<p><SPAN name="c20" id="c20"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER VIII.</h3>
<h4>LORD BRACY'S LETTER.<br/> </h4>
<p><span class="smallcaps">The</span>
school and the parish went on through August and September,
and up to the middle of October, very quietly. The quarrel
between the Bishop and the Doctor had altogether subsided. People
in the diocese had ceased to talk continually of Mr. and Mrs.
Peacocke. There was still alive a certain interest as to what
might be the ultimate fate of the poor lady; but other matters had
come up, and she no longer formed the one topic of conversation at
all meetings. The twenty boys at the school felt that, as their
numbers had been diminished, so also had their reputation. They
were less loud, and, as other boys would have said of them, less
"cocky" than of yore. But they ate and drank and played, and, let
us hope, learnt their lessons as usual. Mrs. Peacocke had from
time to time received letters from her husband, the last up to the
time of which we speak having been written at the Ogden
<ins class="corr" title="Lowercase ‘junction’ changed to uppercase
‘Junction’ to conform to majority usage
(3 out of 4 times with uppercase).">Junction</ins>,
at which Mr. Peacocke had stopped for four-and-twenty hours with
the object of making inquiry as to the statement made to him at
St. Louis. Here he learned enough to convince him that Robert
Lefroy had told him the truth in regard to what had there
occurred. The people about the station still remembered the
condition of the man who had been taken out of the car when
suffering from delirium tremens; and remembered also that the man
had not died there, but had been carried on by the next train to
San Francisco. One of the porters also declared that he had heard
a few days afterwards that the sufferer had died almost
immediately on his arrival at San Francisco. Information as far
as this Mr. Peacocke had sent home to his wife, and had added his
firm belief that he should find the man's grave in the cemetery,
and be able to bring home with him testimony to which no authority
in England, whether social, episcopal, or judicial, would refuse
to give credit.</p>
<p>"Of course he will be married again," said Mrs. Wortle to her
husband.</p>
<p>"They shall be married here, and I will perform the ceremony. I
don't think the Bishop himself would object to that; and I
shouldn't care a straw if he did."</p>
<p>"Will he go on with the school?" whispered Mrs. Wortle.</p>
<p>"Will the school go on? If the school goes on, he will go on, I
suppose. About that you had better ask Mrs. Stantiloup."</p>
<p>"I will ask nobody but you," said the wife, putting up her face to
kiss him. As this was going on, everything was said to comfort
Mrs. Peacocke, and to give her hopes of new life. Mrs. Wortle
told her how the Doctor had promised that he himself would marry
them as soon as the forms of the Church and the legal requisitions
would allow. Mrs. Peacocke accepted all that was said to her
quietly and thankfully, but did not again allow herself to be
roused to such excitement as she had shown on the one occasion
recorded.</p>
<p>It was at this time that the Doctor received a letter which
greatly affected his mode of thought at the time. He had
certainly become hipped and low-spirited, if not despondent, and
clearly showed to his wife, even though he was silent, that his
mind was still intent on the injury which that wretched woman had
done him by her virulence. But the letter of which we speak for a
time removed this feeling, and gave him, as it were, a new life.
The letter, which was from Lord Bracy, was as
<span class="nowrap">follows;—</span><br/> </p>
<p>"<span class="smallcaps">My dear Doctor
Wortle</span>.—Carstairs left us for Oxford yesterday,
and before he went, startled his mother and me considerably by a
piece of information. He tells us that he is over head and ears
in love with your daughter. The communication was indeed made
three days ago, but I told him that I should take a day or two to
think of it before I wrote to you. He was very anxious, when he
told me, to go off at once to Bowick, and to see you and your
wife, and of course the young lady;—but this I stopped by the
exercise of somewhat peremptory parental authority. Then he
informed me that he had been to Bowick, and had found his
lady-love at home, you and Mrs. Wortle having by chance been
absent at the time. It seems that he declared himself to the
young lady, who, in the exercise of a wise discretion, ran away
from him and left him planted on the terrace. That is his account
of what passed, and I do not in the least doubt its absolute
truth. It is at any rate quite clear, from his own showing, that
the young lady gave him no encouragement.</p>
<p>"Such having been the case, I do not think that I should have
found it necessary to write to you at all had not Carstairs
persevered with me till I promised to do so. He was willing, he
said, not to go to Bowick on condition that I would write to you
on the subject. The meaning of this is, that had he not been very
much in earnest, I should have considered it best to let the
matter pass on as such matters do, and be forgotten. But he is
very much in earnest. However foolish it is,—or perhaps I had
better say unusual,—that a lad should be in love before he is
twenty, it is, I suppose, possible. At any rate it seems to be
the case with him, and he has convinced his mother that it would
be cruel to ignore the fact.</p>
<p>"I may at once say that, as far as you and your girl are
concerned, I should be quite satisfied that he should choose for
himself such a marriage. I value rank, at any rate, as much as it
is worth; but that he will have of his own, and does not need to
strengthen it by intermarriage with another house of peculiarly
old lineage. As far as that is concerned, I should be contented.
As for money, I should not wish him to think of it in marrying.
If it comes, <i>tant mieux</i>. If not, he will have enough of his
own. I write to you, therefore, exactly as I should do if you had
happened to be a brother peer instead of a clergyman.</p>
<p>"But I think that long engagements are very dangerous; and you
probably will agree with me that they are likely to be more
prejudicial to the girl than to the man. It may be that, as
difficulties arise in the course of years, he can forget the
affair, and that she cannot. He has many things of which to
think; whereas she, perhaps, has only that one. She may have made
that thing so vital to her that it cannot be got under and
conquered; whereas, without any fault or heartlessness on his
part, occupation has conquered it for him. In this case I fear
that the engagement, if made, could not but be long. I should be
sorry that he should not take his degree. And I do not think it
wise to send a lad up to the University hampered with the serious
feeling that he has already betrothed himself.</p>
<p>"I tell you all just as it is, and I leave it to your wisdom to
suggest what had better be done. He wished me to promise that I
would undertake to induce you to tell Miss Wortle of his
conversation with me. He said that he had a right to demand so
much as that, and that, though he would not for the present go to
Bowick, he should write to you. The young gentleman seems to have
a will of his own,—which I cannot say that I regret. What you
will do as to the young lady,—whether you will or will not tell
her what I have written,—I must leave to yourself. If you do, I
am to send word to her from Lady Bracy to say that she shall be
delighted to see her here. She had better, however, come when
that inflammatory young gentleman shall be at Oxford. Yours very
faithfully,</p>
<p class="ind15">"<span class="smallcaps">Bracy</span>."<br/> </p>
<p>This letter certainly did a great deal to invigorate the Doctor,
and to console him in his troubles. Even though the debated
marriage might prove to be impossible, as it had been declared by
the voices of all the Wortles one after another, still there was
something in the tone in which it was discussed by the young man's
father which was in itself a relief. There was, at any rate, no
contempt in the letter. "I may at once say that, as far as you
and your girl are concerned, I shall be very well pleased." That,
at any rate, was satisfactory. And the more he looked at it the
less he thought that it need be altogether impossible. If Lord
Bracy liked it, and Lady Bracy liked it,—and young Carstairs, as
to whose liking there seemed to be no reason for any doubt,—he
did not see why it should be impossible. As to Mary,—he could
not conceive that she should make objection if all the others were
agreed. How could she possibly fail to love the young man if
encouraged to do so? Suitors who are good-looking, rich, of high
rank, sweet-tempered, and at the same time thoroughly devoted, are
not wont to be discarded. All the difficulty lay in the lad's
youth. After all, how many noblemen have done well in the world
without taking a degree? Degrees, too, have been taken by married
men. And, again, young men have been persistent before now, even
to the extent of waiting three years. Long engagements are
bad,—no doubt. Everybody has always said so. But a long
engagement may be better than none at all.</p>
<p>He at last made up his mind that he would speak to Mary; but he
determined that he would consult his wife first. Consulting Mrs.
Wortle, on his part, generally amounted to no more than
instructing her. He found it sometimes necessary to talk her
over, as he had done in that matter of visiting Mrs. Peacocke; but
when he set himself to work he rarely failed. She had nowhere else
to go for a certain foundation and support. Therefore he hardly
doubted much when he began his operation about this suggested
engagement.</p>
<p>"I have got that letter this morning from Lord Bracy," he said,
handing her the document.</p>
<p>"Oh dear! Has he heard about Carstairs?"</p>
<p>"You had better read it."</p>
<p>"He has told it all," she exclaimed, when she had finished the
first sentence.</p>
<p>"He has told it all, certainly. But you had better read the
letter through."</p>
<p>Then she seated herself and read it, almost trembling, however, as
she went on with it. "Oh dear;—that is very nice what he says
about you and Mary."</p>
<p>"It is all very nice as far as that goes. There is no reason why
it should not be nice."</p>
<p>"It might have made him so angry!"</p>
<p>"Then he would have been very unreasonable."</p>
<p>"He acknowledges that Mary did not encourage him."</p>
<p>"Of course she did not encourage him. He would have been very
unlike a gentleman had he thought so. But in truth, my dear, it
is a very good letter. Of course there are difficulties."</p>
<p>"Oh;—it is impossible!"</p>
<p>"I do not see that at all. It must rest very much with him, no
doubt;—with Carstairs; and I do not like to think that our girl's
happiness should depend on any young man's constancy. But such
dangers have to be encountered. You and I were engaged for three
years before we were married, and we did not find it so very bad."</p>
<p>"It was very good. Oh, I was so happy at the time."</p>
<p>"Happier than you've been since?"</p>
<p>"Well; I don't know. It was very nice to know that you were my
lover."</p>
<p>"Why shouldn't Mary think it very nice to have a lover?"</p>
<p>"But I knew that you would be true."</p>
<p>"Why shouldn't Carstairs be true?"</p>
<p>"Remember he is so young. You were in orders."</p>
<p>"I don't know that I was at all more likely to be true on that
account. A clergyman can jilt a girl just as well as another. It
depends on the nature of the man."</p>
<p>"And you were so good."</p>
<p>"I never came across a better youth than Carstairs. You see what
his father says about his having a will of his own. When a young
man shows a purpose of that kind he generally sticks to it."</p>
<p>The upshot of it all was, that Mary was to be told, and that her
father was to tell her.</p>
<p>"Yes, papa, he did come," she said. "I told mamma all about me."</p>
<p>"And she told me, of course. You did what was quite right, and I
should not have thought it necessary to speak to you had not Lord
Bracy written to me."</p>
<p>"Lord Bracy has written!" said Mary. It seemed to her, as it had
done to her mother, that Lord Bracy must have written angrily; but
though she thought so, she plucked up her spirit gallantly,
telling herself that though Lord Bracy might be angry with his own
son, he could have no cause to be displeased with her.</p>
<p>"Yes; I have a letter, which you shall read. The young man seems
to have been very much in earnest."</p>
<p>"I don't know," said Mary, with some little exultation at her
heart.</p>
<p>"It seems but the other day that he was a boy, and now he has
become suddenly a man." To this Mary said nothing; but she also
had come to the conclusion that, in this respect, Lord Carstairs
had lately changed,—very much for the better. "Do you like him,
Mary?"</p>
<p>"Like him, papa?"</p>
<p>"Well, my darling; how am I to put it? He is so much in earnest
that he has got his father to write to me. He was coming over
himself again before he went to Oxford; but he told his father
what he was going to do, and the Earl stopped him. There's the
letter, and you may read it."</p>
<p>Mary read the letter, taking herself apart to a corner of the
room, and seemed to her father to take a long time in reading it.
But there was very much on which she was called upon to make up
her mind during those few minutes. Up to the present time,—up to
the moment in which her father had now summoned her into his
study, she had resolved that it was "impossible." She had become
so clear on the subject that she would not ask herself the
question whether she could love the young man. Would it not be
wrong to love the young man? Would it not be a longing for the
top brick of the chimney, which she ought to know was out of her
reach? So she had decided it, and had therefore already taught
herself to regard the declaration made to her as the ebullition of
a young man's folly. But not the less had she known how great had
been the thing suggested to her,—how excellent was this top brick
of the chimney; and as to the young man himself, she could not but
feel that, had matters been different, she might have loved him.
Now there had come a sudden change; but she did not at all know
how far she might go to meet the change, nor what the change
altogether meant. She had been made sure by her father's question
that he had taught himself to hope. He would not have asked her
whether she liked him,—would not, at any rate, have asked that
question in that voice,—had he not been prepared to be good to
her had she answered in the affirmative. But then this matter did
not depend upon her father's wishes,—or even on her father's
judgment. It was necessary that, before she said another word,
she should find out what Lord Bracy said about it. There she had
Lord Bracy's letter in her hand, but her mind was so disturbed
that she hardly knew how to read it aright at the spur of the
moment.</p>
<p>"You understand what he says, Mary?"</p>
<p>"I think so, papa."</p>
<p>"It is a very kind letter."</p>
<p>"Very kind indeed. I should have thought that he would not have
liked it at all."</p>
<p>"He makes no objection of that kind. To tell the truth, Mary, I
should have thought it unreasonable had he done so. A gentleman
can do no better than marry a lady. And though it is much to be a
nobleman, it is more to be a gentleman."</p>
<p>"Some people think so much of it. And then his having been here
as a pupil! I was very sorry when he spoke to me."</p>
<p>"All that is past and gone. The danger is that such an engagement
would be long."</p>
<p>"Very long."</p>
<p>"You would be afraid of that, Mary?" Mary felt that this was hard
upon her, and unfair. Were she to say that the danger of a long
engagement did not seem to her to be very terrible, she would at
once be giving up everything. She would have declared then that
she did love the young man; or, at any rate, that she intended to
do so. She would have succumbed at the first hint that such
succumbing was possible to her. And yet she had not known that
she was very much afraid of a long
<ins class="corr" title="Full stop added
after ‘engagement’">engagement</ins>. She would, she
thought, have been much more afraid had a speedy marriage been
proposed to her. Upon the whole, she did not know whether it
would not be nice to go on knowing that the young man loved her,
and to rest secure on her faith in him. She was sure of
this,—that the reading of Lord Bracy's letter had in some way
made her happy, though she was unwilling at once to express her
happiness to her father. She was quite sure that she could make
no immediate reply to that question, whether she was afraid of a
long engagement. "I must answer Lord Bracy's letter, you know,"
said the Doctor.</p>
<p>"Yes, papa."</p>
<p>"And what shall I say to him?"</p>
<p>"I don't know, papa."</p>
<p>"And yet you must tell me what to say, my darling."</p>
<p>"Must I, papa?"</p>
<p>"Certainly! Who else can tell me? But I will not answer it
to-day. I will put it off till Monday." It was Saturday morning
on which the letter was being discussed,—a day of which a
considerable portion was generally appropriated to the preparation
of a sermon. "In the mean time you had better talk to mamma; and
on Monday we will settle what is to be said to Lord Bracy."</p>
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