her that I know nothing of.
And he must have been good to her in many ways, else
she would not have wanted to marry him.”
But that last argument at once began
to appear doubtful. Mrs. Glasher naturally wished
to exclude other children who would stand between
Grandcourt and her own: and Gwendolen’s
comprehension of this feeling prompted another way
of reconciling claims.
“Perhaps we shall have no children.
I hope we shall not. And he might leave the estate
to the pretty little boy. My uncle said that Mr.
Grandcourt could do as he liked with the estates.
Only when Sir Hugo Mallinger dies there will be enough
for two.”
This made Mrs. Glasher appear quite
unreasonable in demanding that her boy should be sole
heir; and the double property was a security that
Grandcourt’s marriage would do her no wrong,
when the wife was Gwendolen Harleth with all her proud
resolution not to be fairly accused. This maiden
had been accustomed to think herself blameless; other
persons only were faulty.
It was striking, that in the hold
which this argument of her doing no wrong to Mrs.
Glasher had taken on her mind, her repugnance to the
idea of Grandcourt’s past had sunk into a subordinate
feeling. The terror she had felt in the night-watches
at overstepping the border of wickedness by doing
what she had at first felt to be wrong, had dulled
any emotions about his conduct. She was thinking
of him, whatever he might be, as a man over whom she
was going to have indefinite power; and her loving
him having never been a question with her, any agreeableness
he had was so much gain. Poor Gwendolen had no
awe of unmanageable forces in the state of matrimony,
but regarded it as altogether a matter of management,
in which she would know how to act. In relation
to Grandcourt’s past she encouraged new doubts
whether he were likely to have differed much from
other men; and she devised little schemes for learning
what was expected of men in general.
But whatever else might be true in
the world, her hair was dressed suitably for riding,
and she went down in her riding-habit, to avoid delay
before getting on horseback. She wanted to have
her blood stirred once more with the intoxication
of youth, and to recover the daring with which she
had been used to think of her course in life.
Already a load was lifted off her; for in daylight
and activity it was less oppressive to have doubts
about her choice, than to feel that she had no choice
but to endure insignificance and servitude.
“Go back and make yourself look
like a duchess, mamma,” she said, turning suddenly
as she was going down-stairs. “Put your
point-lace over your head. I must have you look
like a duchess. You must not take things humbly.”
When Grandcourt raised her left hand
gently and looked at the ring, she said gravely, “It
was very good of you to think of everything and send
me that packet.”
“You will tell me if there is
anything I forget?” he said, keeping the hand
softly within his own. “I will do anything
you wish.”
“But I am very unreasonable
in my wishes,” said Gwendolen, smiling.
“Yes, I expect that. Women always are.”
“Then I will not be unreasonable,”
said Gwendolen, taking away her hand and tossing her
head saucily. “I will not be told that I
am what women always are.”
“I did not say that,”
said Grandcourt, looking at her with his usual gravity.
“You are what no other woman is.”
“And what is that, pray?”
said Gwendolen, moving to a distance with a little
air of menace.
Grandcourt made his pause before he
answered. “You are the woman I love.”
“Oh, what nice speeches!”
said Gwendolen, laughing. The sense of that love
which he must once have given to another woman under
strange circumstances was getting familiar.
“Give me a nice speech in return.
Say when we are to be married.”
“Not yet. Not till we have
had a gallop over the downs. I am so thirsty
for that, I can think of nothing else. I wish
the hunting had begun. Sunday the twentieth,
twenty-seventh, Monday, Tuesday.” Gwendolen
was counting on her fingers with the prettiest nod
while she looked at Grandcourt, and at last swept
one palm over the other while she said triumphantly,
“It will begin in ten days!”
“Let us be married in ten days,
then,” said Grandcourt, “and we shall
not be bored about the stables.”
“What do women always say in
answer to that?” said Gwendolen, mischievously.
“They agree to it,” said the lover, rather
off his guard.
“Then I will not!” said
Gwendolen, taking up her gauntlets and putting them
on, while she kept her eyes on him with gathering fun
in them.
The scene was pleasant on both sides.
A cruder lover would have lost the view of her pretty
ways and attitudes, and spoiled all by stupid attempts
at caresses, utterly destructive of drama. Grandcourt
preferred the drama; and Gwendolen, left at ease, found
her spirits rising continually as she played at reigning.
Perhaps if Klesmer had seen more of her in this unconscious
kind of acting, instead of when she was trying to
be theatrical, he might have rated her chance higher.
When they had had a glorious gallop,
however, she was in a state of exhilaration that disposed
her to think well of hastening the marriage which
would make her life all of apiece with this splendid
kind of enjoyment. She would not debate any more
about an act to which she had committed herself; and
she consented to fix the wedding on that day three
weeks, notwithstanding the difficulty of fulfilling
the customary laws of the trousseau.
Lush, of course, was made aware of
the engagement by abundant signs, without being formally
told. But he expected some communication as a
consequence of it, and after a few days he became rather
impatient under Grandcourt’s silence, feeling
sure that the change would affect his personal prospects,
and wishing to know exactly how. His tactics no
longer included any opposition which he
did not love for its own sake. He might easily
cause Grandcourt a great deal of annoyance, but it
would be to his own injury, and to create annoyance
was not a motive with him. Miss Gwendolen he
would certainly not have been sorry to frustrate a
little, but after all there was no knowing
what would come. It was nothing new that Grandcourt
should show a perverse wilfulness; yet in his freak
about this girl he struck Lush rather newly as something
like a man who was fey led on by
an ominous fatality; and that one born to his fortune
should make a worse business of his life than was
necessary, seemed really pitiable. Having protested
against the marriage, Lush had a second-sight for its
evil consequences. Grandcourt had been taking
the pains to write letters and give orders himself
instead of employing Lush, and appeared to be ignoring
his usefulness, even choosing, against the habit of
years, to breakfast alone in his dressing-room.
But a tete-a-tete was not to be avoided in
a house empty of guests; and Lush hastened to use an
opportunity of saying it was one day after
dinner, for there were difficulties in Grandcourt’s
dining at Offendene
“And when is the marriage to take place?”
Grandcourt, who drank little wine,
had left the table and was lounging, while he smoked,
in an easy chair near the hearth, where a fire of oak
boughs was gaping to its glowing depths, and edging
them with a delicate tint of ashes delightful to behold.
The chair of red-brown velvet brocade was a becoming
back-ground for his pale-tinted, well-cut features
and exquisite long hands. Omitting the cigar,
you might have imagined him a portrait by Moroni,
who would have rendered wonderfully the impenetrable
gaze and air of distinction; and a portrait by that
great master would have been quite as lively a companion
as Grandcourt was disposed to be. But he answered
without unusual delay.
“On the tenth.”
“I suppose you intend to remain here.”
“We shall go to Ryelands for
a little while; but we shall return here for the sake
of the hunting.”
After this word there was the languid
inarticulate sound frequent with Grandcourt when he
meant to continue speaking, and Lush waited for something
more. Nothing came, and he was going to put another
question, when the inarticulate sound began again
and introduced the mildly uttered suggestion
“You had better make some new arrangement for
yourself.”
“What! I am to cut and
run?” said Lush, prepared to be good-tempered
on the occasion.
“Something of that kind.”
“The bride objects to me.
I hope she will make up to you for the want of my
services.”
“I can’t help your being
so damnably disagreeable to women,” said Grandcourt,
in soothing apology.
“To one woman, if you please.”
“It makes no difference since she is the one
in question.”
“I suppose I am not to be turned
adrift after fifteen years without some provision.”
“You must have saved something out of me.”
“Deuced little. I have often saved something
for you.”
“You can have three hundred
a year. But you must live in town and be ready
to look after things when I want you. I shall
be rather hard up.”
“If you are not going to be
at Ryelands this winter, I might run down there and
let you know how Swinton goes on.”
“If you like. I don’t
care a toss where you are, so that you keep out of
sight.”
“Much obliged,” said Lush,
able to take the affair more easily than he had expected.
He was supported by the secret belief that he should
by-and-by be wanted as much as ever.
“Perhaps you will not object
to packing up as soon as possible,” said Grandcourt.
“The Torringtons are coming, and Miss Harleth
will be riding over here.”
“With all my heart. Can’t
I be of use in going to Gadsmere.”
“No. I am going myself.”
“About your being rather hard up. Have
you thought of that plan ”
“Just leave me alone, will you?”
said Grandcourt, in his lowest audible tone, tossing
his cigar into the fire, and rising to walk away.
He spent the evening in the solitude
of the smaller drawing-room, where, with various new
publications on the table of the kind a gentleman
may like to have on hand without touching, he employed
himself (as a philosopher might have done) in sitting
meditatively on the sofa and abstaining from literature political,
comic, cynical, or romantic. In this way hours
may pass surprisingly soon, without the arduous invisible
chase of philosophy; not from love of thought, but
from hatred of effort from a state of the
inward world, something like premature age, where
the need for action lapses into a mere image of what
has been, is, and may or might be; where impulse is
born and dies in a phantasmal world, pausing in rejection
of even a shadowy fulfillment. That is a condition
which often comes with whitening hair; and sometimes,
too, an intense obstinacy and tenacity of rule, like
the main trunk of an exorbitant egoism, conspicuous
in proportion as the varied susceptibilities of younger
years are stripped away.
But Grandcourt’s hair, though
he had not much of it, was of a fine, sunny blonde,
and his moods were not entirely to be explained as
ebbing energy. We mortals have a strange spiritual
chemistry going on within us, so that a lazy stagnation
or even a cottony milkiness may be preparing one knows
not what biting or explosive material. The navvy
waking from sleep and without malice heaving a stone
to crush the life out of his still sleeping comrade,
is understood to lack the trained motive which makes
a character fairly calculable in its actions; but by
a roundabout course even a gentleman may make of himself
a chancy personage, raising an uncertainty as to what
he may do next, that sadly spoils companionship.
Grandcourt’s thoughts this evening
were like the circlets one sees in a dark pool, continually
dying out and continually started again by some impulse
from below the surface. The deeper central impulse
came from the image of Gwendolen; but the thoughts
it stirred would be imperfectly illustrated by a reference
to the amatory poets of all ages. It was characteristic
that he got none of his satisfaction from the belief
that Gwendolen was in love with him; and that love
had overcome the jealous resentment which had made
her run away from him. On the contrary, he believed
that this girl was rather exceptional in the fact
that, in spite of his assiduous attention to her, she
was not in love with him; and it seemed to him very
likely that if it had not been for the sudden poverty
which had come over her family, she would not have
accepted him. From the very first there had been
an exasperating fascination in the tricksiness with
which she had not met his advances, but wheeled
away from them. She had been brought to accept
him in spite of everything brought to kneel
down like a horse under training for the arena, though
she might have an objection to it all the while.
On the whole, Grandcourt got more pleasure out of this
notion than he could have done out of winning a girl
of whom he was sure that she had a strong inclination
for him personally. And yet this pleasure in
mastering reluctance flourished along with the habitual
persuasion that no woman whom he favored could be quite
indifferent to his personal influence; and it seemed
to him not unlikely that by-and-by Gwendolen might
be more enamored of him than he of her. In any
case, she would have to submit; and he enjoyed thinking
of her as his future wife, whose pride and spirit
were suited to command every one but himself.
He had no taste for a woman who was all tenderness
to him, full of petitioning solicitude and willing
obedience. He meant to be master of a woman who
would have liked to master him, and who perhaps would
have been capable of mastering another man.
Lush, having failed in his attempted
reminder to Grandcourt, thought it well to communicate
with Sir Hugo, in whom, as a man having perhaps interest
enough to command the bestowal of some place where
the work was light, gentlemanly, and not ill-paid,
he was anxious to cultivate a sense of friendly obligation,
not feeling at all secure against the future need
of such a place. He wrote the following letter,
and addressed it to Park Lane, whither he knew the
family had returned from Leubronn:
MY DEAR SIR HUGO Since we
came home the marriage has been absolutely decided
on, and is to take place in less than three weeks.
It is so far the worse for him that her mother
has lately lost all her fortune, and he will have
to find supplies. Grandcourt, I know, is feeling
the want of cash; and unless some other plan is
resorted to, he will be raising money in a foolish
way. I am going to leave Diplow immediately,
and I shall not be able to start the topic. What
I should advise is, that Mr. Deronda, who I know
has your confidence, should propose to come and
pay a short visit here, according to invitation (there
are going to be other people in the house), and that
you should put him fully in possession of your
wishes and the possible extent of your offer.
Then, that he should introduce the subject to Grandcourt
so as not to imply that you suspect any particular
want of money on his part, but only that there
is a strong wish on yours, What I have formerly
said to him has been in the way of a conjecture that
you might be willing to give a good sum for his
chance of Diplow; but if Mr. Deronda came armed
with a definite offer, that would take another sort
of hold. Ten to one he will not close for some
time to come; but the proposal will have got a
stronger lodgment in his mind; and though at present
he has a great notion of the hunting here, I see a
likelihood, under the circumstances, that he will
get a distaste for the neighborhood, and there
will be the notion of the money sticking by him
without being urged. I would bet on your ultimate
success. As I am not to be exiled to Siberia,
but am to be within call, it is possible that,
by and by, I may be of more service to you. But
at present I can think of no medium so good as
Mr. Deronda. Nothing puts Grandcourt in worse
humor than having the lawyers thrust their paper under
his nose uninvited.
Trusting that your visit to
Leubronn has put you in excellent
condition for the winter,
I remain, my dear Sir Hugo,
Yours very faithfully,
THOMAS CRANMER LUSH.
Sir Hugo, having received this letter
at breakfast, handed it to Deronda, who, though he
had chambers in town, was somehow hardly ever in them,
Sir Hugo not being contented without him. The
chatty baronet would have liked a young companion
even if there had been no peculiar reasons for attachment
between them: one with a fine harmonious unspoiled
face fitted to keep up a cheerful view of posterity
and inheritance generally, notwithstanding particular
disappointments; and his affection for Deronda was
not diminished by the deep-lying though not obtrusive
difference in their notions and tastes. Perhaps
it was all the stronger; acting as the same sort of
difference does between a man and a woman in giving
a piquancy to the attachment which subsists in spite
of it. Sir Hugo did not think unapprovingly of
himself; but he looked at men and society from a liberal-menagerie
point of view, and he had a certain pride in Deronda’s
differing from him, which, if it had found voice,
might have said “You see this fine
young fellow not such as you see every
day, is he? he belongs to me in a sort of
way. I brought him up from a child; but you would
not ticket him off easily, he has notions of his own,
and he’s as far as the poles asunder from what
I was at his age.” This state of feeling
was kept up by the mental balance in Deronda, who
was moved by an affectionateness such as we are apt
to call feminine, disposing him to yield in ordinary
details, while he had a certain inflexibility of judgment,
and independence of opinion, held to be rightfully
masculine.
When he had read the letter, he returned
it without speaking, inwardly wincing under Lush’s
mode of attributing a neutral usefulness to him in
the family affairs.
“What do you say, Dan?
It would be pleasant enough for you. You have
not seen the place for a good many years now, and you
might have a famous run with the harriers if you went
down next week,” said Sir Hugo.
“I should not go on that account,”
said Deronda, buttering his bread attentively.
He had an objection to this transparent kind of persuasiveness,
which all intelligent animals are seen to treat with
indifference. If he went to Diplow he should be
doing something disagreeable to oblige Sir Hugo.
“I think Lush’s notion
is a good one. And it would be a pity to lose
the occasion.”
“That is a different matter if
you think my going of importance to your object,”
said Deronda, still with that aloofness of manner which
implied some suppression. He knew that the baronet
had set his heart on the affair.
“Why, you will see the fair
gambler, the Leubronn Diana, I shouldn’t wonder,”
said Sir Hugo, gaily. “We shall have to
invite her to the Abbey, when they are married,”
he added, turning to Lady Mallinger, as if she too
had read the letter.
“I cannot conceive whom you
mean,” said Lady Mallinger, who in fact had
not been listening, her mind having been taken up with
her first sips of coffee, the objectionable cuff of
her sleeve, and the necessity of carrying Theresa
to the dentist innocent and partly laudable
preoccupations, as the gentle lady’s usually
were. Should her appearance be inquired after,
let it be said that she had reddish blonde hair (the
hair of the period), a small Roman nose, rather prominent
blue eyes and delicate eyelids, with a figure which
her thinner friends called fat, her hands showing
curves and dimples like a magnified baby’s.
“I mean that Grandcourt is going
to marry the girl you saw at Leubronn don’t
you remember her the Miss Harleth who used
to play at roulette.”
“Dear me! Is that a good match for him?”
“That depends on the sort of
goodness he wants,” said Sir Hugo, smiling.
“However, she and her friends have nothing, and
she will bring him expenses. It’s a good
match for my purposes, because if I am willing to
fork out a sum of money, he may be willing to give
up his chance of Diplow, so that we shall have it
out and out, and when I die you will have the consolation
of going to the place you would like to go to wherever
I may go.”
“I wish you would not talk of
dying in that light way, dear.”
“It’s rather a heavy way,
Lou, for I shall have to pay a heavy sum forty
thousand, at least.”
“But why are we to invite them
to the Abbey?” said Lady Mallinger. “I
do not like women who gamble, like Lady Cragstone.”
“Oh, you will not mind her for
a week. Besides, she is not like Lady Cragstone
because she gambled a little, any more than I am like
a broker because I’m a Whig. I want to
keep Grandcourt in good humor, and to let him see
plenty of this place, that he may think the less of
Diplow. I don’t know yet whether I shall
get him to meet me in this matter. And if Dan
were to go over on a visit there, he might hold out
the bait to him. It would be doing me a great
service.” This was meant for Deronda.
“Daniel is not fond of Mr. Grandcourt,
I think, is he?” said Lady Mallinger, looking
at Deronda inquiringly.
“There is no avoiding everybody
one doesn’t happen to be fond of,” said
Deronda. “I will go to Diplow I
don’t know that I have anything better to do since
Sir Hugo wishes it.”
“That’s a trump!”
said Sir Hugo, well pleased. “And if you
don’t find it very pleasant, it’s so much
experience. Nothing used to come amiss to me
when I was young. You must see men and manners.”
“Yes; but I have seen that man,
and something of his manners too,” said Deronda.
“Not nice manners, I think,” said Lady
Mallinger.
“Well, you see they succeed
with your sex,” said Sir Hugo, provokingly.
“And he was an uncommonly good-looking fellow
when he was two or three and twenty like
his father. He doesn’t take after his father
in marrying the heiress, though. If he had got
Miss Arrowpoint and my land too, confound him, he
would have had a fine principality.”
Deronda, in anticipating the projected
visit, felt less disinclination than when consenting
to it. The story of that girl’s marriage
did interest him: what he had heard through Lush
of her having run away from the suit of the man she
was now going to take as a husband, had thrown a new
sort of light on her gambling; and it was probably
the transition from that fevered worldliness into
poverty which had urged her acceptance where she must
in some way have felt repulsion. All this implied
a nature liable to difficulty and struggle elements
of life which had a predominant attraction for his
sympathy, due perhaps to his early pain in dwelling
on the conjectured story of his own existence.
Persons attracted him, as Hans Meyrick had done, in
proportion to the possibility of his defending them,
rescuing them, telling upon their lives with some
sort of redeeming influence; and he had to resist an
inclination, easily accounted for, to withdraw coldly
from the fortunate. But in the movement which
had led him to repurchase Gwendolen’s necklace
for her, and which was at work in him still, there
was something beyond his habitual compassionate fervor something
due to the fascination of her womanhood. He was
very open to that sort of charm, and mingled it with
the consciously Utopian pictures of his own future;
yet any one able to trace the folds of his character
might have conceived that he would be more likely
than many less passionate men to love a woman without
telling her of it. Sprinkle food before a delicate-eared
bird: there is nothing he would more willingly
take, yet he keeps aloof, because of his sensibility
to checks which to you are imperceptible. And
one man differs from another, as we all differ from
the Bosjesman, in a sensibility to checks, that come
from variety of needs, spiritual or other. It
seemed to foreshadow that capability of reticence
in Deronda that his imagination was much occupied with
two women, to neither of whom would he have held it
possible that he should ever make love. Hans
Meyrick had laughed at him for having something of
the knight-errant in his disposition; and he would
have found his proof if he had known what was just
now going on in Deronda’s mind about Mirah and
Gwendolen.
Deronda wrote without delay to announce
his visit to Diplow, and received in reply a polite
assurance that his coming would give great pleasure.
That was not altogether untrue. Grandcourt thought
it probable that the visit was prompted by Sir Hugo’s
desire to court him for a purpose which he did not
make up his mind to resist; and it was not a disagreeable
idea to him that this fine fellow, whom he believed
to be his cousin under the rose, would witness, perhaps
with some jealousy, Henleigh Mallinger Grandcourt
play the commanding part of betrothed lover to a splendid
girl whom the cousin had already looked at with admiration.
Grandcourt himself was not jealous
of anything unless it threatened his mastery which
he did not think himself likely to lose.