<SPAN name="chap31"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER XXXI. </h3>
<h3> THEIR REWARD. </h3>
<p>By degrees Gibbie had come to be well known about the Mains and
Glashruach. Angus's only recognition of him was a scowl in return
for his smile; but, as I have said, he gave him no farther
annoyance, and the tales about the beast-loon were dying out from
Daurside. Jean Mavor was a special friend to him: for she knew now
well enough who had been her brownie, and made him welcome as often
as he showed himself with Donal. Fergus was sometimes at home;
sometimes away; but he was now quite a fine gentleman, a student of
theology, and only condescendingly cognizant of the existence of
Donal Grant. All he said to him when he came home a master of arts,
was, that he had expected better of him: he ought to be something
more than herd by this time. Donal smiled and said nothing. He had
just finished a little song that pleased him, and could afford to be
patronized. I am afraid, however, he was not contented with that,
but in his mind's eye measured Fergus from top to toe.</p>
<p>In the autumn, Mr. Galbraith returned to Glashruach, but did not
remain long. His schemes were promising well, and his
self-importance was screwed yet a little higher in consequence. But
he was kinder than usual to Ginevra. Before he went he said to her
that, as Mr. Machar had sunk into a condition requiring his
daughter's constant attention, he would find her an English
governess as soon as he reached London; meantime she must keep up
her studies by herself as well as she could. Probably he forgot all
about it, for the governess was not heard of at Glashruach, and
things fell into their old way. There was no spiritual traffic
between the father and daughter, consequently Ginevra never said
anything about Donal or Gibbie, or her friendship for Nicie. He had
himself to blame altogether; he had made it impossible for her to
talk to him. But it was well he remained in ignorance, and so did
not put a stop to the best education she could at this time of her
life have been having—such as neither he nor any friend of his
could have given her.</p>
<p>It was interrupted, however, by the arrival of the winter—a wild
time in that region, fierce storm alternating with the calm of
death. After howling nights, in which it seemed as if all the
polter-geister of the universe must be out on a disembodied lark,
the mountains stood there in the morning solemn still, each with his
white turban of snow unrumpled on his head, in the profoundest
silence of blue air, as if he had never in his life passed a more
thoughtful, peaceful time than the very last night of all. To such
feet as Ginevra's the cottage on Glashgar was for months almost as
inaccessible as if it had been in Sirius. More than once the Daur
was frozen thick; for weeks every beast was an absolute prisoner to
the byre, and for months was fed with straw and turnips and potatoes
and oilcake. Then was the time for stories; and often in the long
dark, while yet it was hours too early for bed, would Ginevra go
with Nicie, who was not much of a raconteuse, to the kitchen, to get
one of the other servants to tell her an old tale. For even in his
own daughter and his own kitchen, the great laird could not
extinguish the accursed superstition. Not a glimpse did Ginevra get
all this time of Donal or of Gibbie.</p>
<p>At last, like one of its own flowers in its own bosom, the spring
began again to wake in God's thought of his world; and the snow,
like all other deaths, had to melt and run, leaving room for hope;
then the summer woke smiling, as if she knew she had been asleep;
and the two youths and the two maidens met yet again on Lorrie bank,
with the brown water falling over the stones, the gold nuggets of
the broom hanging over the water, and the young larch-wood scenting
the air all up the brae side between them and the house, which the
tall hedge hid from their view. The four were a year older, a year
nearer trouble, and a year nearer getting out of it. Ginevra was
more of a woman, Donal more of a poet, Nicie as nice and much the
same, and Gibbie, if possible, more a foundling of the universe than
ever. He was growing steadily, and showed such freedom and ease,
and his motions were all so rapid and direct, that it was plain at a
glance the beauty of his countenance was in no manner or measure
associated with weakness. The mountain was a grand nursery for him,
and the result, both physical and spiritual, corresponded. Janet,
who, better than anyone else, knew what was in the mind of the boy,
revered him as much as he revered her; the first impression he made
upon her had never worn off—had only changed its colour a little.
More even than a knowledge of the truth, is a readiness to receive
it; and Janet saw from the first that Gibbie's ignorance at its
worst was but room vacant for the truth: when it came it found bolt
nor bar on door or window, but had immediate entrance. The secret
of this power of reception was, that to see a truth and to do it was
one and the same thing with Gibbie. To know and not do would have
seemed to him an impossibility, as it is in vital idea a
monstrosity.</p>
<p>This unity of vision and action was the main cause also of a certain
daring simplicity in the exercise of the imagination, which so far
from misleading him reacted only in obedience—which is the truth of
the will—the truth, therefore, of the whole being. He did not do
the less well for his sheep, that he fancied they knew when Jesus
Christ was on the mountain, and always at such times both fed better
and were more frolicsome. He thought Oscar knew it also, and
interpreted a certain look of the dog by the supposition that he had
caught a sign of the bodily presence of his Maker. The direction in
which his imagination ran forward, was always that in which his
reason pointed; and so long as Gibbie's fancies were bud-blooms upon
his obedience, his imagination could not be otherwise than in
harmony with his reason. Imagination is a poor root, but a worthy
blossom, and in a nature like Gibbie's its flowers cannot fail to be
lovely. For no outcome of a man's nature is so like himself as his
imaginations, except it be his fancies, indeed. Perhaps his
imaginations show what he is meant to be, his fancies what he is
making of himself.</p>
<p>In the summer, Mr. Galbraith, all unannounced, reappeared at
Glashruach, but so changed that, startled at the sight of him,
Ginevra stopped midway in her advance to greet him. The long thin
man was now haggard and worn; he looked sourer too, and more
suspicious—either that experience had made him so, or that he was
less equal to the veiling of his feelings in dignified indifference.
He was annoyed that his daughter should recognize an alteration in
him, and, turning away, leaned his head on the hand whose arm was
already supported by the mantelpiece, and took no further notice of
her presence; but perhaps conscience also had something to do with
this behaviour. Ginevra knew from experience that the sight of
tears would enrage him, and with all her might repressed those she
felt beginning to rise. She went up to him timidly, and took the
hand that hung by his side. He did not repel her—that is, he did
not push her away, or even withdraw his hand, but he left it hanging
lifeless, and returned with it no pressure upon hers—which was much
worse.</p>
<p>"Is anything the matter, papa?" she asked with trembling voice.</p>
<p>"I am not aware that I have been in the habit of communicating with
you on the subject of my affairs," he answered; "nor am I likely to
begin to do so, where my return after so long an absence seems to
give so little satisfaction."</p>
<p>"Oh, papa! I was frightened to see you looking so ill."</p>
<p>"Such a remark upon my personal appearance is but a poor recognition
of my labours for your benefit, I venture to think, Jenny," he said.</p>
<p>He was at the moment contemplating, as a necessity, the sale of
every foot of the property her mother had brought him. Nothing less
would serve to keep up his credit, and gain time to disguise more
than one failing scheme. Everything had of late been going so
badly, that he had lost a good deal of his confidence and
self-satisfaction; but he had gained no humility instead. It had
not dawned upon him yet that he was not unfortunate, but unworthy.
The gain of such a conviction is to a man enough to outweigh
infinitely any loss that even his unworthiness can have caused him;
for it involves some perception of the worthiness of the truth, and
makes way for the utter consolation which the birth of that truth in
himself will bring. As yet Mr. Galbraith was but overwhelmed with
care for a self which, so far as he had to do with the making of it,
was of small value indeed, although in the possibility, which is the
birthright of every creature, it was, not less than that of the
wretchedest of dog-licked Lazaruses, of a value by himself
unsuspected and inappreciable. That he should behave so cruelly to
his one child, was not unnatural to that self with which he was so
much occupied: failure had weakened that command of behaviour which
so frequently gains the credit belonging only to justice and
kindness, and a temper which never was good, but always feeling the
chain, was ready at once to show its ugly teeth. He was a proud
man, whose pride was always catching cold from his heart. He might
have lived a hundred years in the same house with a child that was
not his own, without feeling for her a single movement of affection.</p>
<p>The servants found more change in him than Ginevra did; his
relations with them, if not better conceived than his paternal ones,
had been less evidently defective. Now he found fault with every
one, so that even Joseph dared hardly open his mouth, and said he
must give warning. The day after his arrival, having spent the
morning with Angus walking over certain fields, much desired, he
knew, of a neighbouring proprietor, inwardly calculating the utmost
he could venture to ask for them with a chance of selling, he
scolded Ginevra severely on his return because she had not had
lunch, but had waited for him; whereas a little reflection might
have shown him she dared not take it without him. Naturally,
therefore, she could not now eat, because of a certain sensation in
her throat. The instant he saw she was not eating, he ordered her
out of the room: he would have no such airs in his family! By the
end of the week—he arrived on the Tuesday—such a sense of
estrangement possessed Ginevra, that she would turn on the stair and
run up again, if she heard her father's voice below. Her aversion
to meeting him, he became aware of, and felt relieved in regard to
the wrong he was doing his wife, by reflecting upon her daughter's
behaviour towards him; for he had a strong constitutional sense of
what was fair, and a conscience disobeyed becomes a cancer.</p>
<p>In this evil mood he received from some one—all his life Donal
believed it was Fergus—a hint concerning the relations between his
daughter and his tenant's herd-boy. To describe his feelings at the
bare fact that such a hint was possible, would be more labour than
the result would repay.—What! his own flesh and blood, the heiress
of Glashruach, derive pleasure from the boorish talk of such a
companion! It could not be true, when the mere thought, without the
belief of it, filled him with such indignation! He was overwhelmed
with a righteous disgust. He did himself the justice of making
himself certain before he took measures; but he never thought of
doing them the justice of acquainting himself first with the nature
of the intercourse they held. But it mattered little; for he would
have found nothing in that to give him satisfaction, even if the
thing itself had not been outrageous. He watched and waited, and
more than once pretended to go from home: at last one morning, from
the larch-wood, he saw the unnatural girl seated with her maid on
the bank of the river, the cow-herd reading to them, and on the
other side the dumb idiot lying listening. He was almost beside
himself—with what, I can hardly define. In a loud voice of bare
command he called to her to come to him. With a glance of terror at
Nicie she rose, and they went up through the larches together.</p>
<p>I will not spend my labour upon a reproduction of the verbal torrent
of wrath, wounded dignity, disgust, and contempt, with which the
father assailed his shrinking, delicate, honest-minded woman-child.
For Nicie, he dismissed her on the spot. Not another night would
he endure her in the house, after her abominable breach of
confidence! She had to depart without even a good-bye from Ginevra,
and went home weeping in great dread of what her mother would say.</p>
<p>"Lassie," said Janet, when she heard her story, "gien onybody be to
blame it's mysel'; for ye loot me ken ye gaed whiles wi' yer bonnie
missie to hae a news wi' Donal, an' I saw an' see noucht 'at's wrang
intill't. But the fowk o' this warl' has ither w'ys o' jeedgin' o'
things, an' I maun bethink mysel' what lesson o' the serpent's
wisdom I hae to learn frae 't. Ye're walcome hame, my bonnie lass.
Ye ken I aye keep the wee closet ready for ony o' ye 'at micht come
ohn expeckit."</p>
<p>Nicie, however, had not long to occupy the closet, for those of her
breed were in demand in the country.</p>
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