John’s recovery, though continuous
and satisfactory, was but slow; and it was not until
Easter, which fell early, that his health was pronounced
to be entirely re-established. The last few weeks
of his convalescence had proved to all of us a time
of thankful and tranquil enjoyment. If I may
judge from my own experience, there are few epochs
in our life more favourable to the growth of sentiments
of affection and piety, or more full of pleasurable
content, than is the period of gradual recovery from
serious illness. The chastening effect of our
recent sickness has not yet passed away, and we are
at once grateful to our Creator for preserving us,
and to our friends for the countless acts of watchful
kindness which it is the peculiar property of illness
to evoke.
No mother ever nursed a son more tenderly
than did Mrs. Temple nurse my brother, and before
his restoration to health was complete the attachment
between him and Constance had ripened into a formal
betrothal. Such an alliance was, as I have before
explained, particularly suitable, and its prospect
afforded the most lively pleasure to all those concerned.
The month of March had been unusually mild, and Royston
being situated in a valley, as is the case with most
houses of that date, was well sheltered from cold winds.
It had, moreover, a south aspect, and as my brother
gradually gathered strength, Constance and he and
I would often sit out of doors in the soft spring
mornings. We put an easy-chair with many cushions
for him on the gravel by the front door, where the
warmth of the sun was reflected from the red brick
walls, and he would at times read aloud to us while
we were engaged with our crochet-work. Mr. Tennyson
had just published anonymously a first volume of poems,
and the sober dignity of his verse well suited our
frame of mind at that time. The memory of those
pleasant spring mornings, my dear Edward, has not
yet passed away, and I can still smell the sweet moist
scent of the violets, and see the bright colours of
the crocus-flowers in the parterres in front of
us.
John’s mind seemed to be gathering
strength with his body. He had apparently flung
off the cloud which had overshadowed him before his
illness, and avoided entirely any reference to those
unpleasant events which had been previously so constantly
in his thoughts. I had, indeed, taken an early
opportunity of telling him of my discovery of the picture
of Adrian Temple, as I thought it would tend to show
him that at least the last appearance of this ghostly
form admitted of a rational explanation. He seemed
glad to hear of this, but did not exhibit the same
interest in the matter that I had expected, and allowed
it at once to drop. Whether through lack of interest,
or from a lingering dislike to revisit the spot where
he was seized with illness, he did not, I believe,
once enter the picture-gallery before he left Royston.
I cannot say as much for myself.
The picture of Adrian Temple exerted a curious fascination
over me, and I constantly took an opportunity of studying
it. It was, indeed, a beautiful work; and perhaps
because John’s recovery gave a more cheerful
tone to my thoughts, or perhaps from the power of
custom to dull even the keenest antipathies, I
gradually got to lose much of the feeling of aversion
which it had at first inspired. In time the unpleasant
look grew less unpleasing, and I noticed more the
beautiful oval of the face, the brown eyes, and the
fine chiselling of the features. Sometimes, too,
I felt a deep pity for so clever a gentleman who had
died young, and whose life, were it ever so wicked,
must often have been also lonely and bitter. More
than once I had been discovered by Mrs. Temple or
Constance sitting looking at the picture, and they
had gently laughed at me, saying that I had fallen
in love with Adrian Temple.
One morning in early April, when the
sun was streaming brightly through the oriel, and
the picture received a fuller light than usual, it
occurred to me to examine closely the scroll of music
painted as hanging over the top of the pedestal on
which the figure leant. I had hitherto thought
that the signs depicted on it were merely such as painters
might conventionally use to represent a piece of musical
notation. This has generally been the case, I
think, in such pictures as I have ever seen in which
a piece of music has been introduced. I mean that
while the painting gives a general representation
of the musical staves, no attempt is ever made to
paint any definite notes such as would enable an actual
piece to be identified. Though, as I write this,
I do remember that on the monument to Handel in Westminster
Abbey there is represented a musical scroll similar
to that in Adrian Temple’s picture, but actually
sculptured with the opening phrase of the majestic
melody, “I know that my Redeemer liveth.”
On this morning, then, at Royston
I thought I perceived that there were painted on the
scroll actual musical staves, bars, and notes; and
my interest being excited, I stood upon a chair so
as better to examine them. Though time had somewhat
obscured this portion of the picture as with a veil
or film, yet I made out that the painter had intended
to depict some definite piece of music. In another
moment I saw that the air represented consisted of
the opening bars of the Gagliarda in the suite
by Graziani with which my brother and I were so well
acquainted. Though I believe that I had not seen
the volume of music in which that piece was contained
more than twice, yet the melody was very familiar
to me, and I had no difficulty whatever in making myself
sure that I had here before me the air of the Gagliarda
and none other. It was true that it was only
roughly painted, but to one who knew the tune there
was no room left for doubt.
Here was a new cause, I will not say
for surprise, but for reflection. It might, of
course, have been merely a coincidence that the artist
should have chosen to paint in this picture this particular
piece of music; but it seemed more probable that it
had actually been a favourite air of Adrian Temple,
and that he had chosen deliberately to have it represented
with him. This discovery I kept entirely to myself,
not thinking it wise to communicate it to my brother,
lest by doing so I might reawaken his interest in
a subject which I hoped he had finally dismissed from
his thoughts.
In the second week of April the happy
party at Royston was dispersed, John returning to
Oxford for the summer term, Mrs. Temple making a short
visit to Scotland, and Constance coming to Worth Maltravers
to keep me company for a time.
It was John’s last term at Oxford.
He expected to take his degree in June, and his marriage
with Constance Temple had been provisionally arranged
for the September following. He returned to Magdalen
Hall in the best of spirits, and found his rooms looking
cheerful with well-filled flower-boxes in the windows.
I shall not detain you with any long narration of
the events of the term, as they have no relation to
the present history. I will only say that I believe
my brother applied himself diligently to his studies,
and took his amusement mostly on horseback, riding
two horses which he had had sent to him from Worth
Maltravers.
About the second week after his return
he received a letter from Mr. George Smart to the
effect that the Stradivarius violin was now in complete
order. Subsequent examination, Mr. Smart wrote,
and the unanimous verdict of connoisseurs whom he
had consulted, had merely confirmed the views he had
at first expressednamely, that the violin
was of the finest quality, and that my brother had
in his possession a unique and intact example of Stradivarius’s
best period. He had had it properly strung; and
as the bass-bar had never been moved, and was of a
stronger nature than that usual at the period of its
manufacture, he had considered it unnecessary to replace
it. If any signs should become visible of its
being inadequate to support the tension of modern
stringing, another could be easily substituted for
it at a later date. He had allowed a young German
virtuoso to play on it, and though this gentleman
was one of the first living performers, and had had
an opportunity of handling many splendid instruments,
he assured Mr. Smart that he had never performed on
one that could in any way compare with this.
My brother wrote in reply thanking him, and begging
that the violin might be sent to Magdalen Hall.
The pleasant musical evenings, however,
which John had formerly been used to spend in the
company of Mr. Gaskell were now entirely pretermitted.
For though there was no cause for any diminution of
friendship between them, and though on Mr. Gaskell’s
part there was an ardent desire to maintain their
former intimacy, yet the two young men saw less and
less of one another, until their intercourse was confined
to an accidental greeting in the street. I believe
that during all this time my brother played very frequently
on the Stradivarius violin, but always alone.
Its very possession seemed to have engendered from
the first in his mind a secretive tendency which, as
I have already observed, was entirely alien to his
real disposition. As he had concealed its discovery
from his sister, so he had also from his friend, and
Mr. Gaskell remained in complete ignorance of the existence
of such an instrument.
On the evening of its arrival from
London, John seems to have carefully unpacked the
violin and tried it with a new bow of Tourte’s
make which he had purchased of Mr. Smart. He
had shut the heavy outside door of his room before
beginning to play, so that no one might enter unawares;
and he told me afterwards that though he had naturally
expected from the instrument a very fine tone, yet
its actual merits so far exceeded his anticipations
as entirely to overwhelm him. The sound issued
from it in a volume of such depth and purity as to
give an impression of the passages being chorded,
or even of another violin being played at the same
time. He had had, of course, no opportunity of
practising during his illness, and so expected to
find his skill with the bow somewhat diminished; but
he perceived, on the contrary, that his performance
was greatly improved, and that he was playing with
a mastery and feeling of which he had never before
been conscious. While attributing this improvement
very largely to the beauty of the instrument on which
he was performing, yet he could not but believe that
by his illness, or in some other unexplained way,
he had actually acquired a greater freedom of wrist
and fluency of expression, with which reflection he
was not a little elated. He had had a lock fixed
on the cupboard in which he had originally found the
violin, and here he carefully deposited it on each
occasion after playing, before he opened the outer
door of his room.
So the summer term passed away.
The examinations had come in their due time, and were
now over. Both the young men had submitted themselves
to the ordeal, and while neither would of course have
admitted as much to anyone else, both felt secretly
that they had no reason to be dissatisfied with their
performance. The results would not be published
for some weeks to come. The last night of the
term had arrived, the last night too of John’s
Oxford career. It was near nine o’clock,
but still quite light, and the rich orange glow of
sunset had not yet left the sky. The air was
warm and sultry, as on that eventful evening when just
a year ago he had for the first time seen the figure
or the illusion of the figure of Adrian Temple.
Since that time he had played the “Areopagita”
many, many times; but there had never been any reappearance
of that form, nor even had the once familiar creaking
of the wicker chair ever made itself heard. As
he sat alone in his room, thinking with a natural
melancholy that he had seen the sun set for the last
time on his student life, and reflecting on the possibilities
of the future and perhaps on opportunities wasted
in the past, the memory of that evening last June
recurred strongly to his imagination, and he felt an
irresistible impulse to play once more the “Areopagita.”
He unlocked the now familiar cupboard and took out
the violin, and never had the exquisite gradations
of colour in its varnish appeared to greater advantage
than in the soft mellow light of the fading day.
As he began the Gagliarda he looked at the
wicker chair, half expecting to see a form he well
knew seated in it; but nothing of the kind ensued,
and he concluded the “Areopagita”
without the occurrence of any unusual phenomenon.
It was just at its close that he heard
some one knocking at the outer door. He hurriedly
locked away the violin and opened the “oak.”
It was Mr. Gaskell. He came in rather awkwardly,
as though not sure whether he would be welcomed.
“Johnnie,” he began, and stopped.
The force of ancient habit sometimes,
dear nephew, leads us unwittingly to accost those
who were once our friends by a familiar or nick-name
long “after the intimacy that formerly justified
it has vanished. But sometimes we intentionally
revert to the use of such a name, not wishing to proclaim
openly, as it were, by a more formal address that we
are no longer the friends we once were. I think
this latter was the case with Mr. Gaskell as he repeated
the familiar name.
“Johnnie, I was passing down
New College Lane, and heard the violin from your open
windows. You were playing the ‘Areopagita,’
and it all sounded so familiar to me that I thought
I must come up. I am not interrupting you, am
I?”
“No, not at all,” John answered.
“It is the last night of our
undergraduate life, the last night we shall meet in
Oxford as students. To-morrow we make our bow
to youth and become men. We have not seen much
of each other this term at any rate, and I daresay
that is my fault. But at least let us part as
friends. Surely our friends are not so many that
we can afford to fling them lightly away.”
He held out his hand frankly, and
his voice trembled a little as he spokepartly
perhaps from real emotion, but more probably from the
feeling of reluctance which I have noticed men always
exhibit to discovering any sentiment deeper than those
usually deemed conventional in correct society.
My brother was moved by his obvious wish to renew
their former friendship, and grasped the proffered
hand.
There was a minute’s pause,
and then the conversation was resumed, a little stiffly
at first, but more freely afterwards. They spoke
on many indifferent subjects, and Mr. Gaskell congratulated
John on the prospect of his marriage, of which he
had heard. As he at length rose up to take his
departure, he said, “You must have practised
the violin diligently of late, for I never knew anyone
make so rapid progress with it as you have done.
As I came along I was spellbound by your music.
I never before heard you bring from the instrument
so exquisite a tone: the chorded passages were
so powerful that I believed there had been another
person playing with you. Your Pressenda is certainly
a finer instrument than I ever imagined.”
My brother was pleased with Mr. Gaskell’s
compliment, and the latter continued, “Let me
enjoy the pleasure of playing with you once more in
Oxford; let us play the ‘Areopagita.’”
And so saying he opened the pianoforte and sat down.
John was turning to take out the Stradivarius
when he remembered that he had never even revealed
its existence to Mr. Gaskell, and that if he now produced
it an explanation must follow. In a moment his
mood changed, and with less geniality he excused himself,
somewhat awkwardly, from complying with the request,
saying that he was fatigued.
Mr. Gaskell was evidently hurt at
his friend’s altered manner, and without renewing
his petition rose at once from the pianoforte, and
after a little forced conversation took his departure.
On leaving he shook my brother by the hand, wished
him all prosperity in his marriage and after-life,
and said, “Do not entirely forget your old comrade,
and remember that if at any time you should stand
in need of a true friend, you know where to find him!”
John heard his footsteps echoing down
the passage and made a half-involuntary motion towards
the door as if to call him back, but did not do so,
though he thought over his last words then and on a
subsequent occasion.