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<h3>CHAPTER XCIX. Lady Carbury and Mr Broune</h3>
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<br/>When Sir Felix Carbury declared to his friends at the Beargarden
that he intended to devote the next few months of his life to
foreign travel, and that it was his purpose to take with him a
Protestant divine,—as was much the habit with young men of rank
and fortune some years since,—he was not altogether lying.
There was indeed a sounder basis of truth than was usually to be
found attached to his statements. That he should have
intended to produce a false impression was a matter of course,—and
nearly equally so that he should have made his attempt by asserting
things which he must have known that no one would believe. He
was going to Germany, and he was going in company with a clergyman,
and it had been decided that he should remain there for the next
twelve months. A representation had lately been made to the
Bishop of London that the English Protestants settled in a certain
commercial town in the north-eastern district of Prussia were
without pastoral aid, and the bishop had stirred himself in the
matter. A clergyman was found willing to expatriate himself,
but the income suggested was very small. The Protestant
English population of the commercial town in question, though
pious, was not liberal. It had come to pass that the "Morning
Breakfast Table" had interested itself in the matter, having
appealed for subscriptions after a manner not unusual with that
paper. The bishop and all those concerned in the matter had
fully understood that if the "Morning Breakfast Table" could be got
to take the matter up heartily, the thing would be done. The
heartiness had been so complete that it had at last devolved upon
Mr Broune to appoint the clergyman; and, as with all the aid that
could be found, the income was still small, the Rev. Septimus
Blake,—a brand snatched from the burning of Rome,—had been
induced to undertake the maintenance and total charge of Sir Felix
Carbury for a consideration. Mr Broune imparted to Mr Blake
all that there was to know about the baronet, giving much counsel
as to the management of the young man, and specially enjoining on
the clergyman that he should on no account give Sir Felix the means
of returning home. It was evidently Mr Broune's anxious wish
that Sir Felix should see as much as possible of German life, at a
comparatively moderate expenditure, and under circumstances that
should be externally respectable if not absolutely those which a
young gentleman might choose for his own comfort or profit;—but
especially that those circumstances should not admit of the speedy
return to England of the young gentleman himself.
<br/>Lady Carbury had at first opposed the scheme. Terribly
difficult as was to her the burden of maintaining her son, she
could not endure the idea of driving him into exile. But Mr
Broune was very obstinate, very reasonable, and, as she thought,
somewhat hard of heart. "What is to be the end of it then?"
he said to her, almost in anger. For in those days the great
editor, when in presence of Lady Carbury, differed very much from
that Mr Broune who used to squeeze her hand and look into her
eyes. His manner with her had become so different that she
regarded him as quite another person. She hardly dared to
contradict him, and found herself almost compelled to tell him what
she really felt and thought. "Do you mean to let him eat up
everything you have to your last shilling, and then go to the
workhouse with him?"
<br/>"Oh, my friend, you know how I am struggling! Do not say
such horrid things."
<br/>"It is because I know how you are struggling that I find myself
compelled to say anything on the subject. What hardship will
there be in his living for twelve months with a clergyman in
Prussia? What can he do better? What better chance can
he have of being weaned from the life he is leading?"
<br/>"If he could only be married!"
<br/>"Married! Who is to marry him? Why should any girl
with money throw herself away upon him?"
<br/>"He is so handsome."
<br/>"What has his beauty brought him to? Lady Carbury, you
must let me tell you that all that is not only foolish but
wrong. If you keep him here you will help to ruin him, and
will certainly ruin yourself. He has agreed to go;—let him
go."
<br/>She was forced to yield. Indeed, as Sir Felix had himself
assented, it was almost impossible that she should not do so.
Perhaps Mr Broune's greatest triumph was due to the talent and
firmness with which he persuaded Sir Felix to start upon his
travels. "Your mother," said Mr Broune, "has made up her mind
that she will not absolutely beggar your sister and herself in
order that your indulgence may be prolonged for a few months.
She cannot make you go to Germany of course. But she can turn
you out of her house, and, unless you go, she will do so."
<br/>"I don't think she ever said that, Mr Broune."
<br/>"No;—she has not said so. But I have said it for her in
her presence; and she has acknowledged that it must necessarily be
so. You may take my word as a gentleman that it will be
so. If you take her advice £175 a year will be paid for
your maintenance;—but if you remain in England not a shilling
further will be paid." He had no money. His last
sovereign was all but gone. Not a tradesman would give him
credit for a coat or a pair of boots. The key of the door had
been taken away from him. The very page treated him with
contumely. His clothes were becoming rusty. There was
no prospect of amusement for him during the coming autumn or
winter. He did not anticipate much excitement in Eastern
Prussia, but he thought that any change must be a change for the
better.
<br/>He assented, therefore, to the proposition made by Mr Broune,
was duly introduced to the Rev. Septimus Blake, and, as he spent
his last sovereign on a last dinner at the Beargarden, explained
his intentions for the immediate future to those friends at his
club who would no doubt mourn his departure.
<br/>Mr Blake and Mr Broune between them did not allow the grass to
grow under their feet. Before the end of August Sir Felix,
with Mr and Mrs Blake and the young Blakes, had embarked from Hull
for Hamburg,—having extracted at the very hour of parting a last
five pound note from his foolish mother. "It will be just
enough to bring him home," said Mr Broune with angry energy when he
was told of this. But Lady Carbury, who knew her son well,
assured him that Felix would be restrained in his expenditure by no
such prudence as such a purpose would indicate. "It will be
gone," she said, "long before they reach their destination."
<br/>"Then why the deuce should you give it him?" said Mr Broune.
<br/>Mr Broune's anxiety had been so intense that he had paid half a
year's allowance in advance to Mr Blake out of his own
pocket. Indeed, he had paid various sums for Lady
Carbury,—so that that unfortunate woman would often tell herself
that she was becoming subject to the great editor, almost like a
slave. He came to her, three or four times a week, at about
nine o'clock in the evening, and gave her instructions as to all
that she should do. "I wouldn't write another novel if I were
you," he said. This was hard, as the writing of novels was
her great ambition, and she had flattered herself that the one
novel which she had written was good. Mr Broune's own critic
had declared it to be very good in glowing language. The
"Evening Pulpit" had of course abused it,—because it is the nature
of the "Evening Pulpit" to abuse. So she had argued with
herself, telling herself that the praise was all true, whereas the
censure had come from malice. After that article in the
"Breakfast Table," it did seem hard that Mr Broune should tell her
to write no more novels. She looked up at him piteously but
said nothing. "I don't think you'd find it answer. Of
course you can do it as well as a great many others. But then
that is saying so little!"
<br/>"I thought I could make some money."
<br/>"I don't think Mr Leadham would hold out to you very high
hopes;—I don't, indeed. I think I would turn to something
else."
<br/>"It is so very hard to get paid for what one does."
<br/>To this Mr Broune made no immediate answer; but, after sitting
for a while, almost in silence, he took his leave. On that
very morning Lady Carbury had parted from her son. She was
soon about to part from her daughter, and she was very sad.
She felt that she could hardly keep up that house in Welbeck Street
for herself, even if her means permitted it. What should she
do with herself? Whither should she take herself?
Perhaps the bitterest drop in her cup had come from those words of
Mr Broune forbidding her to write more novels. After all,
then, she was not a clever woman,—not more clever than other women
around her! That very morning she had prided herself on her
coming success as a novelist, basing all her hopes on that review
in the "Breakfast Table." Now, with that reaction of spirits
which is so common to all of us, she was more than equally
despondent. He would not thus have crushed her without a
reason. Though he was hard to her now,—he who used to be so
soft,—he was very good. It did not occur to her to rebel
against him. After what he had said, of course there would be
no more praise in the "Breakfast Table,"—and, equally of course,
no novel of hers could succeed without that. The more she
thought of him, the more omnipotent he seemed to be. The more
she thought of herself, the more absolutely prostrate she seemed to
have fallen from those high hopes with which she had begun her
literary career not much more than twelve months ago.
<br/>On the next day he did not come to her at all, and she sat idle,
wretched, and alone. She could not interest herself in
Hetta's coming marriage, as that marriage was in direct opposition
to one of her broken schemes. She had not ventured to confess
so much to Mr Broune, but she had in truth written the first pages
of the first chapter of a second novel. It was impossible now
that she should even look at what she had written. All this
made her very sad. She spent the evening quite alone; for
Hetta was staying down in Suffolk, with her cousin's friend, Mrs
Yeld, the bishop's wife; and as she thought of her life past and
her life to come, she did, perhaps, with a broken light, see
something of the error of her ways, and did, after a fashion,
repent. It was all "leather or prunello," as she said to
herself;—it was all vanity,—and vanity,—and vanity! What
real enjoyment had she found in anything? She had only taught
herself to believe that some day something would come which she
would like;—but she had never as yet in truth found anything to
like. It had all been in anticipation,—but now even her
anticipations were at an end. Mr Broune had sent her son
away, had forbidden her to write any more novels,—and had been
refused when he had asked her to marry him!
<br/>The next day he came to her as usual, and found her still very
wretched. "I shall give up this house," she said. "I
can't afford to keep it; and in truth I shall not want it. I
don't in the least know where to go, but I don't think that it much
signifies. Any place will be the same to me now."
<br/>"I don't see why you should say that."
<br/>"What does it matter?"
<br/>"You wouldn't think of going out of London."
<br/>"Why not? I suppose I had better go wherever I can live
cheapest."
<br/>"I should be sorry that you should be settled where I could not
see you," said Mr Broune plaintively.
<br/>"So shall I,—very. You have been more kind to me than
anybody. But what am I to do? If I stay in London I can
live only in some miserable lodgings. I know you will laugh
at me, and tell me that I am wrong; but my idea is that I shall
follow Felix wherever he goes, so that I may be near him and help
him when he needs help. Hetta doesn't want me. There is
nobody else that I can do any good to."
<br/>"I want you," said Mr Broune, very quietly.
<br/>"Ah,—that is so kind of you. There is nothing makes one
so good as goodness;—nothing binds your friend to you so firmly as
the acceptance from him of friendly actions. You say you want
me, because I have so sadly wanted you. When I go you will
simply miss an almost daily trouble, but where shall I find a
friend?"
<br/>"When I said I wanted you, I meant more than that, Lady
Carbury. Two or three months ago I asked you to be my
wife. You declined, chiefly, if I understood you rightly,
because of your son's position. That has been altered, and
therefore I ask you again. I have quite convinced
myself,—not without some doubts, for you shall know all; but,
still, I have quite convinced myself,—that such a marriage will
best contribute to my own happiness. I do not think, dearest,
that it would mar yours."
<br/>This was said with so quiet a voice and so placid a demeanour,
that the words, though they were too plain to be misunderstood,
hardly at first brought themselves home to her. Of course he
had renewed his offer of marriage, but he had done so in a tone
which almost made her feel that the proposition could not be an
earnest one. It was not that she believed that he was joking
with her or paying her a poor insipid compliment. When she
thought about it at all, she knew that it could not be so.
But the thing was so improbable! Her opinion of herself was
so poor, she had become so sick of her own vanities and
littlenesses and pretences, that she could not understand that such
a man as this should in truth want to make her his wife. At
this moment she thought less of herself and more of Mr Broune than
either perhaps deserved. She sat silent, quite unable to look
him in the face, while he kept his place in his arm-chair, lounging
back, with his eyes intent on her countenance. "Well," he
said; "what do you think of it? I never loved you better than
I did for refusing me before, because I thought that you did so
because it was not right that I should be embarrassed by your son."
<br/>"That was the reason," she said, almost in a whisper.
<br/>"But I shall love you better still for accepting me now if you
will accept me."
<br/>The long vista of her past life appeared before her eyes.
The ambition of her youth which had been taught to look only to a
handsome maintenance, the cruelty of her husband which had driven
her to run from him, the further cruelty of his forgiveness when
she returned to him; the calumny which had made her miserable,
though she had never confessed her misery; then her attempts at
life in London, her literary successes and failures, and the
wretchedness of her son's career;—there had never been happiness,
or even comfort, in any of it. Even when her smiles had been
sweetest her heart had been heaviest. Could it be that now at
last real peace should be within her reach, and that tranquillity
which comes from an anchor holding to a firm bottom? Then she
remembered that first kiss,—or attempted kiss,—when, with a sort
of pride in her own superiority, she had told herself that the man
was a susceptible old goose. She certainly had not thought
then that his susceptibility was of this nature. Nor could
she quite understand now whether she had been right then, and that
the man's feelings, and almost his nature, had since changed,—or
whether he had really loved her from first to last. As he
remained silent it was necessary that she should answer him.
"You can hardly have thought of it enough," she said.
<br/>"I have thought of it a good deal too. I have been thinking of it for
six months at least."
<br/>"There is so much against me."
<br/>"What is there against you?"
<br/>"They say bad things of me in India."
<br/>"I know all about that," replied Mr Broune.
<br/>"And Felix!"
<br/>"I think I may say that I know all about that also."
<br/>"And then I have become so poor!"
<br/>"I am not proposing to myself to marry you for your money.
Luckily for me,—I hope luckily for both of us,—it is not
necessary that I should do so."
<br/>"And then I seem so to have fallen through in everything.
I don't know what I've got to give to a man in return for all that
you offer to give to me."
<br/>"Yourself," he said, stretching out his right hand to her.
<br/>And there he sat with it stretched out,—so that she found
herself compelled to put her own into it, or to refuse to do so
with very absolute words. Very slowly she put out her own,
and gave it to him without looking at him. Then he drew her
towards him, and in a moment she was kneeling at his feet, with her
face buried on his knees. Considering their ages perhaps we
must say that their attitude was awkward. They would
certainly have thought so themselves had they imagined that any one
could have seen them. But how many absurdities of the kind
are not only held to be pleasant, but almost holy,—as long as they
remain mysteries inspected by no profane eyes! It is not that
Age is ashamed of feeling passion and acknowledging,—it but that
the display of it is without the graces of which Youth is proud,
and which Age regrets.
<br/>On that occasion there was very little more said between
them. He had certainly been in earnest, and she had now
accepted him. As he went down to his office he told himself
now that he had done the best, not only for her but for himself
also. And yet I think that she had won him more thoroughly by
her former refusal than by any other virtue.
<br/>She, as she sat alone, late into the night, became subject to a
thorough reaction of spirit. That morning the world had been
a perfect blank to her. There was no single object of
interest before her. Now everything was rose-coloured.
This man who had thus bound her to him, who had given her such
assured proofs of his affection and truth, was one of the
considerable ones of the world; a man than whom few,—so she told
herself,—were greater or more powerful. Was it not a career
enough for any woman to be the wife of such a man, to receive his
friends, and to shine with his reflected glory?
<br/>Whether her hopes were realised, or,—as human hopes never are
realised,—how far her content was assured, these pages cannot
tell; but they must tell that, before the coming winter was over,
Lady Carbury became the wife of Mr Broune and, in furtherance of
her own resolve, took her husband's name. The house in
Welbeck Street was kept, and Mrs Broune's Tuesday evenings were
much more regarded by the literary world than had been those of
Lady Carbury.
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