I now come to my own story. During
the early part of my life there is little to relate,
and I will be brief; but I must be allowed to dwell
a little on the years of my childhood that it may be
apparent how when one hope failed all life was to
be a blank; and how when the only affection I was
permitted to cherish was blasted my existence was
extinguished with it.
I have said that my aunt was very
unlike my father. I believe that without the
slightest tinge of a bad heart she had the coldest
that ever filled a human breast: it was totally
incapable of any affection. She took me under
her protection because she considered it her duty;
but she had too long lived alone and undisturbed by
the noise and prattle of children to allow that I
should disturb her quiet. She had never been
married; and for the last five years had lived perfectly
alone on an estate, that had descended to her through
her mother, on the shores of Loch Lomond in Scotland.
My father had expressed a wish in his letters that
she should reside with me at his family mansion which
was situated in a beautiful country near Richmond in
Yorkshire. She would not consent to this proposition,
but as soon as she had arranged the affairs which
her brother’s departure had caused to fall to
her care, she quitted England and took me with her
to her scotch estate.
The care of me while a baby, and afterwards
untill I had reached my eighth year devolved on a
servant of my mother’s, who had accompanied
us in our retirement for that purpose. I was placed
in a remote part of the house, and only saw my aunt
at stated hours. These occurred twice a day;
once about noon she came to my nursery, and once after
her dinner I was taken to her. She never caressed
me, and seemed all the time I staid in the room to
fear that I should annoy her by some childish freak.
My good nurse always schooled me with the greatest
care before she ventured into the parlour and
the awe my aunt’s cold looks and few constrained
words inspired was so great that I seldom disgraced
her lessons or was betrayed from the exemplary stillness
which I was taught to observe during these short visits.
Under my good nurse’s care I
ran wild about our park and the neighbouring fields.
The offspring of the deepest love I displayed from
my earliest years the greatest sensibility of disposition.
I cannot say with what passion I loved every thing
even the inanimate objects that surrounded me.
I believe that I bore an individual attachment to
every tree in our park; every animal that inhabited
it knew me and I loved them. Their occasional
deaths filled my infant heart with anguish. I
cannot number the birds that I have saved during the
long and severe winters of that climate; or the hares
and rabbits that I have defended from the attacks
of our dogs, or have nursed when accidentally wounded.
When I was seven years of age my nurse
left me. I now forget the cause of her departure
if indeed I ever knew it. She returned to England,
and the bitter tears she shed at parting were the last
I saw flow for love of me for many years. My
grief was terrible: I had no friend but her in
the whole world. By degrees I became reconciled
to solitude but no one supplied her place in my affections.
I lived in a desolate country where
It is true that I now saw a little
more of my aunt, but she was in every way an unsocial
being; and to a timid child she was as a plant beneath
a thick covering of ice; I should cut my hands in endeavouring
to get at it. So I was entirely thrown upon my
own resourses. The neighbouring minister was
engaged to give me lessons in reading, writing and
french, but he was without family and his manners even
to me were always perfectly characteristic of the
profession in the exercise of whose functions he chiefly
shone, that of a schoolmaster. I sometimes strove
to form friendships with the most attractive of the
girls who inhabited the neighbouring village; but I
believe I should never have succeeded [even] had not
my aunt interposed her authority to prevent all intercourse
between me and the peasantry; for she was fearful
lest I should acquire the scotch accent and dialect;
a little of it I had, although great pains was taken
that my tongue should not disgrace my English origin.
As I grew older my liberty encreased
with my desires, and my wanderings extended from our
park to the neighbouring country. Our house was
situated on the shores of the lake and the lawn came
down to the water’s edge. I rambled amidst
the wild scenery of this lovely country and became
a complete mountaineer: I passed hours on the
steep brow of a mountain that overhung a waterfall
or rowed myself in a little skiff to some one of the
islands. I wandered for ever about these lovely
solitudes, gathering flower after flower
Ond’ era pinta tutta
la mia via
singing as I might the wild melodies
of the country, or occupied by pleasant day dreams.
My greatest pleasure was the enjoyment of a serene
sky amidst these verdant woods: yet I loved all
the changes of Nature; and rain, and storm, and the
beautiful clouds of heaven brought their delights
with them. When rocked by the waves of the lake
my spirits rose in triumph as a horseman feels with
pride the motions of his high fed steed.
But my pleasures arose from the contemplation
of nature alone, I had no companion: my warm
affections finding no return from any other human
heart were forced to run waste on inanimate objects.
Sometimes indeed I wept when my aunt received my caresses
with repulsive coldness, and when I looked round and
found none to love; but I quickly dried my tears.
As I grew older books in some degree supplied the
place of human intercourse: the library of my
aunt was very small; Shakespear, Milton, Pope and
Cowper were the strangley [sic] assorted poets
of her collection; and among the prose authors a translation
of Livy and Rollin’s ancient history were my
chief favourites although as I emerged from childhood
I found others highly interesting which I had before
neglected as dull.
When I was twelve years old it occurred
to my aunt that I ought to learn music; she herself
played upon the harp. It was with great hesitation
that she persuaded herself to undertake my instruction;
yet believing this accomplishment a necessary part
of my education, and balancing the evils of this measure
or of having some one in the house to instruct me
she submitted to the inconvenience. A harp was
sent for that my playing might not interfere with
hers, and I began: she found me a docile and
when I had conquered the first rudiments a very apt
scholar. I had acquired in my harp a companion
in rainy days; a sweet soother of my feelings when
any untoward accident ruffled them: I often addressed
it as my only friend; I could pour forth to it my
hopes and loves, and I fancied that its sweet accents
answered me. I have now mentioned all my studies.
I was a solitary being, and from my
infant years, ever since my dear nurse left me, I
had been a dreamer. I brought Rosalind and Miranda
and the lady of Comus to life to be my companions,
or on my isle acted over their parts imagining myself
to be in their situations. Then I wandered from
the fancies of others and formed affections and intimacies
with the aerial creations of my own brain but
still clinging to reality I gave a name to these conceptions
and nursed them in the hope of realization. I
clung to the memory of my parents; my mother I should
never see, she was dead: but the idea of [my]
unhappy, wandering father was the idol of my imagination.
I bestowed on him all my affections; there was a miniature
of him that I gazed on continually; I copied his last
letter and read it again and again. Sometimes
it made me weep; and at other [times] I repeated with
transport those words, “One day I
may claim her at your hands.” I was to
be his consoler, his companion in after years.
My favourite vision was that when I grew up I would
leave my aunt, whose coldness lulled my conscience,
and disguised like a boy I would seek my father through
the world. My imagination hung upon the scene
of recognition; his miniature, which I should continually
wear exposed on my breast, would be the means and
I imaged the moment to my mind a thousand and a thousand
times, perpetually varying the circumstances.
Sometimes it would be in a desart; in a populous city;
at a ball; we should perhaps meet in a vessel; and
his first words constantly were, “My daughter,
I love thee”! What extactic moments have
I passed in these dreams! How many tears I have
shed; how often have I laughed aloud.
This was my life for sixteen years.
At fourteen and fifteen I often thought that the time
was come when I should commence my pilgrimage, which
I had cheated my own mind into believing was my imperious
duty: but a reluctance to quit my Aunt; a remorse
for the grief which, I could not conceal from myself,
I should occasion her for ever withheld me. Sometimes
when I had planned the next morning for my escape
a word of more than usual affection from her lips made
me postpone my resolution. I reproached myself
bitterly for what I called a culpable weakness; but
this weakness returned upon me whenever the critical
moment approached, and I never found courage to depart.
Wordsworth
Dante