“Look, a horse at the door,
And little King Charles is snarling;
Go back, my lord, across the moor,
You are not her darling.”
Eleanor set out early to go home.
She would not wait to be sent for. The walk might
set her pulses in motion again perhaps. The fog
was breaking away under the sun’s rays, but
it had left everything wet; the morning was excessively
chill. There was no grass in her way however,
and Eleanor’s thick shoes did not fear the road,
nor her feet the three miles of way. The walk
was good. It could not be said to be pleasant;
yet action of any kind was grateful and helpful.
She saw not a creature till she got home.
Home struck her with new sorrow, in
the sense of the disappointment she was going to bring
to so many there. She made her own room without
having to speak to anybody; bathed and dressed for
breakfast. How grave her face was, this morning!
She could not help that. And she felt that it
grew graver, when entering the breakfast room she found
Mr. Carlisle there.
“What have you done to yourself?”
said he after they were seated at the breakfast table.
“Taken a walk this morning.”
“Judicious! in this air, which
is like a suspended shower-bath! Where did you
go?”
“On the Wiglands road.”
“If I had come in time, I should
have taken you up before me, and cut short such a
proceeding. Mrs. Powle, you do not make use of
your authority.”
“Seems hardly worth while, when
it is on the point of expiring,” said Mrs. Powle
blandly, with a smiling face.
“Why Eleanor had to come home,”
said Julia; “she spent the night in the village.
She could not help walking unless mamma
had sent the carriage or something for her.”
“Spent the night in the village!” said
Mr. Carlisle.
“Eleanor took it into her head
that she must go to take care of a sick girl there the
daughter of her nurse. It is great foolishness,
I think, but Eleanor will do it.”
“It don’t agree with her
very well,” said Julia. “How you do
look, Eleanor, this morning!”
“She looks very well,”
said the Squire “for all I see.
Walking won’t hurt her.”
What Mr. Carlisle thought he did not
say. When breakfast was over he drew Eleanor
off into the library.
“How do you do this morning?”
said he stopping to look at her.
“Not very well.”
“I came early, to give you a
great gallop to the other end of the moor where
you wished to go the other day. You are not fit
for it now?”
“Hardly.”
“Did you sit up with that girl last night?
“I sat up. She did not
want much done for her. My being there was a
great comfort to her.”
“Far too great a comfort.
You are a naughty child. Do you fancy, Eleanor,
your husband will allow you to do such things?”
“I must try to do what is right, Macintosh.”
“Do you not think it will be
right that you should pleasure me in what I ask of
you?” he said very gently and with a caressing
action which took away the edge of the words.
“Yes in things that
are right,” said Eleanor, who felt that she owed
him all gentleness because of the wrong she had done.
“I shall not ask you anything
that is not right; but if I should, the
responsibility of your doing wrong will rest on me.
Now do you feel inclined to practise obedience a little
to day?”
“No, not at all,” said
Eleanor honestly, her blood rousing.
“It will be all the better practice.
You must go and lie down and rest carefully, and get
ready to ride with me this afternoon, if the weather
will do. Eh, Eleanor?”
“I do not think I shall want to ride to-day.”
“Kiss me, and say you will do as I bid you.”
Eleanor obeyed, and went to her room
feeling wretched. She must find some way quickly
to alter this state of things if she could
alter them. In the mean time she had promised
to rest. It was a comfort to lock the door and
feel that for hours at any rate she was alone from
all the world. But Eleanor’s heart fainted.
She lay down, and for a long time remained in motionless
passive dismay; then nature asserted her rights and
she slept.
If sleep did not quite “knit
up the ravelled sleeve of care” for her, Eleanor
yet felt much less ragged when she came out of her
slumber. There was some physical force now to
meet the mental demand. The first thing demanded
was a letter to Mr. Carlisle. It was in vain to
think to tell him in spoken words what she wanted
him to know; he would cut them short or turn them
aside as soon as he perceived their drift, before
she could at all possess him with the facts of the
case. Eleanor sat down before dressing, to write
her letter, so that no call might break her off until
it was done.
It was a weary, anxious, sorrowful
writing; done with some tears and some mute prayers
for help; with images constantly starting into her
mind that she had to put aside together with the hot
drops they called forth. The letter was finished,
when Eleanor was informed that Mr. Carlisle waited
for her.
“To ride, I suppose,”
she thought. “I will not go.”
She put on a house dress and went down to the library,
where her mother and Mr. Carlisle were together; looking
both of them so well pleased!
“You are not dressed for riding!”
he said, taking her into his arms.
“As you see,” returned Eleanor.
“I have brought a new horse for you. Will
you change your dress?”
“I think not. I am not equal to anything
new.”
“Have you slept?”
“Yes, but I have not eaten;
and it takes both to make muscle. I cannot even
talk to you till after tea.”
“Have you had no luncheon?”
“I was asleep.”
“Mrs. Powle,” said the
gentleman, “you do not take care of my interests
here. May I request you to have this want supplied I
am going to take Eleanor a great gallop presently;
she must have something first.” He put
Eleanor in an easy chair as he spoke, and stood looking
at her. Probably he saw some unusual lines of
thought or care about the face, but it was by no means
less fine for that. Mr. Carlisle liked what he
saw. Refreshments came; and he poured out chocolate
for her and served her with an affectionate supervision
that watched every item. But when after a very
moderate meal Eleanor’s hand was stretched out
for another piece of bread, he stopped her.
“No,” he said; “no more now.
Now go and put on your habit.”
“But I am very hungry,” said Eleanor.
“No matter you will
forget it in five minutes. Go and put on your
habit.”
Eleanor hesitated; thought that perhaps
after all the ride would be the easiest way of passing
the afternoon; and went.
“Well you do understand the
art of command,” said Mrs. Powle admiringly.
“She would never have done that for me.”
Mr. Carlisle did not look surprised,
nor gratified, nor in fact shew anything whatever
in his looks. Unless it were, that the difference
of effects produced by himself and his future mother-in-law,
was very much a matter of course. He stood before
the fire, with no change at all in his clear hazel
eyes, until Eleanor appeared. Then they sparkled.
Eleanor was for some reason or other particularly lovely
in his eyes to-day.
The horse he had brought for her was
a superb Arabian, shewing nerve and fire in every
line of his form and starting muscle, from the tips
of the ears down to the long fetlock and beautiful
hoof. Shewing fire in the bright eye too.
A brown creature, with luxuriant flowing mane and
tail.
“He is not quite so quiet as
Black Maggie,” Mr. Carlisle said as he put Eleanor
upon his back; “and you must not curb him, Eleanor,
or he will run.”
They went to the moor; and by degrees
getting wonted to her fiery charger and letting him
display his fine paces and increase his speed, Eleanor
found the sensation very inspiriting. Even Black
Maggie was not an animal like this; every motion was
instinct with life and power, and not a little indication
of headstrongness and irritability gave a great additional
interest and excitement to the pleasure of managing
him. Mr. Carlisle watched her carefully, Eleanor
knew; he praised her handling. He himself was
mounted on a quiet, powerful creature that did not
make much shew.
“If this fellow what is his name?”
“Tippoo Sultan.”
“If he were by any chance to
run would that horse you are riding keep
up with him?”
“I hope you will not try.”
“I don’t mean it but
I am curious. There, Mr. Carlisle, there is the
place where I was thrown.”
“A villainous looking place.
I wish it was mine. How do you like Tippoo?”
“Oh, he is delightful!”
Mr. Carlisle looked satisfied, as
he might; for Eleanor’s colour had become brilliant,
and her face had changed greatly since setting out.
Strength and courage and hope seemed to come to her
on Tippoo’s back, facing the wind on the moor
and gallopping over the wild, free way. They
took in part the route Eleanor had followed that day
alone, coming back through the village by a still
wider circuit. As they rode more moderately along
the little street, if it could be called so the
houses were all on one side Eleanor saw
Mr. Rhys standing at Mrs. Lewis’s door; he saw
her. Involuntarily her bow in return to his salutation
was very low. At the same instant Tippoo started,
on a run to which all his former gallopping had been
a gentle amble. This was not ungentle; the motion
had nothing rough; only Eleanor was going in a straight
line over the ground at a rate that took away her breath.
She had presence of mind not to draw the curb rein,
but she felt that she could hardly endure long the
sort of progress she was making through the air.
It did not seem to be on the ground. Her curiosity
was gratified on one point; for after the first instant
she found Mr. Carlisle’s powerful grey straining
close beside her. Nevertheless Tippoo was so
entirely in earnest that it was some little time it
seemed a very long one before the grey could
get so close to the brown and so far up with him that
Mr. Carlisle could lay his hand upon the thick brown
mane of Tippoo and stoop forward to speak to him.
As soon as that was done once or twice, Tippoo’s
speed gradually relaxed; and a perseverance in his
master’s appeals to his reason and sense of duty,
brought the wild creature back to a moderate pace and
the air of a civilized horse. Mr. Carlisle transferred
his grasp from the mane to Eleanor’s hand.
“Eleanor, what did you do that for?”
“Do what? I did nothing.”
“You curbed him. You drew
the rein, and he considered himself insulted.
I told you he would not bear it.”
“He has had nothing to bear
from me. I have not drawn the curb at all, Robert.”
“I must contradict you.
I saw you do it. That started him.”
Eleanor remained silent and a little
pale. Was Mr. Carlisle right? The ride had
until then done her a great deal of good; roused up
her energies and restored in some degree her spirit;
the involuntary race together with the sudden sight
of Mr. Rhys, had the effect to bring back all the
soberness which for the moment the delight and stir
of the exercise had dissipated. She went on pondering
various things. Eleanor’s letter to Mr.
Carlisle was in the pocket of her habit, ready for
use; she determined to give it him when he left her
that evening; that was one of her subjects of thought.
Accordingly he found her very abstracted and cold
the rest of the way; grave and uninterested. He
fancied she might have been startled by her run on
Tippoo’s back, though it was not very like her;
but he did not know what to fancy. And true it
is, that a remembrance of fear had come up to Eleanor
after that gallop. Afraid she was not, at the
time; but she felt that she had been in a condition
of some peril from which her own forces could not
have extricated her; that brought up other considerations,
and sadly in Eleanor’s mind some words of the
hymn they had sung last night in the barn floated
over among her thoughts:
“When I can read my title clear,
To mansions in the skies, I’ll bid farewell
to every fear, And wipe my weeping eyes.”
Very simple words; words that to some
ears have become trite with repetition; but thoughts
that went down into the depths of Eleanor’s
heart and garrisoned themselves there, beyond the power
of any attacks to dislodge. Her gravity and indifference
piqued Mr. Carlisle, curiosity and affection both.
He spent the evening in trying to overcome them; with
very partial success. When he was leaving her,
Eleanor drew the letter from her pocket.
“What is this?” said he taking it.
“Only a letter for you.”
“From you! The consideration
of that must not be postponed.” He broke
the seal. “Come, sit down again. I
will read it here.”
“Not now! Take it home,
Macintosh, and read it there. Let it wait so
long.”
“Why?”
“Never mind why. Do! Because I ask
you.”
“I don’t believe I can
understand it without you beside me,” said he
smiling, and drawing the letter from its envelope while
he looked at her.
“But there is everybody here,”
said Eleanor glancing at another part of the room
where the rest of the family were congregated.
“I would rather you took it home with you.”
“It is something that requires serious treatment?”
“Yes.”
“You are a wise little thing,”
said he, “and I will take your advice.”
He put the letter in his pocket; then took Eleanor’s
hand upon his arm and walked her off to the library.
Nobody was there; lamplight and firelight were warm
and bright. Mr. Carlisle placed his charge in
an easy chair by the library table, much to her disappointment;
drew another close beside it, and sat down with his
arm over the back of hers to read the letter.
Thus it ran:
“It is right you should know
a change which has taken place in me since the time
when I first became known to you. I have changed
very much, though it is a change perhaps which you
will not believe in; yet I feel that it makes me very
different from my old self, and alters entirely my
views of almost everything. Life and life’s
affairs and aims do not look
to me as they looked a few months ago; if indeed I
could be said to have taken any view at all of them
then. They were little more than names to me,
I believe. They are great realities now.
“I do not know how to tell you
in what this change in me consists, for I doubt you
will neither like it nor believe in it. Yet you
must believe in it; for I am not the woman
I was a little while ago; not the woman you think
me now. If I suffered you to go on as you are,
in ignorance of it, I should be deceiving you.
I have opened my eyes to the fact that this life is
not the end of life. I see another beyond, much
more lasting, unknown, strange, perhaps not very distant.
The thought of it presses upon me like a cloud.
I want to be ready for it I feel I am not
ready and that before I can be ready, not
only my views but my character must be changed.
I am determined it shall. For, Mr. Carlisle,
there is a Ruler whose government extends over this
life and that, whose requisitions I have never met,
whose commands I have never obeyed, whom consequently
I fear; and until this fear is changed for another
feeling I cannot be happy. I will not live the
life I have been leading; careless and thoughtless;
I will be the servant of this Ruler whom hitherto
I have disregarded. Whatever his commands are,
those I will follow; at all costs, at any sacrifice;
whatever I have or possess shall be used for his service.
One thing I desire; to be a true servant of God, and
not fear his face in displeasure. To secure that,
I will let everything else in the world go.
“I wish you to understand this
thoroughly. It will draw on consequences that
you would not like. It will make me such a woman
as you would not, I feel, wish your wife to be.
I shall follow a course of life and action that in
many things, I know, would be extremely distasteful
to you. Yet I must follow them I can
do no other I dare do no other. I
cannot live as I have lived. No, not for any reward
or consideration that could be offered me. Nor
to avoid any human anger.
“I think you would probably
choose never to see me at the Priory, rather than
to see me there such a woman as I shall be. In
that case I shall be very sorry for all the disagreeable
consequences which would to you attend the annulling
of the contract formed between us. My own part
of them I am ready to bear.
“ELEANOR POWLE.”
The letter was read through almost
under Eleanor’s own eyes. She looked furtively,
as she could, to see how Mr. Carlisle took it.
He did not seem to take it at all; she could find
no change in his face. If the brow slightly bent
before her did slightly knit itself in sterner lines
than common, she could not be sure of it, bent as it
was; and when he looked up, there was no such expression
there. He looked as pleasant as possible.
“Do you want me to laugh at you?” he said.
“That was not the precise object
I had in writing,” said Eleanor soberly.
“I do not suppose it, and yet
I feel very much like laughing at you a little.
So you think you can make yourself a woman I would
not like, eh, my darling?”
He had drawn Eleanor’s head
down to his shoulder, within easy reach of his lips,
but he did not kiss her. His right hand smoothed
back the masses of her beautiful hair, and then rested
on her cheek while he looked into the face thus held
for near inspection; much as one handles a child.
The touch was light and caressing, and calm as power
too. Eleanor breathed quick. She could not
bear it. She forced herself back where she could
look at him.
“You are taking it lightly,
but I mean it very seriously,” she said.
“I think I could I think I shall.
I did not write you such a letter without very deep
reason.”
He still retained his hold of her,
and in his right hand had captured one of hers.
This hand he now brought to his lips, kissing and
caressing it.
“I do not think I understand
it yet,” he said. “What are you going
to do with yourself? Is it your old passion for
a monastic life come up again? do you want the old
Priory built up, and me for a Father Confessor?”
Did he mean ever to loose his hold
of the little hand he held so lightly and firmly?
Never! Eleanor’s head drooped.
“What is it, Eleanor?”
“It is serious work, Mr. Carlisle; and you will
not believe me.”
“Make me serious too. Tell
me a little more definitely what dreadful thing I
am to expect. What sort of a woman is my wife
going to be?”
“Such a one as you would not
have, if you knew it; such a one as you
never would have sought, if I had known it myself earlier;
I feel sure.” Eleanor’s colour glowed
all over her face and brow; nevertheless she spoke
steadily.
“Enigmatical!” said Mr.
Carlisle. “The only thing I understand is
this and this ” and he
kissed alternately her cheek and lips. “Here
is my wife here is what I wish her
to be. It will be all right the twenty-first
of next month. What will you do after that, Eleanor?”
Eleanor was silent, mortified, troubled,
silenced. What was the use of trying to explain
herself?
“What do you want to do, Eleanor?
Give all your money to the poor? I believe that
is your pet fancy. Is that what you mean to do?”
Eleanor’s cheeks burnt again.
“You know I have very little money to give,
Mr. Carlisle. But I have determined to give myself.”
“To me?”
“No, no. I mean, to duties
and commands higher than any human obligation.
And they may, and probably will, oblige me to live
in a way that would not please you.”
“Let us see. What is the novelty?”
“I am going to live it
is right I should tell you, whether you will believe
me or not, I am going to live henceforth
not for this world but the other.”
“How?” said he, looking
at her with his clear brilliant eyes.
“I do not know, in detail.
But you know, in the Church service, the pomps and
vanities of the world are renounced; whatever that
involves, it will find me obedient.”
“What has put this fancy in your head, Eleanor?”
“A sense of danger, first, I think.”
“A sense of danger! Danger of what?”
“Yes. A feeling of being
unready for that other life to which I might at any
time go; that other world, I mean.
I cannot be happy so.” She was agitated;
her colour was high; her nerves trembled.
“How came this ‘sense
of danger’ into your head? what brought it, or
suggested it?”
“When I was ill last summer I
felt it then. I have felt it since. I feel
my head uncovered to meet the storm that may at any
time break upon it. I am going to live, if I
can, as people live whom you would laugh at; you would
call them fanatics and fools. It is the only way
for me to be happy; but you would not like it in one
near you.”
“Go in a black dress, Eleanor?”
She was silent. She very nearly burst into tears,
but prevented that.
“You can’t terrify me,”
said Mr. Carlisle, lazily throwing himself back in
his chair. “I don’t get up a ‘sense
of danger’ as easily as you do, darling.
One look in your face puts all that to flight at once.
I am safe. You may do what you like.”
“You would not say that by and by,” said
Eleanor.
“Would I not?” said he,
rousing up and drawing her tenderly but irresistibly
to his arms again. “But make proper amends
to me for breaking rules to-night, and you shall have
carte blanche for this new fancy, Eleanor.
How are you going to ask my forgiveness?”
“You ought to ask mine for you will
not attend to me.”
“Contumacious?” said he
lightly, touching her lips as if they were a goblet
and he were taking sips of the wine; “then
I shall take my own amends. You shall live as
you please, darling, only take me along with you.”
“You will not go.”
“How do you know?”
“Neither your feeling nor your taste agree with
it.”
“What are you going to
do!” said he half laughing, holding her fast
and looking down into her face. “My little
Eleanor! Make yourself a grey nun, or a blue
Puritan? Grey becomes you, darling; it makes a
duchess of you; and blue is set off by this magnificent
brown head of yours. I will answer for my taste
in either event; and I think you could bear, and consequently
I could, all the other colours in the rainbow.
As for your idea, of making yourself a woman that I
would not like, I do not think you can compass it.
You may try. I will not let you go too far.”
“You cannot hinder it, Macintosh,” said
Eleanor in a low voice.
“Kiss me!” said he laughingly.
Eleanor slowly raised her head from
his shoulder and obeyed, so far as a very dainty and
shyly given permission went; feeling bitterly that
she had brought herself into bonds from which only
Mr. Carlisle’s hand could release her.
She could not break them herself. What possible
reason could she assign? And so she was in his
power.
“Cheeks hot, and hands cold,”
said Mr. Carlisle to himself as he walked away through
the rooms. “I wish the twenty-first were
to-morrow!” He stopped in the drawing-room to
hold a consultation of some length with Mrs. Powle;
in which however he confided to her no more than that
the last night’s attention to her nurse’s
daughter had been quite too much for Eleanor, and
he should think it extremely injudicious to allow it
again. Which Mrs. Powle had no idea of doing.
Neither had Eleanor any idea of attempting
it. But she spent half that night in heart-ache
and in baffled searchings for a path out of her difficulties.
What could she do? If Mr. Carlisle would
marry her, she saw no help for it; and to disgust
him with her would be a difficult matter. For
oh, Eleanor knew, that though he would not like a religious
wife, he had good reason to trust his own power of
regulating any tendency of that sort which might offend
him. Once his wife, once let that strong arm
have a right to be round her permanently; and Eleanor
knew it would be an effectual bar against whatever
he wished to keep at a distance.
Eleanor was armed with no Christian
armour; no helmet or shield of protection had she;
all she had was the strength of fear, and the resolute
determination to seek until she should find that panoply
in which she would be safe and strong. Once married
to Mr. Carlisle, and she felt that her determination
would be in danger, and her resolution meet another
resolution with which it might have hard fighting to
do. Ay, and who knew whether hers would overcome!
She must not finish this marriage; yet how induce
Mr. Carlisle to think of her as she wished?
“I declare,” said Mrs.
Powle coming into her room the next day, “that
one night’s sitting up, has done the work of
a week’s illness upon you, Eleanor! Mr.
Carlisle is right.”
“In what?”
“He said you must not go again.”
“I think he is somewhat premature in arranging
my movements.”
“Don’t you like it?”
said Mrs. Powle laughing a little. “You
must learn to submit to that. I am glad there
is somebody that can control you, Eleanor, at last.
It does me good. It was just a happiness that
you never took anything desperate into your head,
for your father and you together were more than a
match for me; and it’s just the same with Julia.
But Julia really is growing tame and more reasonable,
I think, lately.”
“Good reason why,” thought
Eleanor moodily. “But that is a better sort
of control she is under.”
“I am charged with a commission to you, Eleanor.”
“What is it, ma’am?”
“To find out what particular
kind of jewels you prefer. I really don’t
know, so am obliged to ask you which was
not in my commission.”
“Jewels, mamma!”
“Jewels, my lady.”
“O mamma! don’t talk to me of jewels!”
“Nor of weddings, I suppose;
but really I do not see how things are to be done
unless they are to be talked about. For instance,
this matter of your liking in jewellery I
think rubies become you, Eleanor; though to be sure
there is nothing I like so well as diamonds. What
is the matter?”
For Eleanor’s brown head had
gone down on the table before her and her face was
hidden in her hands. She slowly raised it at her
mother’s question.
“Mamma, Mr. Carlisle does not know what he is
doing!”
“Pray what do you mean?”
“He thinks he is marrying a
person who will be gay and live for and in the world,
as he lives and as he would wish me.
Mamma, I will not! I never will. I never
shall be what he likes in that respect. I mean
to live a religious life.”
“A religious life! What sort of a life
is that?”
“It is what you do not like nor he.”
“A religious life! Eleanor,
you do not suppose Mr. Carlisle would wish his wife
to lead an irreligious life?”
“Yes I do.”
“I should not like you to tell
him that,” said Mrs. Powle colouring
with anger. “How dare you say it? What
sort of a religious life do you want to live?”
“Such a one as the Bible bids,
mamma,” Eleanor said in a low voice and drooping
her head. “Such a one as the Prayer Book
recommends, over and over.”
“And you think Mr. Carlisle
would not like that? What insinuations you are
making against us all, Eleanor. For of course,
I, your mother, have wished you also to live this
irreligious life. We are a set of heathens together.
Dr. Cairnes too. He was delighted with it.”
“It changes nothing, mamma,”
said Eleanor. “I am resolved to live in
a different way; and Mr. Carlisle would not like it;
and if he only knew it, he would not wish to marry
me; and I cannot make him believe it.”
“You have tried, have you?”
“Yes, I have tried. It was only honest.”
“Well I did not think you were
such a fool, Eleanor! and I am sure he did not.
Believe you, you little fool? he knows better.
He knows that he will not have had you a week at the
Priory before you will be too happy to live what life
he pleases. He is just the man to bring you into
order. I only wish the wedding-day was to-morrow.”
Eleanor drew herself up, and her face
changed from soft and sorrowful to stubborn.
She kept silence.
“In this present matter of jewels,”
said Mrs. Powle returning to the charge, “I
suppose I am to tell him that a plain set of jet is
as much as you can fancy; or that, as it would be
rather uncommon to be married in black, you will take
bugles. What he will say I am sure I don’t
know.”
“You had better not try, mamma,”
said Eleanor. “If the words you last said
are true, and I should be unable to follow my conscience
at Rythdale Priory, then I shall never go there; and
in that case the jewels will not be wanted, except
for somebody else whose taste neither bugles nor jet
would suit.”
“Now you have got one of your
obstinate fits on,” said Mrs. Powle, “and
I will go. I shall be a better friend to you than
to tell Mr. Carlisle a word of all this, which I know
will be vanished in another month or two; and if you
value your good fortune, Eleanor, I recommend you to
keep a wise tongue between your teeth in talking to
him. I know one thing I wish Dr. Cairnes,
or the Government, or the Church, or whoever has it
in hand, would keep all dissenting fools from coming
to Wiglands to preach their pestiferous notions here!
and that your father would not bring them to his house!
That is what I wish. Will you be reasonable,
and give me an answer about the jewels, Eleanor?”
“I cannot think about jewels, mamma.”
Mrs. Powle departed. Eleanor
sat with her head bowed in her hands; her mind in
dim confusion, through which loomed the one thought,
that she must break this marriage. Her mother’s
words had roused the evil as well as the good of Eleanor’s
nature; and along with bitter self-reproaches and
longings for good, she already by foretaste champed
the bit of an authority that she did not love.
So, while her mind was in a sea of turmoil, there
came suddenly, like a sun-blink upon the confusion,
a soft question from her little sister Julia.
Neither mother nor daughter had taken notice of her
being in the room. The question came strangely
soft, for Julia.
“Eleanor, do you love Jesus?”
Eleanor raised her head in unspeakable
astonishment, startled and even shocked, as one is
at an unheard-of thing. Julia’s face was
close beside her, looking wistful and anxious, and
tender also. The look struck Eleanor’s
heart. But she only stared.
“Do you?” said Julia wistfully.
It wrought the most unaccountable
convulsion in Eleanor’s mind, this little dove’s
feather of a question, touching the sore and angry
feelings that wrestled there. She flung herself
off her chair, and on her knees by the table sobbed
dreadfully. Julia stood by, looking as sober
as if she had been a ministering angel.
Eleanor knew what the question meant that
was all. She had heard Mr. Rhys speak of it;
she had heard him speak of it with a quiver on his
lip and a flush in his face, which shewed her that
there was something in religion that she had never
fathomed, nor ever before suspected; there was a hidden
region of joy the entrance to which was veiled from
her. To Eleanor the thing would have been a mere
mystery, but that she had seen it to be a reality;
once seen, that was never to be forgotten. And
now, in the midst of her struggles of passion and pain,
Julia’s question came innocently asking whether
she were a sharer in that unearthly wonderful joy
which seemed to put its possessor beyond the reach
of struggles. Eleanor’s sobs were the hard
sobs of pain. As wisely as if she had really
been a ministering angel, her little sister stood
by silent; and said not another word until Eleanor
had risen and taken her seat again. Nor then
either. It was Eleanor that spoke.
“What do you know about it, Julia?”
“Not much,” said the child.
“I love the Lord Jesus that
is all, and I thought, perhaps, from the
way you spoke, that you did. Mr. Rhys would be
so glad.”
“He? Glad? what do you mean, Julia?”
“I know he would; because I
have heard him pray for you a great many times.”
“No no,” said
Eleanor turning away, “I know nothing
but fear. I do not feel anything better.
And they want me to think of everything else in the
world but this one thing!”
“But you will think of it, Eleanor, won’t
you?”
Eleanor was silent and abstracted.
Her sister watched her with strange eyes for Julia,
anxiously observant. The silence lasted some time.
“When does Mr. Rhys Is
he going to preach again, Julia, that you know of?”
“I guess not. He was very
tired after he preached the other night; he lay on
the couch and did not move the whole next day.
He is better to-day.”
“You have seen him this morning?”
“O yes. I see him every
day; and he teaches me a great many things. But
he always prays for you.”
Eleanor did not wish to keep up the
conversation, and it dropped. And after that,
things went on their train.
It was a very fast train, too; and
growing in importance and thickening in its urgency
of speed. Every day the preparations converged
more nearly towards their great focus, the twenty-first
of December. Eleanor felt the whirl of circumstances,
felt borne off her feet and carried away with them;
and felt it hopelessly. She knew not what to urge
that should be considered sufficient reason either
by her mother or Mr. Carlisle for even delaying, much
less breaking off the match. She was grave and
proud, and unsatisfactory, as much as it was in her
nature to be, partly on purpose; and Mr. Carlisle
was not satisfied, and hurried on things all the more.
He kept his temper perfectly, whatever thoughts he
had; he rode and walked with Eleanor, when she would
go, with the same cool and faultless manner; when
she would not, he sometimes let it pass and sometimes
made her go; but once or twice he failed in doing
this; and recognized the possibility of Eleanor’s
ability to give him trouble. He knew his own
power however; on the whole he liked her quite as
well for it.
“What is the matter with you,
my darling?” he said one day. “You
are not like yourself.”
“I am not happy,” said
Eleanor. “I told you I had a doubt unsettled
upon my mind; and till that doubt is put at rest I
cannot be happy; I cannot have peace; you will take
no pleasure in me.”
“Why do you not settle it then?”
said Mr. Carlisle, quietly.
“Because I have no chance.
I have not a moment to think, in this whirl where
I am living. If you would put off the twenty-first
of next month to the twenty-first of some month in
the spring or summer I might
have a breathing place, and get myself in order.
I cannot, now.”
“You will have time to think,
love, when you get to the Priory,” Mr. Carlisle
observed in the same tone an absolute tone.
“Yes. I know how that would
be!” Eleanor answered bitterly. “But
I can take no pleasure in anything, I cannot
have any rest or comfort, as long as I
know that if anything happened to me if
death came suddenly I am utterly unready.
I cannot be happy so.”
“I think I had better send Dr.
Cairnes to see you,” said Mr. Carlisle.
“He is in duty bound to be the family physician
in all things spiritual where they need him.
But this is morbid, Eleanor. I know how it is.
These are only whims, my darling, that will never outlive
that day you dread so much.”
He had drawn her into his arms as
he spoke; but in his touch and his kiss Eleanor felt
or fancied something masterful, which irritated her.
“If I thought that, Mr. Carlisle,”
she said, “if I knew it was true, that
day would never come!”
Mr. Carlisle’s self-control
was perfect; so was his tact. He made no answer
at all to this speech; only gave Eleanor two or three
more of those quiet ownership kisses. No appearance
of discomposure in his manner or in his voice when
he spoke; still holding her in his arms.
“I shall know how to punish
you one of these days for this,” he said.
“You may expect to be laughed at a little, my
darling, when you turn penitent. Which will not
hinder the moment from coming.”
And so, dismissing the matter and
her with another light touch of her lips, he left
her.
“Will it be so?” thought
Eleanor. “Shall I be so within his control,
that I shall even sue to him to forget and pardon this
word of my true indignation? Once his wife once
let the twenty-first of December come and
there will be no more help for me. What shall
I do?”
She was desperate, but she saw no
opening. She saw however the next day that Mr.
Carlisle was coldly displeased with her. She was
afraid to have him remain so; and made conciliations.
These were accepted immediately and frankly, but so
at the same time as made her feel she had lost ground
and given Mr. Carlisle an advantage; every inch of
which he knew and took. Nobody had seen the tokens
of any part of all this passage of arms; in three
days all was just as it had been, except Eleanor’s
lost ground. And three days more were gone before
the twenty-first of December.