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<h3>CONCLUDING REMARKS:</h3>
<h4>[By the Editor of <i>The Cornhill Magazine</i>.]<br/> </h4>
<p>Here the story is broken off, and it can never be finished. What
promised to be the crowning work of a life is a memorial of death. A
few days longer, and it would have been a triumphal column, crowned
with a capital of festal leaves and flowers: now it is another sort
of column—one of those sad white pillars which stand broken in the
churchyard.</p>
<p>But if the work is not quite complete, little remains to be added to
it, and that little has been distinctly reflected into our minds. We
know that Roger Hamley will marry Molly, and that is what we are most
concerned about. Indeed, there was little else to tell. Had the
writer lived, she would have sent her hero back to Africa forthwith;
and those scientific parts of Africa are a long way from Hamley; and
there is not much to choose between a long distance and a long time.
How many hours are there in twenty-four when you are all alone in a
desert place, a thousand miles from the happiness which might be
yours to take—if you were there to take it? How many, when from the
sources of the Topinambo your heart flies back ten times a day, like
a carrier-pigeon, to the one only source of future good for you, and
ten times a day returns with its message undelivered? Many more than
are counted on the calendar. So Roger found. The days were weeks that
separated him from the time when Molly gave him a certain little
flower, and months from the time which divorced him from Cynthia,
whom he had begun to doubt before he knew for certain that she was
never much worth hoping for. And if such were his days, what was the
slow procession of actual weeks and months in those remote and
solitary places? They were like years of a stay-at-home life, with
liberty and leisure to see that nobody was courting Molly meanwhile.
The effect of this was, that long before the term of his engagement
was ended all that Cynthia had been to him was departed from Roger's
mind, and all that Molly was and might be to him filled it full.</p>
<p>He returned; but when he saw Molly again he remembered that to her
the time of his absence might not have seemed so long, and was
oppressed with the old dread that she would think him fickle.
Therefore this young gentleman, so self-reliant and so lucid in
scientific matters, found it difficult after all to tell Molly how
much he hoped she loved him; and might have blundered if he had not
thought of beginning by showing her the flower that was plucked from
the nosegay. How charmingly that scene would have been drawn, had
Mrs. Gaskell lived to depict it, we can only imagine: that it <i>would</i>
have been charming—especially in what Molly did, and looked, and
said—we know.</p>
<p>Roger and Molly are married; and if one of them is happier than the
other, it is Molly. Her husband has no need to draw upon the little
fortune which is to go to poor Osborne's boy, for he becomes
professor at some great scientific institution, and wins his way in
the world handsomely. The squire is almost as happy in this marriage
as his son. If any one suffers for it, it is Mr. Gibson. But he takes
a partner, so as to get a chance of running up to London to stay with
Molly for a few days now and then, and "to get a little rest from
Mrs. Gibson." Of what was to happen to Cynthia after her marriage the
author was not heard to say much; and, indeed, it does not seem that
anything needs to be added. One little anecdote, however, was told of
her by Mrs. Gaskell, which is very characteristic. One day, when
Cynthia and her husband were on a visit to Hollingford, Mr. Henderson
learned for the first time, through an innocent casual remark of Mr.
Gibson's, that the famous traveller, Roger Hamley, was known to the
family. Cynthia had never happened to mention it. How well that
little incident, too, would have been described!</p>
<p>But it is useless to speculate upon what would have been done by the
delicate strong hand which can create no more Molly Gibsons—no more
Roger Hamleys. We have repeated, in this brief note, all that is
known of her designs for the story, which would have been completed
in another chapter. There is not so much to regret, then, so far as
this novel is concerned; indeed, the regrets of those who knew her
are less for the loss of the novelist than of the woman—one of the
kindest and wisest of her time. But yet, for her own sake <i>as</i> a
novelist alone, her untimely death is a matter for deep regret. It is
clear in this novel of <i>Wives and Daughters</i>, in the exquisite little
story that preceded it, <i>Cousin Phillis</i>, and in <i>Sylvia's Lovers</i>,
that Mrs. Gaskell had within these five years started upon a new
career with all the freshness of youth, and with a mind which seemed
to have put off its clay and to have been born again. But that "put
off its clay" must be taken in a very narrow sense. All minds are
tinctured more or less with the "muddy vesture" in which they are
contained; but few minds ever showed less of base earth than Mrs.
Gaskell's. It was so at all times; but lately even the original
slight tincture seemed to disappear. While you read any one of the
last three books we have named, you feel yourself caught out of an
abominable wicked world, crawling with selfishness and reeking with
base passions, into one where there is much weakness, many mistakes,
sufferings long and bitter, but where it is possible for people to
live calm and wholesome lives; and, what is more, you feel that this
is at least as real a world as the other. The kindly spirit which
thinks no ill looks out of her pages irradiate; and while we read
them, we breathe the purer intelligence which prefers to deal with
emotions and passions which have a living root in minds within the
pale of salvation, and not with those which rot without it. This
spirit is more especially declared in <i>Cousin Phillis</i> and <i>Wives and
Daughters</i>—their author's latest works; they seem to show that for
her the end of life was not descent amongst the clods of the valley,
but ascent into the purer air of the heaven-aspiring hills.</p>
<p>We are saying nothing now of the merely intellectual qualities
displayed in these later works. Twenty years to come, that may be
thought the more important question of the two; in the presence of
her grave we cannot think so; but it is true, all the same, that as
mere works of art and observation, these later novels of Mrs.
Gaskell's are among the finest of our time. There is a scene in
<i>Cousin Phyllis</i>—where Holman, making hay with his men, ends the day
with a psalm—which is not excelled as a picture in all modern
fiction; and the same may be said of that chapter of this last story
in which Roger smokes a pipe with the Squire after the quarrel with
Osborne. There is little in either of these scenes, or in a score of
others which succeed each other like gems in a cabinet, which the
ordinary novel-maker could "seize." There is no "material" for <i>him</i>
in half-a-dozen farming men singing hymns in a field, or a
discontented old gentleman smoking tobacco with his son. Still less
could he avail himself of the miseries of a little girl sent to be
happy in a fine house full of fine people; but it is just in such
things as these that true genius appears brightest and most
unapproachable. It is the same with the personages in Mrs. Gaskell's
works. Cynthia is one of the most difficult characters which have
ever been attempted in our time. Perfect art always obscures the
difficulties it overcomes; and it is not till we try to follow the
processes by which such a character as the Tito of <i>Romola</i> is
created, for instance, that we begin to understand what a marvellous
piece of work it is. To be sure, Cynthia was not so difficult, nor is
it nearly so great a creation as that splendid achievement of art and
thought—of the rarest art, of the profoundest thought. But she also
belongs to the kind of characters which are conceived only in minds
large, clear, harmonious and just, and which can be portrayed fully
and without flaw only by hands obedient to the finest motions of the
mind. Viewed in this light, Cynthia is a more important piece of work
even than Molly, delicately as she is drawn, and true and harmonious
as that picture is also. And what we have said of Cynthia may be said
with equal truth of Osborne Hamley. The true delineation of a
character like that is as fine a test of art as the painting of a
foot or a hand, which also seems so easy, and in which perfection is
most rare. In this case the work is perfect. Mrs. Gaskell has drawn a
dozen characters more striking than Osborne since she wrote <i>Mary
Barton</i>, but not one which shows more exquisite finish.</p>
<p>Another thing we may be permitted to notice, because it has a great
and general significance. It may be true that this is not exactly the
place for criticism, but since we are writing of Osborne Hamley, we
cannot resist pointing out a peculiar instance of the subtler
conceptions which underlie all really considerable works. Here are
Osborne and Roger, two men who, in every particular that can be
seized for <i>description</i>, are totally different creatures. Body and
mind they are quite unlike. They have different tastes; they take
different ways: they are men of two sorts which, in the society
sense, never "know" each other; and yet, never did brotherly blood
run more manifest than in the veins of those two. To make that
manifest without allowing the effort to peep out for a single moment,
would be a triumph of art; but it is a "touch beyond the reach of
art" to make their likeness in unlikeness so natural a thing that we
no more wonder about it than we wonder at seeing the fruit and the
bloom on the same bramble: we have always seen them there together in
blackberry season, and do not wonder about it nor think about it at
all. Inferior writers, even some writers who are highly accounted,
would have revelled in the "contrast," persuaded that they were doing
a fine anatomical dramatic thing by bringing it out at every
opportunity. To the author of <i>Wives and Daughters</i> this sort of
anatomy was mere dislocation. She began by having the people of her
story born in the usual way, and not built up like the Frankenstein
monster; and thus when Squire Hamley took a wife, it was then
provided that his two boys should be as naturally one and diverse as
the fruit and the bloom on the bramble. "It goes without speaking."
These differences are precisely what might have been expected from
the union of Squire Hamley with the town-bred, refined,
delicate-minded woman whom he married; and the affection of the young
men, their kindness (to use the word in its old and new meanings at
once) is nothing but a reproduction of those impalpable threads of
love which bound the equally diverse father and mother in bonds
faster than the ties of blood.</p>
<p>But we will not permit ourselves to write any more in this vein. It
is unnecessary to demonstrate to those who know what is and what is
not true literature that Mrs. Gaskell was gifted with some of the
choicest faculties bestowed upon mankind; that these grew into
greater strength and ripened into greater beauty in the decline of
her days; and that she has gifted us with some of the truest, purest
works of fiction in the language. And she was herself what her works
show her to have been—a wise, good woman.</p>
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