Among our most assiduous visitors
was a young man of rank, well informed, and agréable
in his person. After we had spent a few weeks
in London his attentions towards me became marked and
his visits more frequent. I was too much taken
up by my own occupations and feelings to attend much
to this, and then indeed I hardly noticed more than
the bare surface of events as they passed around me;
but I now remember that my father was restless and
uneasy whenever this person visited us, and when we
talked together watched us with the greatest apparent
anxiety although he himself maintained a profound silence.
At length these obnoxious visits suddenly ceased altogether,
but from that moment I must date the change of my
father: a change that to remember makes me shudder
and then filled me with the deepest grief. There
were no degrees which could break my fall from happiness
to misery; it was as the stroke of lightning sudden
and entire. Alas! I now met frowns where
before I had been welcomed only with smiles: he,
my beloved father, shunned me, and either treated
me with harshness or a more heart-breaking coldness.
We took no more sweet counsel together; and when I
tried to win him again to me, his anger, and the terrible
emotions that he exhibited drove me to silence and
tears.
And this was sudden. The day
before we had passed alone together in the country;
I remember we had talked of future travels that we
should undertake together . There was
an eager delight in our tones and gestures that could
only spring from deep & mutual love joined to the
most unrestrained confidence[;] and now the next day,
the next hour, I saw his brows contracted, his eyes
fixed in sullen fierceness on the ground, and his
voice so gentle and so dear made me shiver when he
addressed me. Often, when my wandering fancy brought
by its various images now consolation and now aggravation
of grief to my heart, I have compared myself to
Proserpine who was gaily and heedlessly gathering
flowers on the sweet plain of Enna, when the King
of Hell snatched her away to the abodes of death and
misery. Alas! I who so lately knew of nought
but the joy of life; who had slept only to dream sweet
dreams and awoke to incomparable happiness, I now passed
my days and nights in tears. I who sought and
had found joy in the love-breathing countenance of
my father now when I dared fix on him a supplicating
look it was ever answered by an angry frown. I
dared not speak to him; and when sometimes I had worked
up courage to meet him and to ask an explanation one
glance at his face where a chaos of mighty passion
seemed for ever struggling made me tremble and shrink
to silence. I was dashed down from heaven to earth
as a silly sparrow when pounced on by a hawk; my eyes
swam and my head was bewildered by the sudden apparition
of grief. Day after day passed marked only
by my complaints and my tears; often I lifted my soul
in vain prayer for a softer descent from joy to woe,
or if that were denied me that I might be allowed
to die, and fade for ever under the cruel blast that
swept over me,
Sometimes I said to myself, this is
an enchantment, and I must strive against it.
My father is blinded by some malignant vision which
I must remove. And then, like David, I would
try music to win the evil spirit from him; and once
while singing I lifted my eyes towards him and saw
his fixed on me and filled with tears; all his muscles
seemed relaxed to softness. I sprung towards
him with a cry of joy and would have thrown myself
into his arms, but he pushed me roughly from him and
left me. And even from this slight incident he
contracted fresh gloom and an additional severity
of manner.
There are many incidents that I might
relate which shewed the diseased yet incomprehensible
state of his mind; but I will mention one that occurred
while we were in company with several other persons.
On this occasion I chanced to say that I thought Myrrha
the best of Alfieri’s tragedies; as I said this
I chanced to cast my eyes on my father and met his:
for the first time the expression of those beloved
eyes displeased me, and I saw with affright that his
whole frame shook with some concealed emotion that
in spite of his efforts half conquered him: as
this tempest faded from his soul he became melancholy
and silent. Every day some new scene occured
and displayed in him a mind working as [it] were with
an unknown horror that now he could master but which
at times threatened to overturn his reason, and to
throw the bright seat of his intelligence into a perpetual
chaos.
I will not dwell longer than I need
on these disastrous circumstances. I might waste
days in describing how anxiously I watched every change
of fleeting circumstance that promised better days,
and with what despair I found that each effort of mine
aggravated his seeming madness. To tell all my
grief I might as well attempt to count the tears that
have fallen from these eyes, or every sign that has
torn my heart. I will be brief for there is in
all this a horror that will not bear many words, and
I sink almost a second time to death while I recall
these sad scenes to my memory. Oh, my beloved
father! Indeed you made me miserable beyond all
words, but how truly did I even then forgive you,
and how entirely did you possess my whole heart while
I endeavoured, as a rainbow gleams upon a cataract,
to soften thy tremendous sorrows.
Thus did this change come about.
I seem perhaps to have dashed too suddenly into the
description, but thus suddenly did it happen.
In one sentence I have passed from the idea of unspeakable
happiness to that of unspeakable grief but they were
thus closely linked together. We had remained
five months in London three of joy and two of sorrow.
My father and I were now seldom alone or if we were
he generally kept silence with his eyes fixed on the
ground the dark full orbs in which before
I delighted to read all sweet and gentle feeling shadowed
from my sight by their lids and the long lashes that
fringed them. When we were in company he affected
gaiety but I wept to hear his hollow laugh begun
by an empty smile and often ending in a bitter sneer
such as never before this fatal period had wrinkled
his lips. When others were there he often spoke
to me and his eyes perpetually followed my slightest
motion. His accents whenever he addressed me were
cold and constrained although his voice would tremble
when he perceived that my full heart choked the answer
to words proffered with a mien yet new to me.
But days of peaceful melancholy were
of rare occurence[:] they were often broken in upon
by gusts of passion that drove me as a weak boat on
a stormy sea to seek a cove for shelter; but the winds
blew from my native harbour and I was cast far, far
out untill shattered I perished when the tempest had
passed and the sea was apparently calm. I do not
know that I can describe his emotions: sometimes
he only betrayed them by a word or gesture, and then
retired to his chamber and I crept as near it as I
dared and listened with fear to every sound, yet still
more dreading a sudden silence dreading
I knew not what, but ever full of fear.
It was after one tremendous day when
his eyes had glared on me like lightning and
his voice sharp and broken seemed unable to express
the extent of his emotion that in the evening when
I was alone he joined me with a calm countenance,
and not noticing my tears which I quickly dried when
he approached, told me that in three days that [sic]
he intended to remove with me to his estate in Yorkshire,
and bidding me prepare left me hastily as if afraid
of being questioned.
This determination on his part indeed
surprised me. This estate was that which he had
inhabited in childhood and near which my mother resided
while a girl; this was the scene of their youthful
loves and where they had lived after their marriage;
in happier days my father had often told me that however
he might appear weaned from his widow sorrow, and
free from bitter recollections elsewhere, yet he would
never dare visit the spot where he had enjoyed her
society or trust himself to see the rooms that so
many years ago they had inhabited together; her favourite
walks and the gardens the flowers of which she had
delighted to cultivate. And now while he suffered
intense misery he determined to plunge into still
more intense, and strove for greater emotion than
that which already tore him. I was perplexed,
and most anxious to know what this portended; ah,
what could it potend but ruin!
I saw little of my father during this
interval, but he appeared calmer although not less
unhappy than before. On the morning of the third
day he informed me that he had determined to go to
Yorkshire first alone, and that I should follow him
in a fortnight unless I heard any thing from him in
the mean time that should contradict this command.
He departed the same day, and four days afterwards
I received a letter from his steward telling me in
his name to join him with as little delay as possible.
After travelling day and night I arrived with an anxious,
yet a hoping heart, for why should he send for me if
it were only to avoid me and to treat me with the
apparent aversion that he had in London. I met
him at the distance of thirty miles from our mansion.
His demeanour was sad; for a moment he appeared glad
to see me and then he checked himself as if unwilling
to betray his feelings. He was silent during
our ride, yet his manner was kinder than before and
I thought I beheld a softness in his eyes that gave
me hope.
When we arrived, after a little rest,
he led me over the house and pointed out to me the
rooms which my mother had inhabited. Although
more than sixteen years had passed since her death
nothing had been changed; her work box, her writing
desk were still there and in her room a book lay open
on the table as she had left it. My father pointed
out these circumstances with a serious and unaltered
mien, only now and then fixing his deep and liquid
eyes upon me; there was something strange and awful
in his look that overcame me, and in spite of myself
I wept, nor did he attempt to console me, but I saw
his lips quiver and the muscles of his countenance
seemed convulsed.
We walked together in the gardens
and in the evening when I would have retired he asked
me to stay and read to him; and first said, “When
I was last here your mother read Dante to me; you
shall go on where she left off.” And then
in a moment he said, “No, that must not be; you
must not read Dante. Do you choose a book.”
I took up Spencer and read the descent of Sir Guyon
to the halls of Avarice; while he listened his
eyes fixed on me in sad profound silence.
I heard the next morning from the
steward that upon his arrival he had been in a most
terrible state of mind: he had passed the first
night in the garden lying on the damp grass; he did
not sleep but groaned perpetually. “Alas!”
said the old man[,] who gave me this account with
tears in his eyes, “it wrings my heart to see
my lord in this state: when I heard that he was
coming down here with you, my young lady, I thought
we should have the happy days over again that we enjoyed
during the short life of my lady your mother But
that would be too much happiness for us poor creatures
born to tears and that was why she was
taken from us so soon; he was too beautiful and
good for us[.] It was a happy day as we all thought
it when my lord married her: I knew her when
she was a child and many a good turn has she done
for me in my old lady’s time You are
like her although there is more of my lord in you But
has he been thus ever since his return? All my
joy turned to sorrow when I first beheld him with that
melancholy countenance enter these doors as it were
the day after my lady’s funeral He
seemed to recover himself a little after he had bidden
me write to you but still it is a woful
thing to see him so unhappy." These were the feelings
of an old, faithful servant: what must be those
of an affectionate daughter. Alas! Even then
my heart was almost broken.
We spent two months together in this
house. My father spent the greater part of his
time with me; he accompanied me in my walks, listened
to my music, and leant over me as I read or painted.
When he conversed with me his manner was cold and
constrained; his eyes only seemed to speak, and as
he turned their black, full lustre towards me they
expressed a living sadness. There was somthing
in those dark deep orbs so liquid, and intense that
even in happiness I could never meet their full gaze
that mine did not overflow. Yet it was with sweet
tears; now there was a depth of affliction in their
gentle appeal that rent my heart with sympathy; they
seemed to desire peace for me; for himself a heart
patient to suffer; a craving for sympathy, yet a perpetual
self denial. It was only when he was absent from
me that his passion subdued him, that he
clinched his hands knit his brows and
with haggard looks called for death to his despair,
raving wildly, untill exhausted he sank down nor was
revived untill I joined him.
While we were in London there was
a harshness and sulleness in his sorrow which had
now entirely disappeared. There I shrunk and fled
from him, now I only wished to be with him that I might
soothe him to peace. When he was silent I tried
to divert him, and when sometimes I stole to him during
the energy of his passion I wept but did not desire
to leave him. Yet he suffered fearful agony; during
the day he was more calm, but at night when I could
not be with him he seemed to give the reins to his
grief: he often passed his nights either on the
floor in my mother’s room, or in the garden;
and when in the morning he saw me view with poignant
grief his exhausted frame, and his person languid
almost to death with watching he wept; but during all
this time he spoke no word by which I might guess
the cause of his unhappiness[.] If I ventured to enquire
he would either leave me or press his finger on his
lips, and with a deprecating look that I could not
resist, turn away. If I wept he would gaze on
me in silence but he was no longer harsh and although
he repulsed every caress yet it was with gentleness.
He seemed to cherish a mild grief
and softer emotions although sad as a relief from
despair He contrived in many ways to nurse
his melancholy as an antidote to wilder passion[.]
He perpetually frequented the walks that had been
favourites with him when he and my mother wandered
together talking of love and happiness; he collected
every relick that remained of her and always sat opposite
her picture which hung in the room fixing on it a
look of sad despair and all this was done
in a mystic and awful silence. If his passion
subdued him he locked himself in his room; and at
night when he wandered restlessly about the house,
it was when every other creature slept.
It may easily be imagined that I wearied
myself with conjecture to guess the cause of his sorrow.
The solution that seemed to me the most probable was
that during his residence in London he had fallen in
love with some unworthy person, and that his passion
mastered him although he would not gratify it:
he loved me too well to sacrifise me to this inclination,
and that he had now visited this house that by reviving
the memory of my mother whom he so passionately adored
he might weaken the present impression. This
was possible; but it was a mere conjecture unfounded
on any fact. Could there be guilt in it?
He was too upright and noble to do aught that
his conscience would not approve; I did not yet know
of the crime there may be in involuntary feeling and
therefore ascribed his tumultuous starts and gloomy
looks wholly to the struggles of his mind and not
any as they were partly due to the worst fiend of
all Remorse.
But still do I flatter myself that
this would have passed away. His paroxisms of
passion were terrific but his soul bore him through
them triumphant, though almost destroyed by victory;
but the day would finally have been won had not I,
foolish and presumtuous wretch! hurried him on untill
there was no recall, no hope. My rashness gave
the victory in this dreadful fight to the enemy who
triumphed over him as he lay fallen and vanquished.
I! I alone was the cause of his defeat and justly
did I pay the fearful penalty. I said to myself,
let him receive sympathy and these struggles will
cease. Let him confide his misery to another
heart and half the weight of it will be lightened.
I will win him to me; he shall not deny his grief to
me and when I know his secret then will I pour a balm
into his soul and again I shall enjoy the ravishing
delight of beholding his smile, and of again seeing
his eyes beam if not with pleasure at least with gentle
love and thankfulness. This will I do, I said.
Half I accomplished; I gained his secret and we were
both lost for ever.
Fletcher’s comedy of the Captain.
Lord Byron