<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
<p>A new chapter in a novel is something like a new scene in a
play; and when I draw up the curtain this time, reader, you must
fancy you see a room in the George Inn at Millcote, with such
large figured papering on the walls as inn rooms have; such a
carpet, such furniture, such ornaments on the mantelpiece, such
prints, including a portrait of George the Third, and another of
the Prince of Wales, and a representation of the death of
Wolfe. All this is visible to you by the light of an oil
lamp hanging from the ceiling, and by that of an excellent fire,
near which I sit in my cloak and bonnet; my muff and umbrella lie
on the table, and I am warming away the numbness and chill
contracted by sixteen hours’ exposure to the rawness of an
October day: I left Lowton at four o’clock a.m., and the
Millcote town clock is now just striking eight.</p>
<p>Reader, though I look comfortably accommodated, I am not very
tranquil in my mind. I thought when the coach stopped here
there would be some one to meet me; I looked anxiously round as I
descended the wooden steps the “boots” placed for my
convenience, expecting to hear my name pronounced, and to see
some description of carriage waiting to convey me to
Thornfield. Nothing of the sort was visible; and when I
asked a waiter if any one had been to inquire after a Miss Eyre,
I was answered in the negative: so I had no resource but to
request to be shown into a private room: and here I am waiting,
while all sorts of doubts and fears are troubling my
thoughts.</p>
<p>It is a very strange sensation to inexperienced youth to feel
itself quite alone in the world, cut adrift from every
connection, uncertain whether the port to which it is bound can
be reached, and prevented by many impediments from returning to
that it has quitted. The charm of adventure sweetens that
sensation, the glow of pride warms it; but then the throb of fear
disturbs it; and fear with me became predominant when
half-an-hour elapsed and still I was alone. I bethought
myself to ring the bell.</p>
<p>“Is there a place in this neighbourhood called
Thornfield?” I asked of the waiter who answered the
summons.</p>
<p>“Thornfield? I don’t know, ma’am;
I’ll inquire at the bar.” He vanished, but
reappeared instantly—</p>
<p>“Is your name Eyre, Miss?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Person here waiting for you.”</p>
<p>I jumped up, took my muff and umbrella, and hastened into the
inn-passage: a man was standing by the open door, and in the
lamp-lit street I dimly saw a one-horse conveyance.</p>
<p>“This will be your luggage, I suppose?” said the
man rather abruptly when he saw me, pointing to my trunk in the
passage.</p>
<p>“Yes.” He hoisted it on to the vehicle,
which was a sort of car, and then I got in; before he shut me up,
I asked him how far it was to Thornfield.</p>
<p>“A matter of six miles.”</p>
<p>“How long shall we be before we get there?”</p>
<p>“Happen an hour and a half.”</p>
<p>He fastened the car door, climbed to his own seat outside, and
we set off. Our progress was leisurely, and gave me ample
time to reflect; I was content to be at length so near the end of
my journey; and as I leaned back in the comfortable though not
elegant conveyance, I meditated much at my ease.</p>
<p>“I suppose,” thought I, “judging from the
plainness of the servant and carriage, Mrs. Fairfax is not a very
dashing person: so much the better; I never lived amongst fine
people but once, and I was very miserable with them. I
wonder if she lives alone except this little girl; if so, and if
she is in any degree amiable, I shall surely be able to get on
with her; I will do my best; it is a pity that doing one’s
best does not always answer. At Lowood, indeed, I took that
resolution, kept it, and succeeded in pleasing; but with Mrs.
Reed, I remember my best was always spurned with scorn. I
pray God Mrs. Fairfax may not turn out a second Mrs. Reed; but if
she does, I am not bound to stay with her! let the worst come to
the worst, I can advertise again. How far are we on our
road now, I wonder?”</p>
<p>I let down the window and looked out; Millcote was behind us;
judging by the number of its lights, it seemed a place of
considerable magnitude, much larger than Lowton. We were
now, as far as I could see, on a sort of common; but there were
houses scattered all over the district; I felt we were in a
different region to Lowood, more populous, less picturesque; more
stirring, less romantic.</p>
<p>The roads were heavy, the night misty; my conductor let his
horse walk all the way, and the hour and a half extended, I
verily believe, to two hours; at last he turned in his seat and
said—</p>
<p>“You’re noan so far fro’ Thornfield
now.”</p>
<p>Again I looked out: we were passing a church; I saw its low
broad tower against the sky, and its bell was tolling a quarter;
I saw a narrow galaxy of lights too, on a hillside, marking a
village or hamlet. About ten minutes after, the driver got
down and opened a pair of gates: we passed through, and they
clashed to behind us. We now slowly ascended a drive, and
came upon the long front of a house: candlelight gleamed from one
curtained bow-window; all the rest were dark. The car
stopped at the front door; it was opened by a maid-servant; I
alighted and went in.</p>
<p>“Will you walk this way, ma’am?” said the
girl; and I followed her across a square hall with high doors all
round: she ushered me into a room whose double illumination of
fire and candle at first dazzled me, contrasting as it did with
the darkness to which my eyes had been for two hours inured; when
I could see, however, a cosy and agreeable picture presented
itself to my view.</p>
<p>A snug small room; a round table by a cheerful fire; an
arm-chair high-backed and old-fashioned, wherein sat the neatest
imaginable little elderly lady, in widow’s cap, black silk
gown, and snowy muslin apron; exactly like what I had fancied
Mrs. Fairfax, only less stately and milder looking. She was
occupied in knitting; a large cat sat demurely at her feet;
nothing in short was wanting to complete the beau-ideal of
domestic comfort. A more reassuring introduction for a new
governess could scarcely be conceived; there was no grandeur to
overwhelm, no stateliness to embarrass; and then, as I entered,
the old lady got up and promptly and kindly came forward to meet
me.</p>
<p>“How do you do, my dear? I am afraid you have had
a tedious ride; John drives so slowly; you must be cold, come to
the fire.”</p>
<p>“Mrs. Fairfax, I suppose?” said I.</p>
<p>“Yes, you are right: do sit down.”</p>
<p>She conducted me to her own chair, and then began to remove my
shawl and untie my bonnet-strings; I begged she would not give
herself so much trouble.</p>
<p>“Oh, it is no trouble; I dare say your own hands are
almost numbed with cold. Leah, make a little hot negus and
cut a sandwich or two: here are the keys of the
storeroom.”</p>
<p>And she produced from her pocket a most housewifely bunch of
keys, and delivered them to the servant.</p>
<p>“Now, then, draw nearer to the fire,” she
continued. “You’ve brought your luggage with
you, haven’t you, my dear?”</p>
<p>“Yes, ma’am.”</p>
<p>“I’ll see it carried into your room,” she
said, and bustled out.</p>
<p>“She treats me like a visitor,” thought I.
“I little expected such a reception; I anticipated only
coldness and stiffness: this is not like what I have heard of the
treatment of governesses; but I must not exult too
soon.”</p>
<p>She returned; with her own hands cleared her knitting
apparatus and a book or two from the table, to make room for the
tray which Leah now brought, and then herself handed me the
refreshments. I felt rather confused at being the object of
more attention than I had ever before received, and, that too,
shown by my employer and superior; but as she did not herself
seem to consider she was doing anything out of her place, I
thought it better to take her civilities quietly.</p>
<p>“Shall I have the pleasure of seeing Miss Fairfax
to-night?” I asked, when I had partaken of what she offered
me.</p>
<p>“What did you say, my dear? I am a little
deaf,” returned the good lady, approaching her ear to my
mouth.</p>
<p>I repeated the question more distinctly.</p>
<p>“Miss Fairfax? Oh, you mean Miss Varens!
Varens is the name of your future pupil.”</p>
<p>“Indeed! Then she is not your daughter?”</p>
<p>“No,—I have no family.”</p>
<p>I should have followed up my first inquiry, by asking in what
way Miss Varens was connected with her; but I recollected it was
not polite to ask too many questions: besides, I was sure to hear
in time.</p>
<p>“I am so glad,” she continued, as she sat down
opposite to me, and took the cat on her knee; “I am so glad
you are come; it will be quite pleasant living here now with a
companion. To be sure it is pleasant at any time; for
Thornfield is a fine old hall, rather neglected of late years
perhaps, but still it is a respectable place; yet you know in
winter-time one feels dreary quite alone in the best
quarters. I say alone—Leah is a nice girl to be sure,
and John and his wife are very decent people; but then you see
they are only servants, and one can’t converse with them on
terms of equality: one must keep them at due distance, for fear
of losing one’s authority. I’m sure last winter
(it was a very severe one, if you recollect, and when it did not
snow, it rained and blew), not a creature but the butcher and
postman came to the house, from November till February; and I
really got quite melancholy with sitting night after night alone;
I had Leah in to read to me sometimes; but I don’t think
the poor girl liked the task much: she felt it confining.
In spring and summer one got on better: sunshine and long days
make such a difference; and then, just at the commencement of
this autumn, little Adela Varens came and her nurse: a child
makes a house alive all at once; and now you are here I shall be
quite gay.”</p>
<p>My heart really warmed to the worthy lady as I heard her talk;
and I drew my chair a little nearer to her, and expressed my
sincere wish that she might find my company as agreeable as she
anticipated.</p>
<p>“But I’ll not keep you sitting up late
to-night,” said she; “it is on the stroke of twelve
now, and you have been travelling all day: you must feel
tired. If you have got your feet well warmed, I’ll
show you your bedroom. I’ve had the room next to mine
prepared for you; it is only a small apartment, but I thought you
would like it better than one of the large front chambers: to be
sure they have finer furniture, but they are so dreary and
solitary, I never sleep in them myself.”</p>
<p>I thanked her for her considerate choice, and as I really felt
fatigued with my long journey, expressed my readiness to
retire. She took her candle, and I followed her from the
room. First she went to see if the hall-door was fastened;
having taken the key from the lock, she led the way
upstairs. The steps and banisters were of oak; the
staircase window was high and latticed; both it and the long
gallery into which the bedroom doors opened looked as if they
belonged to a church rather than a house. A very chill and
vault-like air pervaded the stairs and gallery, suggesting
cheerless ideas of space and solitude; and I was glad, when
finally ushered into my chamber, to find it of small dimensions,
and furnished in ordinary, modern style.</p>
<p>When Mrs. Fairfax had bidden me a kind good-night, and I had
fastened my door, gazed leisurely round, and in some measure
effaced the eerie impression made by that wide hall, that dark
and spacious staircase, and that long, cold gallery, by the
livelier aspect of my little room, I remembered that, after a day
of bodily fatigue and mental anxiety, I was now at last in safe
haven. The impulse of gratitude swelled my heart, and I
knelt down at the bedside, and offered up thanks where thanks
were due; not forgetting, ere I rose, to implore aid on my
further path, and the power of meriting the kindness which seemed
so frankly offered me before it was earned. My couch had no
thorns in it that night; my solitary room no fears. At once
weary and content, I slept soon and soundly: when I awoke it was
broad day.</p>
<p>The chamber looked such a bright little place to me as the sun
shone in between the gay blue chintz window curtains, showing
papered walls and a carpeted floor, so unlike the bare planks and
stained plaster of Lowood, that my spirits rose at the
view. Externals have a great effect on the young: I thought
that a fairer era of life was beginning for me, one that was to
have its flowers and pleasures, as well as its thorns and
toils. My faculties, roused by the change of scene, the new
field offered to hope, seemed all astir. I cannot precisely
define what they expected, but it was something pleasant: not
perhaps that day or that month, but at an indefinite future
period.</p>
<p>I rose; I dressed myself with care: obliged to be
plain—for I had no article of attire that was not made with
extreme simplicity—I was still by nature solicitous to be
neat. It was not my habit to be disregardful of appearance
or careless of the impression I made: on the contrary, I ever
wished to look as well as I could, and to please as much as my
want of beauty would permit. I sometimes regretted that I
was not handsomer; I sometimes wished to have rosy cheeks, a
straight nose, and small cherry mouth; I desired to be tall,
stately, and finely developed in figure; I felt it a misfortune
that I was so little, so pale, and had features so irregular and
so marked. And why had I these aspirations and these
regrets? It would be difficult to say: I could not then
distinctly say it to myself; yet I had a reason, and a logical,
natural reason too. However, when I had brushed my hair
very smooth, and put on my black frock—which, Quakerlike as
it was, at least had the merit of fitting to a nicety—and
adjusted my clean white tucker, I thought I should do respectably
enough to appear before Mrs. Fairfax, and that my new pupil would
not at least recoil from me with antipathy. Having opened
my chamber window, and seen that I left all things straight and
neat on the toilet table, I ventured forth.</p>
<p>Traversing the long and matted gallery, I descended the
slippery steps of oak; then I gained the hall: I halted there a
minute; I looked at some pictures on the walls (one, I remember,
represented a grim man in a cuirass, and one a lady with powdered
hair and a pearl necklace), at a bronze lamp pendent from the
ceiling, at a great clock whose case was of oak curiously carved,
and ebon black with time and rubbing. Everything appeared
very stately and imposing to me; but then I was so little
accustomed to grandeur. The hall-door, which was half of
glass, stood open; I stepped over the threshold. It was a
fine autumn morning; the early sun shone serenely on embrowned
groves and still green fields; advancing on to the lawn, I looked
up and surveyed the front of the mansion. It was three
storeys high, of proportions not vast, though considerable: a
gentleman’s manor-house, not a nobleman’s seat:
battlements round the top gave it a picturesque look. Its
grey front stood out well from the background of a rookery, whose
cawing tenants were now on the wing: they flew over the lawn and
grounds to alight in a great meadow, from which these were
separated by a sunk fence, and where an array of mighty old thorn
trees, strong, knotty, and broad as oaks, at once explained the
etymology of the mansion’s designation. Farther off
were hills: not so lofty as those round Lowood, nor so craggy,
nor so like barriers of separation from the living world; but yet
quiet and lonely hills enough, and seeming to embrace Thornfield
with a seclusion I had not expected to find existent so near the
stirring locality of Millcote. A little hamlet, whose roofs
were blent with trees, straggled up the side of one of these
hills; the church of the district stood nearer Thornfield: its
old tower-top looked over a knoll between the house and
gates.</p>
<p>I was yet enjoying the calm prospect and pleasant fresh air,
yet listening with delight to the cawing of the rooks, yet
surveying the wide, hoary front of the hall, and thinking what a
great place it was for one lonely little dame like Mrs. Fairfax
to inhabit, when that lady appeared at the door.</p>
<p>“What! out already?” said she. “I see
you are an early riser.” I went up to her, and was
received with an affable kiss and shake of the hand.</p>
<p>“How do you like Thornfield?” she asked. I
told her I liked it very much.</p>
<p>“Yes,” she said, “it is a pretty place; but
I fear it will be getting out of order, unless Mr. Rochester
should take it into his head to come and reside here permanently;
or, at least, visit it rather oftener: great houses and fine
grounds require the presence of the proprietor.”</p>
<p>“Mr. Rochester!” I exclaimed. “Who is
he?”</p>
<p>“The owner of Thornfield,” she responded
quietly. “Did you not know he was called
Rochester?”</p>
<p>Of course I did not—I had never heard of him before; but
the old lady seemed to regard his existence as a universally
understood fact, with which everybody must be acquainted by
instinct.</p>
<p>“I thought,” I continued, “Thornfield
belonged to you.”</p>
<p>“To me? Bless you, child; what an idea! To
me! I am only the housekeeper—the manager. To
be sure I am distantly related to the Rochesters by the
mother’s side, or at least my husband was; he was a
clergyman, incumbent of Hay—that little village yonder on
the hill—and that church near the gates was his. The
present Mr. Rochester’s mother was a Fairfax, and second
cousin to my husband: but I never presume on the
connection—in fact, it is nothing to me; I consider myself
quite in the light of an ordinary housekeeper: my employer is
always civil, and I expect nothing more.”</p>
<p>“And the little girl—my pupil!”</p>
<p>“She is Mr. Rochester’s ward; he commissioned me
to find a governess for her. He intended to have her
brought up in ---shire, I believe. Here she comes, with her
‘bonne,’ as she calls her nurse.” The
enigma then was explained: this affable and kind little widow was
no great dame; but a dependant like myself. I did not like
her the worse for that; on the contrary, I felt better pleased
than ever. The equality between her and me was real; not
the mere result of condescension on her part: so much the
better—my position was all the freer.</p>
<p>As I was meditating on this discovery, a little girl, followed
by her attendant, came running up the lawn. I looked at my
pupil, who did not at first appear to notice me: she was quite a
child, perhaps seven or eight years old, slightly built, with a
pale, small-featured face, and a redundancy of hair falling in
curls to her waist.</p>
<p>“Good morning, Miss Adela,” said Mrs.
Fairfax. “Come and speak to the lady who is to teach
you, and to make you a clever woman some day.” She
approached.</p>
<p>“C’est là ma gouverante!” said she,
pointing to me, and addressing her nurse; who answered—</p>
<p>“Mais oui, certainement.”</p>
<p>“Are they foreigners?” I inquired, amazed at
hearing the French language.</p>
<p>“The nurse is a foreigner, and Adela was born on the
Continent; and, I believe, never left it till within six months
ago. When she first came here she could speak no English;
now she can make shift to talk it a little: I don’t
understand her, she mixes it so with French; but you will make
out her meaning very well, I dare say.”</p>
<p>Fortunately I had had the advantage of being taught French by
a French lady; and as I had always made a point of conversing
with Madame Pierrot as often as I could, and had besides, during
the last seven years, learnt a portion of French by heart
daily—applying myself to take pains with my accent, and
imitating as closely as possible the pronunciation of my teacher,
I had acquired a certain degree of readiness and correctness in
the language, and was not likely to be much at a loss with
Mademoiselle Adela. She came and shook hand with me when
she heard that I was her governess; and as I led her in to
breakfast, I addressed some phrases to her in her own tongue: she
replied briefly at first, but after we were seated at the table,
and she had examined me some ten minutes with her large hazel
eyes, she suddenly commenced chattering fluently.</p>
<p>“Ah!” cried she, in French, “you speak my
language as well as Mr. Rochester does: I can talk to you as I
can to him, and so can Sophie. She will be glad: nobody
here understands her: Madame Fairfax is all English. Sophie
is my nurse; she came with me over the sea in a great ship with a
chimney that smoked—how it did smoke!—and I was sick,
and so was Sophie, and so was Mr. Rochester. Mr. Rochester
lay down on a sofa in a pretty room called the salon, and Sophie
and I had little beds in another place. I nearly fell out
of mine; it was like a shelf. And Mademoiselle—what
is your name?”</p>
<p>“Eyre—Jane Eyre.”</p>
<p>“Aire? Bah! I cannot say it. Well, our
ship stopped in the morning, before it was quite daylight, at a
great city—a huge city, with very dark houses and all
smoky; not at all like the pretty clean town I came from; and Mr.
Rochester carried me in his arms over a plank to the land, and
Sophie came after, and we all got into a coach, which took us to
a beautiful large house, larger than this and finer, called an
hotel. We stayed there nearly a week: I and Sophie used to
walk every day in a great green place full of trees, called the
Park; and there were many children there besides me, and a pond
with beautiful birds in it, that I fed with crumbs.”</p>
<p>“Can you understand her when she runs on so fast?”
asked Mrs. Fairfax.</p>
<p>I understood her very well, for I had been accustomed to the
fluent tongue of Madame Pierrot.</p>
<p>“I wish,” continued the good lady, “you
would ask her a question or two about her parents: I wonder if
she remembers them?”</p>
<p>“Adèle,” I inquired, “with whom did
you live when you were in that pretty clean town you spoke
of?”</p>
<p>“I lived long ago with mama; but she is gone to the Holy
Virgin. Mama used to teach me to dance and sing, and to say
verses. A great many gentlemen and ladies came to see mama,
and I used to dance before them, or to sit on their knees and
sing to them: I liked it. Shall I let you hear me sing
now?”</p>
<p>She had finished her breakfast, so I permitted her to give a
specimen of her accomplishments. Descending from her chair,
she came and placed herself on my knee; then, folding her little
hands demurely before her, shaking back her curls and lifting her
eyes to the ceiling, she commenced singing a song from some
opera. It was the strain of a forsaken lady, who, after
bewailing the perfidy of her lover, calls pride to her aid;
desires her attendant to deck her in her brightest jewels and
richest robes, and resolves to meet the false one that night at a
ball, and prove to him, by the gaiety of her demeanour, how
little his desertion has affected her.</p>
<p>The subject seemed strangely chosen for an infant singer; but
I suppose the point of the exhibition lay in hearing the notes of
love and jealousy warbled with the lisp of childhood; and in very
bad taste that point was: at least I thought so.</p>
<p>Adèle sang the canzonette tunefully enough, and with
the <i>naïveté</i> of her age. This achieved,
she jumped from my knee and said, “Now, Mademoiselle, I
will repeat you some poetry.”</p>
<p>Assuming an attitude, she began, “La Ligue des Rats:
fable de La Fontaine.” She then declaimed the little
piece with an attention to punctuation and emphasis, a
flexibility of voice and an appropriateness of gesture, very
unusual indeed at her age, and which proved she had been
carefully trained.</p>
<p>“Was it your mama who taught you that piece?” I
asked.</p>
<p>“Yes, and she just used to say it in this way:
‘Qu’ avez vous donc? lui dit un de ces rats;
parlez!’ She made me lift my hand—so—to
remind me to raise my voice at the question. Now shall I
dance for you?”</p>
<p>“No, that will do: but after your mama went to the Holy
Virgin, as you say, with whom did you live then?”</p>
<p>“With Madame Frédéric and her husband: she
took care of me, but she is nothing related to me. I think
she is poor, for she had not so fine a house as mama. I was
not long there. Mr. Rochester asked me if I would like to
go and live with him in England, and I said yes; for I knew Mr.
Rochester before I knew Madame Frédéric, and he was
always kind to me and gave me pretty dresses and toys: but you
see he has not kept his word, for he has brought me to England,
and now he is gone back again himself, and I never see
him.”</p>
<p>After breakfast, Adèle and I withdrew to the library,
which room, it appears, Mr. Rochester had directed should be used
as the schoolroom. Most of the books were locked up behind
glass doors; but there was one bookcase left open containing
everything that could be needed in the way of elementary works,
and several volumes of light literature, poetry, biography,
travels, a few romances, &c. I suppose he had
considered that these were all the governess would require for
her private perusal; and, indeed, they contented me amply for the
present; compared with the scanty pickings I had now and then
been able to glean at Lowood, they seemed to offer an abundant
harvest of entertainment and information. In this room,
too, there was a cabinet piano, quite new and of superior tone;
also an easel for painting and a pair of globes.</p>
<p>I found my pupil sufficiently docile, though disinclined to
apply: she had not been used to regular occupation of any
kind. I felt it would be injudicious to confine her too
much at first; so, when I had talked to her a great deal, and got
her to learn a little, and when the morning had advanced to noon,
I allowed her to return to her nurse. I then proposed to
occupy myself till dinner-time in drawing some little sketches
for her use.</p>
<p>As I was going upstairs to fetch my portfolio and pencils,
Mrs. Fairfax called to me: “Your morning school-hours are
over now, I suppose,” said she. She was in a room the
folding-doors of which stood open: I went in when she addressed
me. It was a large, stately apartment, with purple chairs
and curtains, a Turkey carpet, walnut-panelled walls, one vast
window rich in slanted glass, and a lofty ceiling, nobly
moulded. Mrs. Fairfax was dusting some vases of fine purple
spar, which stood on a sideboard.</p>
<p>“What a beautiful room!” I exclaimed, as I looked
round; for I had never before seen any half so imposing.</p>
<p>“Yes; this is the dining-room. I have just opened
the window, to let in a little air and sunshine; for everything
gets so damp in apartments that are seldom inhabited; the
drawing-room yonder feels like a vault.”</p>
<p>She pointed to a wide arch corresponding to the window, and
hung like it with a Tyrian-dyed curtain, now looped up.
Mounting to it by two broad steps, and looking through, I thought
I caught a glimpse of a fairy place, so bright to my novice-eyes
appeared the view beyond. Yet it was merely a very pretty
drawing-room, and within it a boudoir, both spread with white
carpets, on which seemed laid brilliant garlands of flowers; both
ceiled with snowy mouldings of white grapes and vine-leaves,
beneath which glowed in rich contrast crimson couches and
ottomans; while the ornaments on the pale Parian mantelpiece were
of sparkling Bohemian glass, ruby red; and between the windows
large mirrors repeated the general blending of snow and fire.</p>
<p>“In what order you keep these rooms, Mrs.
Fairfax!” said I. “No dust, no canvas
coverings: except that the air feels chilly, one would think they
were inhabited daily.”</p>
<p>“Why, Miss Eyre, though Mr. Rochester’s visits
here are rare, they are always sudden and unexpected; and as I
observed that it put him out to find everything swathed up, and
to have a bustle of arrangement on his arrival, I thought it best
to keep the rooms in readiness.”</p>
<p>“Is Mr. Rochester an exacting, fastidious sort of
man?”</p>
<p>“Not particularly so; but he has a gentleman’s
tastes and habits, and he expects to have things managed in
conformity to them.”</p>
<p>“Do you like him? Is he generally
liked?”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes; the family have always been respected
here. Almost all the land in this neighbourhood, as far as
you can see, has belonged to the Rochesters time out of
mind.”</p>
<p>“Well, but, leaving his land out of the question, do you
like him? Is he liked for himself?”</p>
<p>“I have no cause to do otherwise than like him; and I
believe he is considered a just and liberal landlord by his
tenants: but he has never lived much amongst them.”</p>
<p>“But has he no peculiarities? What, in short, is
his character?”</p>
<p>“Oh! his character is unimpeachable, I suppose. He
is rather peculiar, perhaps: he has travelled a great deal, and
seen a great deal of the world, I should think. I dare say
he is clever, but I never had much conversation with
him.”</p>
<p>“In what way is he peculiar?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know—it is not easy to
describe—nothing striking, but you feel it when he speaks
to you; you cannot be always sure whether he is in jest or
earnest, whether he is pleased or the contrary; you don’t
thoroughly understand him, in short—at least, I
don’t: but it is of no consequence, he is a very good
master.”</p>
<p>This was all the account I got from Mrs. Fairfax of her
employer and mine. There are people who seem to have no
notion of sketching a character, or observing and describing
salient points, either in persons or things: the good lady
evidently belonged to this class; my queries puzzled, but did not
draw her out. Mr. Rochester was Mr. Rochester in her eyes;
a gentleman, a landed proprietor—nothing more: she inquired
and searched no further, and evidently wondered at my wish to
gain a more definite notion of his identity.</p>
<p>When we left the dining-room, she proposed to show me over the
rest of the house; and I followed her upstairs and downstairs,
admiring as I went; for all was well arranged and handsome.
The large front chambers I thought especially grand: and some of
the third-storey rooms, though dark and low, were interesting
from their air of antiquity. The furniture once
appropriated to the lower apartments had from time to time been
removed here, as fashions changed: and the imperfect light
entering by their narrow casement showed bedsteads of a hundred
years old; chests in oak or walnut, looking, with their strange
carvings of palm branches and cherubs’ heads, like types of
the Hebrew ark; rows of venerable chairs, high-backed and narrow;
stools still more antiquated, on whose cushioned tops were yet
apparent traces of half-effaced embroideries, wrought by fingers
that for two generations had been coffin-dust. All these
relics gave to the third storey of Thornfield Hall the aspect of
a home of the past: a shrine of memory. I liked the hush,
the gloom, the quaintness of these retreats in the day; but I by
no means coveted a night’s repose on one of those wide and
heavy beds: shut in, some of them, with doors of oak; shaded,
others, with wrought old English hangings crusted with thick
work, portraying effigies of strange flowers, and stranger birds,
and strangest human beings,—all which would have looked
strange, indeed, by the pallid gleam of moonlight.</p>
<p>“Do the servants sleep in these rooms?” I
asked.</p>
<p>“No; they occupy a range of smaller apartments to the
back; no one ever sleeps here: one would almost say that, if
there were a ghost at Thornfield Hall, this would be its
haunt.”</p>
<p>“So I think: you have no ghost, then?”</p>
<p>“None that I ever heard of,” returned Mrs.
Fairfax, smiling.</p>
<p>“Nor any traditions of one? no legends or ghost
stories?”</p>
<p>“I believe not. And yet it is said the Rochesters
have been rather a violent than a quiet race in their time:
perhaps, though, that is the reason they rest tranquilly in their
graves now.”</p>
<p>“Yes—‘after life’s fitful fever they
sleep well,’” I muttered. “Where are you
going now, Mrs. Fairfax?” for she was moving away.</p>
<p>“On to the leads; will you come and see the view from
thence?” I followed still, up a very narrow staircase
to the attics, and thence by a ladder and through a trap-door to
the roof of the hall. I was now on a level with the crow
colony, and could see into their nests. Leaning over the
battlements and looking far down, I surveyed the grounds laid out
like a map: the bright and velvet lawn closely girdling the grey
base of the mansion; the field, wide as a park, dotted with its
ancient timber; the wood, dun and sere, divided by a path visibly
overgrown, greener with moss than the trees were with foliage;
the church at the gates, the road, the tranquil hills, all
reposing in the autumn day’s sun; the horizon bounded by a
propitious sky, azure, marbled with pearly white. No
feature in the scene was extraordinary, but all was
pleasing. When I turned from it and repassed the trap-door,
I could scarcely see my way down the ladder; the attic seemed
black as a vault compared with that arch of blue air to which I
had been looking up, and to that sunlit scene of grove, pasture,
and green hill, of which the hall was the centre, and over which
I had been gazing with delight.</p>
<p>Mrs. Fairfax stayed behind a moment to fasten the trap-door;
I, by drift of groping, found the outlet from the attic, and
proceeded to descend the narrow garret staircase. I
lingered in the long passage to which this led, separating the
front and back rooms of the third storey: narrow, low, and dim,
with only one little window at the far end, and looking, with its
two rows of small black doors all shut, like a corridor in some
Bluebeard’s castle.</p>
<p>While I paced softly on, the last sound I expected to hear in
so still a region, a laugh, struck my ear. It was a curious
laugh; distinct, formal, mirthless. I stopped: the sound
ceased, only for an instant; it began again, louder: for at
first, though distinct, it was very low. It passed off in a
clamorous peal that seemed to wake an echo in every lonely
chamber; though it originated but in one, and I could have
pointed out the door whence the accents issued.</p>
<p>“Mrs. Fairfax!” I called out: for I now heard her
descending the great stairs. “Did you hear that loud
laugh? Who is it?”</p>
<p>“Some of the servants, very likely,” she answered:
“perhaps Grace Poole.”</p>
<p>“Did you hear it?” I again inquired.</p>
<p>“Yes, plainly: I often hear her: she sews in one of
these rooms. Sometimes Leah is with her; they are
frequently noisy together.”</p>
<p>The laugh was repeated in its low, syllabic tone, and
terminated in an odd murmur.</p>
<p>“Grace!” exclaimed Mrs. Fairfax.</p>
<p>I really did not expect any Grace to answer; for the laugh was
as tragic, as preternatural a laugh as any I ever heard; and, but
that it was high noon, and that no circumstance of ghostliness
accompanied the curious cachinnation; but that neither scene nor
season favoured fear, I should have been superstitiously
afraid. However, the event showed me I was a fool for
entertaining a sense even of surprise.</p>
<p>The door nearest me opened, and a servant came out,—a
woman of between thirty and forty; a set, square-made figure,
red-haired, and with a hard, plain face: any apparition less
romantic or less ghostly could scarcely be conceived.</p>
<p>“Too much noise, Grace,” said Mrs. Fairfax.
“Remember directions!” Grace curtseyed silently
and went in.</p>
<p>“She is a person we have to sew and assist Leah in her
housemaid’s work,” continued the widow; “not
altogether unobjectionable in some points, but she does well
enough. By-the-bye, how have you got on with your new pupil
this morning?”</p>
<p>The conversation, thus turned on Adèle, continued till
we reached the light and cheerful region below.
Adèle came running to meet us in the hall,
exclaiming—</p>
<p>“Mesdames, vous êtes servies!” adding,
“J’ai bien faim, moi!”</p>
<p>We found dinner ready, and waiting for us in Mrs.
Fairfax’s room.</p>
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