“We, too, have
autumns, when our leaves
Drop loosely
through the dampened air;
When all our good seems
bound in sheaves,
And we stand
reaped and bare.”
Lowell.
Laura and Mrs. Melcombe went home,
and Laura saw the window again that Joseph had so
skilfully glazed. Joseph was not there, and Laura
would not have occupied herself with constant thoughts
about him if there had been anything, or rather anybody
else to think of. She soon began to feel low-spirited
and restless, while, like a potato-plant in a dark
cellar, she put forth long runners towards the light,
and no light was to be found. This homely simile
ought to be forgiven, because it is such a good one.
Peter was getting too old for her
teaching. He had a tutor, but the tutor was a
married man, and had taken lodgings for himself and
his wife in one of the farm-houses.
Laura had no career before her, and
no worthy occupation. All that came to pass in
her day was a short saunter, or a drive, or a visit
to the market-town, where she sat looking on while
her sister-in-law did some shopping.
Melcombe was six or seven miles from
any visitable families, excepting two or three
clergymen and their wives; it was shut up in a three-cornered
nook of land, and could not be approached excepting
through turn-pikes, and up and down some specially
steep hills. These things make havoc with country
sociability.
As long as there had been plenty to
do and see, Laura had enjoyed her life on the Continent,
and had fed herself with hope. So many people
as passed before her, it would be strange, she thought,
if not one of them had been made for her, not one
was to give her the love she wanted, the devotion
she knew she could return.
It was certainly strange, and yet
it came to pass, though the travelled fool returned,
improved in style, dress, and even in appearance, while
her conversation was naturally more amusing than before,
for she had seen most places and things that people
like to talk of.
Not one man had asked her to spend
her life with him, and she came back more given to
flights of fancy than ever, but far better acquainted
with herself and more humble, for she had spent so
much of her time (in imagination) with Joseph that
she had become accustomed to his slightly provincial
accent, and had ceased to care about it. Joseph,
however, did not speak like his good father, and he
had been endowed with as much learning as he would
consent to acquire, Swan having felt a great ambition
to make him a certified schoolmaster, but Joseph having
been at an early age rather an idle young dog, had
tormented his father into letting him take to a mere
handicraft, and had left school writing a hand almost
like copperplate, and being a very fair accountant,
but without thirst for knowledge, and without any
worthy ambition.
Laura had always known that nothing
but a desert island was wanted, and she could be his
contented wife; but a desert island was not to be had,
such things are getting rare in the world, and she
now thought that any remote locality, where nobody
knew her, would do.
But where was Joseph?
She had certainly gone away without
giving him any interview, she had persistently kept
away, yet though she was doing what she could, by fits
and starts, to forget him, that perverse imagination
of hers always pictured him as waiting, constant,
ready. There was a particular tree in the glen
behind which she had so frequently represented him
to herself as standing patiently while she approached
with furtive steps, that when she came home and went
to look at it, there was a feeling almost akin to
surprise in her mind at seeing the place drenched in
sparkling dew, and all overgrown with moss. Footsteps
that are feigned never tread anything down; they leave
no print, excepting in the heart that feigns them.
When Laura saw this place in the glen,
she perceived plainly that there was no one with whom
she might be humbly happy and poor not even
a plumber!
This form of human sorrow certainly
one of the worst is not half enough pitied
by the happy.
Of course Laura was a fool nobody
claims for her that she was not; but fools are not
rare, either male or female; as they arrange the world
and its ways in great measure, it is odd that they
do not understand one another better, and whether
Laura showed her folly most or least in thinking that
she could have been obscurely happy as the wife of
a man who belonged to a different class of life from
her own (she herself having small intellectual endowments,
and but little culture), is a subject too vast, too
overwhelming, for decision here; it ought to have
a treatise in twelve volumes all to itself.
Mrs. Melcombe had come home also somewhat
improved, but a good deal disappointed. She had
fully hoped and intended to marry again, because her
son, who was to live to be old, would wish to marry
early, and her future daughter-in-law would be mistress
of the house. It was desirable, therefore, that
Peter’s mother should not be dependent on him
for a home. She had twice been invited, while
on the Continent, to change her name; but in each
case it would have been, in a worldly point of view,
very much to her disadvantage, and that was a species
of second marriage that she by no means contemplated.
She did not want her second husband to take her that
she might nurse him in his old age, fast approaching,
and that he might live upon her income.
So she came home Mrs. Melcombe,
and she continued to be kind to Laura, though she
did not sympathize with her; and that was no fault
of hers: sympathy is much more an intellectual
than a moral endowment. However kind, dull, and
stupid people may be, they can rarely sympathize with
any trouble unless they have gone through one just
like it themselves.
You may hear it said, “Ah, I
can sympathize with him, poor fellow, for I have a
wooden leg myself,” or, “Yes, being a widow,
I know what a widow’s feelings are,” and
so on.
No one has a right to blame these
people; they are as kind as any; it is not their fault
that some are living among them to whom no experience
at all is necessary, and who not only could sympathize,
but do in thought, with the very angel that never
fell, when they consider what it must be to him if
the mortal child he has to watch goes wrong; with the
poor weak drunkard who wishes he could keep sober,
but feels, when he would fain pass by it, that the
gin-shop, like a devil-fish, sends forth long tentacles
and ruthlessly sucks him in; with the mother-whale,
when her wilful young one insists on swimming up the
fiord, and she who has risked her life to warn him
must hear the thud of the harpoon in his side; with
the old tired horse, when they fetch him in from his
sober reverie in the fields, and put his blinkers
on; with anything else? yes, with the bluebells,
whose life above ground is so short, when wasteful
children tread them down; these all feel
something that one would fain save them from.
So perhaps does the rose-tree also, when some careless
boy goes by whooping in the joy of his heart, and whips
off her buds with his cane.
Fruitful sympathy must doubtless have
some likeness of nature, and also a certain kindliness
to found itself on; but it comes more from a penetrative
keenness of observation, from the patient investigations
of thought, from those vivid intuitions that wait
on imagination, from a good memory, which can live
over again in circumstances that are changed, and
from that intelligent possession of the whole of one’s
foregone life, which makes it impossible to ignore
the power of any great emotion or passion merely because
it is past. Where these qualities are there should
be, for there can be, sympathy.
Mrs. Melcombe was fond of her one
child; but she had forgotten what her own nature,
thoughts, fears, and wishes, as well as joys, had been
in childhood. In like manner, as she was, on
the whole, contented herself, she not only thought
that her own example ought to make Laura contented,
but she frequently pointed this out to her.
The child is to the father and mother,
who imparted life to him, and who see his youth, the
most excellent consolation that nature can afford
them for the loss of their own youth, and for the shortness
of life in themselves; but if a mother is therefore
convinced that her child is a consoler to those who
have none, he is sure, at some time or other, to be
considered an unmitigated bore.
Mrs. Melcombe often thought, “Laura
has my child with her constantly to amuse her, and
has none of the responsibility about him that I have.
Laura goes to the shops with me, sees me give the orders,
and I frequently even consult her; she goes with me
into the garden, and sees the interest I take in the
wall-fruit and the new asparagus-bed, and yet she
never takes example by me. She will eat just as
many of these things as I shall, though she often
follows me about the place looking as if she scarcely
cared for them at all.”
Laura was pleased, however, to go
to Wigfield and stay with Grand, and have for a companion
a careless, childish girl, who undertook with enthusiasm
to teach her to drive, and if old Grand wanted his
horses, would borrow any rats of ponies that she could
get.
Laura spent many happy hours with
Liz and the Mortimer children, now huddled into an
old tub of a punt, eating cakes and curd for lunch,
now having a picnic in the wood, and boiling the kettle
out of doors, and at other times welcomed into the
long loft called “Parliament;” but she
seldom saw John Mortimer himself, for Lizzie was always
anxious to be back in good time for dinner. She
valued her place at the head of the table, and the
indulgent old Grand perceived this plainly. He
liked Laura well enough; but Liz was the kind of creature
whom he could be fond of. They were both foolish
girls. Liz took no manner of pains to improve
herself any more than Laura did; but Laura was full
of uneasy little affectations, capricious changes
of manner, and shyness, and Liz was absolutely simple,
and as confiding as a child.
The only useful thing the girls did
while they stayed with Grand was to go into the town
twice a week and devote a couple of hours to a coal
and clothing club, setting down the savings of the
poor, and keeping the books. This bi-weekly visit
had consequences as regarded one of them, but it was
the one who did not care what happened; and they parted
at the end of their visit, having become a good deal
attached to each other, and intending to correspond
as fully and frequently as is the manner of girls.
The intelligent mind, it may be taken
for granted, is able to grasp the thought that one
may be a very fair, and even copious, letter-writer,
and yet show nothing like diffusiveness in writing
to an ancient aunt.
The leaves were all dropping when
Laura came home, and was received into the spirit
of the autumn, breathing in that sense of silence that
comes from absence of the birds, while in still mornings,
unstirred of any wind, the leaves let themselves go,
and the flowers give it up and drop and close.
She was rather sad; but she found amusement in writing
to Liz, and as the days got to their shortest, with
nothing to relieve their monotony, there was pleasure
to be got out of the long answers, which set forth
how Valentine was really going to be married soon after
Christmas, and what Liz was going to wear, how Dorothea
was coming down to be married from Wigfield House,
to please “sister,” and how it would all
be such fun “Only three weeks, Laura
dear, to the delightful day!” Finally, how Dorothea
had arrived and oh, such a lovely trousseau!
and she had never looked half so sweet and pretty before,
“and in four days, dear, the wedding is to be;
eighty people to breakfast only think!
and you shall be told all about it.”
Laura felt herself slightly injured
when, a week after this, she had not been told anything.
She felt even surprised when another week passed,
and yet there was silence; but at the end of it, she
came rushing one morning into Amelia’s room,
quite flushed from excitement, and with an open letter
in her hand.
“They’re not married at
all,” she exclaimed, “Valentine and Miss
Graham! There has been no wedding, and there
is none coming off. Valentine has jilted her.”
“Nonsense,” cried Mrs.
Melcombe. “You must be dreaming things
had gone so far,” and she sat down, feeling
suddenly weak from amazement.
“But it is so,” repeated
Laura, “here is the whole account, I tell you.
When the time came he never appeared.”
“What a disgraceful shame!”
exclaimed Amelia, and Laura proceeded to read to her
this long-expected letter:
“Dearest Laura, I
don’t know how to begin, and I hardly know what
to tell you, because I am so ashamed of it all; and
I promised to give you an account of the wedding,
but I can’t. What will you think when I
tell you that there was none? Valentine never
came. I told you that Dorothea was in the house,
but that he had gone away to take leave of various
friends, because, after the wedding, they were to sail
almost immediately, and so, I must make
short work with this, because I hate it to that degree.
There was the great snowstorm, as you know, and when
he did not come home we thought he must be blocked
up somewhere, and then we were afraid he was very
ill. At last when still it snowed, and still
he did not come, Giles went in search of him, and it
was not till the very day before the wedding that
he got back, having found out the whole detestable
thing.
“Poor Val! and we used to think
him such a dear fellow. Of course I cannot help
being fond of him still, but, Laura, he has disgracefully
attached himself to another girl; he could not bear
to come home and be married, and he knew St. George
would be in such a rage that he did not dare to tell.”
“Young scamp!” exclaimed
Amelia; “such a tall, handsome fellow to, who
would have believed it of him?”
“Well, Laura dear, when I saw
St. George come in, I was so frightened that I fainted.
Dorothea was quite calm quite still she
had been so all the time. It makes me cry to
think what she must have felt, dear sweet thing; but
such a day as that one was, Laura, I cannot describe,
and you cannot imagine. The whole country was
completely snowed up. St. George had telegraphed
to John Mortimer, from London, to be at our house,
if possible, by four o’clock, for something had
gone wrong, and his horses, because of the deep drift,
overturned the phaeton into a ditch. John rolled
out, but managed to wade on to us; he was half covered
with snow when I came down just as light was failing,
and saw him in the hall stamping about and shaking
the snow out of his pockets and from his hair.
I heard him sighing and saying how sad it was, for
we thought Val must be ill, till Giles came up to
him, and in two minutes told him what had happened.
Oh I never saw anybody in such a fury as he put himself
into! I was quite surprised. He almost stuttered
with rage. What was the use either of his storming
at Giles, as if he could help it, or indeed any of
us? And then sister was very much hurt, for she
came hurrying into the hall, and began to cry; she
does so like, poor thing, that people should take
things quietly. And presently, grinding and crunching
through the snow, with four horses, came dear old Grand,
done up in comforters, in the close carriage.
He had driven round the other way; he knew something
was wrong, and he came into the hall with such trembling
hands, thinking Val was dying or perhaps dead.
And then what a passion he got into, too, when John
told him, it’s no use at all my trying to explain
to you; he actually cried, and when he had dried his
eyes, he shook his fists, and said he was ashamed of
his name.
“It was very disagreeable for
us, as you may suppose. It was dusk before sister
and St. George could get them to think of what we had
to do. To send and stop the bells from ringing
early the next morning; to stop several people who
were coming by rail to dinner that day, and expecting
to sleep in the house on account of the unusual weather;
to let Dick A’Court know, and the other clergyman,
who were to have married them; and to prevent as many
people as possible from coming to the breakfast, or
to the church; to stop the men who were making a path
to it through the drift Oh you can’t
think what a confusion there presently was, and we
had four or five hired flys in the stable, ready to
fetch our friends, and take them to church, too; and
there was such a smell all over, of roasting things
and baking things. Well, Laura, off we all set
into the kitchen, and sent off the hired men with the
flys, and every servant we had in the house, male
or female and Grand’s men too excepting
sister’s little maid to attend to Dorothea.
They went with messages and letters and telegrams
right and left, to prevent the disgrace of any more
people coming to look at us. And then, when they
were all gone, we being in the kitchen, John soon recollected
how the cook had begged us to be very particular,
and put water every now and then into the boiler,
for the pipe that supplied it was frozen, and if we
didn’t mind it would burst. So off he and
Giles had to go into the dark yard and get in some
water, and then they had to fetch in coals for the
fires, and when John found that all the water in the
back kitchen was frozen, and there was none but what
was boiling to wash his hands in, he broke out again
and denounced Val, and that minute up came the carrier’s
cart to the back door, having rescued the four smallest
Mortimers and Aunt Christie and the nurse, who had
been found stuck fast in the sociable in a drift,
and in the children burst, full of ecstasy and congratulations,
and thinking it the greatest fun in the world that
we should all be in the kitchen. And while Grand
sat in low spirits at one side of the fire, and they
began to amuse themselves by pulling in all the fish-baskets,
and parcels, and boxes, and wedding presents, that
the carriers had left outside in the snow (because
John wouldn’t let them come in and see us),
St. George sat at the end of the dresser with his
arms folded, smoked a cigar, and held his peace.
He must have been very much tired, as well as disgusted,
poor fellow, for he had been rushing about the country
for three days and nights; so he left all the others
to do just what they liked, and say what they liked.
And very soon the whole confusion got to its height,
by the elder children coming in and being told, and
flying at John to condole and cry over him, and entreat
him not to mind. John, indeed! just as if we didn’t
care at all! It was intended that all the children
should sleep in our house, for it is so near the church,
and nothing could prevent the younger ones from thinking
it all the most glorious fun. What with having
been stuck fast, and then coming on in the cart and
finding us in the kitchen, and having supper there,
they were so delighted that they could not conceal
their ecstasy.
“As for little Anastasia, when
the weights of the great kitchen clock ran down, and
it stopped with an awful sort of gasping click, I believe
she thought that was the wedding, for she ran
up to St. George, who still sat on the dresser, and
said
“‘Shan’t we have another one to-morrow?’
“‘No, you stoopid
little thing!’ Bertie said. ’You know
Cousin Val won’t come to do the marrying.’
“‘But somebody must,’
she went on, ’else we can’t have our new
nopera cloaks and our satin frocks. Can’t
papa?’
“‘No, papa doesn’t wish,’
said Bertie; ‘I asked him.’
“‘Then,’ she said,
looking up at St. George, and speaking in a very pathetic
tone, ’you will, dear, won’t you?
because you know you’re so kind.’
“I just happened to glance at
St. George then, and you can’t think, Laura,
how astonished I was. He turned away his face,
and sister, who was standing close by, lifted up the
child and let her kiss him. Then he got down
from the dresser and went away; but, Laura, if he had
wished more than anything in the world to marry Dorothea,
he might have looked just so.
“Don’t tell any one what
I have said about this. Perhaps I was mistaken.
I will write again soon.
“Ever affectionately yours,
“Elizabeth Grant.”
“Well,” said Mrs. Melcombe,
“it’s the most disgraceful thing I ever
heard of.”
“And here is a postscript,”
remarked Laura; “nothing particular, though: ’P.S. Dorothea
was ill at first; but she is better. I must tell
you that dear old Grand, the next morning, apologized
to sister for having so lost his temper; he said it
was the old Adam that was strong in him still.’”