<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></SPAN>CHAPTER IV</h2>
<p>Mrs Douglas observed, with satisfaction, the improved stature and
increasing gracefulness of her young favourite; but she remarked,
with painful interest, that the hectic of pleasure which tinged the
cheek of Laura, at their meeting, faded fast to the hue of almost
sickly delicacy. She soon noticed that an expression, as of sudden
torture, would sometimes contract, for a moment, the polished
forehead of Laura; that it was now succeeded by the smothered sigh,
the compressed lip, the hasty motion that spoke of strong mental
effort, now subsided into the languor of deep unconquered
melancholy. Such depression Mrs Douglas could not attribute to the
loss of a mother, whose treatment furnished more occasions of
patience than of gratitude; and she anxiously longed to discover its
real cause. But it was soon evident that this was a secret which Laura
had no intention to disclose. A glance from the inquiring eye of Mrs
Douglas, at once recalled her to constrained cheerfulness; and the
presence of Captain Montreville seemed always to put her entirely
upon her guard. While he was in the room, she talked, read aloud, or
played with the children, as if determined to be amused; but as soon
as he retired, she relapsed, like one wearied with effort, into languor
and melancholy, till recalled to herself by the scrutinizing looks of
Mrs Douglas. Even in their most private conversations, the name of
Hargrave never passed her lips. Months, indeed, had elapsed since
Laura could have pronounced that name without painful emotion—to
utter it now was become almost impossible. She felt that she had no
right to publish, while she rejected, his addresses; and she felt an
invincible repugnance to expose even his failings, but much more his
vices, to the censure of the respectable Mrs Douglas. Soon after she
first saw Hargrave, she had written to her friend a warm eulogium of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</SPAN></span>
his fine person, captivating manners, and elegant accomplishments.
Mrs Douglas, in reply, had desired to hear more of this phoenix; but
before Laura again found leisure to write, she was no longer inclined
to make Hargrave her subject, and her friend had desisted from
fruitless inquiries. Mrs Douglas had lately had an opportunity of
judging for herself of the Colonel's attractions; and, so great did they
appear to her, that it was with extreme astonishment she heard his
late disappointment from Captain Montreville, who did not feel his
daughter's delicacy on the subject. This communication only served
to increase her perplexity as to the cause of Laura's depression; yet
she felt herself relieved from the apprehension, that hopeless love for
Hargrave was wasting the health and peace of her dear Laura. Still,
however, she continued to watch that expressive countenance, to
weigh every word that might tend to unfold the enigma. In vain;—Laura
studiously avoided all approach to an explanation. Mrs
Douglas's anxiety now increased to a painful extreme. She felt how
necessary to female inexperience is the advice of a female,—how
indispensable to feminine sorrows are the consolations of feminine
sympathy; and she resolved that no false delicacy should withhold her
from offering such relief as she might have power to bestow.</p>
<p>One morning, after the gentlemen had left them alone together,
Mrs Douglas, meditating on the best means of introducing the
subject she had so much at heart, had fallen into a long silence;
when, looking up, she perceived that Laura had let fall her work, and
was sitting with her eyes fixed, and her arms dropped, in the attitude
of one whose thoughts had no connection with present objects. At the
heavy sigh with which Mrs Douglas surveyed her, she started, and
was rousing her attention to some indifferent subject, when Mrs
Douglas, kindly taking her hand, said, 'My dear child, whatever may
be necessary with others, I beseech you to be under no constraint
with me. I am far from wishing to intrude into your confidence, but
do not add the pain of constraint to anguish that already seems so
oppressive.'</p>
<p>Large tears stole from under Laura's downcast eyelids; but she
spoke not. Mrs Douglas continued—'If my best advice, my most
affectionate sympathy, can be of use to you, I need not say you may
command them.'</p>
<p>Laura threw herself into the arms of her friend, and for some
moments sobbed with uncontrolled emotion; but soon composing
herself, she replied: 'If advice could have profited, if consolation<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</SPAN></span>
could have reached me, where should I have sought them unless
from you, respected friend of my youth;—but the warning voice of
wisdom comes now too late, and even your sympathy would be
bestowed in vain.'</p>
<p>'Heaven forbid that my dearest Laura should be beyond the reach
of comfort. That is the lot of guilt alone.'</p>
<p>'I am grateful to Heaven,' said Laura, 'that I have been less guilty
than imprudent. But, my best friend, let us quit this subject. This
wretchedness cannot, shall not last. Only let me implore you not to
notice it to my father. You know not what horrors might be the
consequence.'</p>
<p>Mrs Douglas shook her head. 'Ah! Laura,' said she, 'that path is
not the path of safety in which you would elude a father's eye.'
Laura's glance met that of her friend; and she read suspicion there.
The thought was so painful to her, that she was on the point of
disclosing all; but she remembered that the reasons which had at first
determined her to silence, were not altered by any one's suspicions,
and she restrained herself. Colonel Hargrave had cruelly wronged
and insulted her—she ought therefore to be doubly cautious how she
injured him. Sympathy, in her case, she felt, would be a dangerous
indulgence; and, above all, she shrunk with horror from exposing her
lover, or his actions, to detestation or contempt. 'Perhaps the time
may come,' said she, pursuing her reflections aloud, 'when you will
be convinced that I am incapable of any clandestine purpose. At
present your compassion might be a treacherous balm to me, when
my best wisdom must be to forget that I have need of pity.'</p>
<p>Mrs Douglas looked on the open candid countenance of Laura,
and her suspicions vanished in a moment; but they returned when
her young friend reiterated her intreaties that she would not hint the
subject to her father. Laura was, however, fortified in her resolutions
of concealment, by an opinion she had often heard Mrs Douglas
express, that the feelings of disappointed love should by women be
kept inviolably a secret. She was decisively giving a new turn to the
conversation, when it was interrupted by the entrance of the
gentlemen; and Mrs Douglas, a little hurt at the steadiness of her
young friend, more than half determined to renew the subject no
more.</p>
<p>A letter lay on the table, which the post had brought for Captain
Montreville; he read it with visible uneasiness, and immediately left
the room. Laura perceived his emotion; and, ever alive to the painful<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</SPAN></span>
subject nearest her heart, instantly concluded that the letter brought a
confession from Hargrave. She heard her father's disordered steps
pacing the apartment above, and earnestly longed, yet feared to join
him. Anxiety at length prevailed; and she timidly approached the door
of Captain Montreville's chamber. She laid her hand upon the lock;
paused again, with failing courage, and was about to retire, when her
father opened the door. 'Come in, my love,' said he, 'I wish to speak
with you.' Laura, trembling, followed him into the room. 'I find,' said
he, 'we must shorten our visit to our kind friends here, and travel
homewards, I must prepare,' continued he, and he sighed heavily, 'I
must prepare for a much longer journey.'</p>
<p>Laura's imagination took the alarm; and, forgetting how unlikely it
was that Captain Montreville should disclose such a resolution to her,
she thought only of his intending to prepare for a journey whence
there is no return, before he should stake his life against that of
Hargrave. She had not power to speak; but, laying her hand on her
father's arm, she cast on him a look of imploring agony. 'Do not be
alarmed, my love,' said he: 'I shall, in a few days, convey your
commands to London; but I do not mean to be long absent.'</p>
<p>Laura's heart leapt light. 'To London, Sir?' said she, in a tone of
cheerful inquiry.</p>
<p>'Yes, my dear child; I must go, and leave you alone at home—while
yet I have a home to shelter you. Had you resembled any other
girl of your age, I should have said no more of this—but I will have
no concealments from you. Read this letter.'</p>
<p>It was from Captain Montreville's agent, and briefly stated, that the
merchant in whose hands he had lately vested his all, in an annuity on
his daughter's life, was dead; and that, owing to some informality in
the deed, the heirs refused to make any payment. Having read the
letter, Laura continued for some moments to muse on its contents,
with her eyes vacantly fixed on the civil expression of concern with
which it concluded. 'How merciful it is,' she exclaimed, 'that this
blow fell not till my mother was insensible of the stroke.'</p>
<p>'For myself,' said Captain Montreville, 'I think I could have borne
it well; but this was the little independence I thought I had secured
for you, dear darling of my heart; and now'—The father's lip
quivered, and his eyes filled; but he turned aside, for he could <i>be</i>
tender—but would not <i>seem</i> so.</p>
<p>'Dearest father,' said Laura, 'think not of me. Could you have
given me millions, I should still have been dependent on the care of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</SPAN></span>
Providence, even for my daily bread. My dependence will now only
be a little more perceptible. But perhaps,' added she cheerfully,
'something may be done to repair this disaster, Warren's heirs will
undoubtedly rectify this mistake, when they find it has been merely
accidental. At all events, a journey to London will amuse you; and I
shall manage your harvest so actively in your absence.'</p>
<p>Captain Montreville had, from Laura's infancy, been accustomed
to witness instances of her fortitude, to see her firm under unmerited
and merciless chastisement, and patient under intense bodily
suffering—but her composure on this occasion, so far surpassed his
expectations, that he was inclined to attribute it less to fortitude than
to inconsideration. 'How light-hearted is youth,' thought he, as he
quitted her. 'This poor child has never seen the harsh features of
poverty, but when distance softened their deformity, and she now
beholds his approach without alarm.' He was mistaken. Laura had
often taken a near survey of poverty. She had entered the cabins of
the very poor—seen infancy squalid, and youth spiritless—manhood
exhausted by toil, and age pining without comfort. In fancy she had
substituted herself in the place of these victims of want; felt by
sympathy their varieties of wretchedness; and she justly considered
poverty among the heaviest of human calamities. But she was sensible
that her firmness might support her father's spirits, or her weakness
serve to aggravate his distress; and she wisely pushed aside the more
formidable mischief, which she could not surmount, to attend to the
more immediate evil, which she felt it in her power to alleviate.</p>
<p>The moment she was alone, Laura fell on her knees: 'Oh!
Heavenly Providence,' she cried, 'save, if it be thy will, my dear
father's age from poverty, though, like my great Master, I should not
have where to lay my head.' She continued to pray long and fervently,
for spirits to cheer her father under his misfortune; and for fortitude
to endure her own peculiar sorrow, in her estimation so much more
bitter. Having implored the blessing of Heaven on her exertions, she
next began to practice them. She wandered out to court the
exhilarating influence of the mountain air; and, studiously turning her
attention to all that was gay, sought to rouse her spirits for the task
she had assigned them. She was so successful, that she was that
evening the life of the little friendly circle. She talked, sang, and
recited—she exerted all the wit and vivacity of which she was
mistress—she employed powers of humour which she herself had
scarcely been conscious of possessing. Her gaiety soon became<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</SPAN></span>
contagious. Scarcely a trace appeared of the anxious fears of Mrs
Douglas, or the parental uneasiness of Captain Montreville, and
fewer still of the death-stroke which disappointed confidence had
carried to the peace of poor Laura. But, retired to the solitude of her
chamber, her exhausted spirits found relief in tears. She felt, that
long to continue her exertion would be impossible; and, in spite of
reason, which told of the danger of solitude, anticipated, with
pleasure, the moment when total seclusion should leave her free to
undisguised wretchedness.</p>
<p>Laura was not yet, however, destined to the hopeless task of
combating misplaced affection in entire seclusion. On the following
morning she found a stranger at the breakfast-table. He seemed a
man of information and accomplishments. An enthusiast in landscape,
he was come to prosecute his favourite study amidst the
picturesque magnificence of Highland scenery; and the appearance
and manners of a gentleman, furnished him with a sufficient
introduction to Highland hospitality. Relieved, by his presence, from
the task of entertaining, Laura scarcely listened to the conversation,
till the stranger, having risen from table, began to examine a picture
which occupied a distinguished place in Mrs Douglas's parlour. It
was the work of Laura, who was no mean proficient. She had early
discovered what is called a genius for painting; that is to say, she had
exercised much of her native invention, and habitual industry on the
art. Captain Montreville added to his personal instructions, every
facility which it was in his power to bestow. Even when her
performances had little in them of wonderful but their number, her
acquaintance pronounced them wonderful; and they obtained the
more useful approbation of a neighbouring nobleman, who invited
her to use, as copies, any part of his excellent collection. Her
progress was now, indeed, marvellous to those who were new to the
effects of unremitting industry, guided by models of exquisite skill.
Having long and sedulously copied, from pieces of acknowledged
merit, she next attempted an original; and having, with great care
composed, and with incredible labour finished her design, she
dedicated to Mrs Douglas the first fruits of her improved talents, in
the picture which the stranger was now contemplating. Willing that
her young friend should reap advantage from the criticisms of a
judicious artist, Mrs Douglas encouraged him to speak freely of the
beauties and defects of the piece. After remarking that there was
some skill in the composition, much interest in the principal figure,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</SPAN></span>
and considerable freedom in the touch, he added: 'If this be, as I
suppose, the work of a young artist, I shall not be surprised that he
one day rise both to fame and fortune.'</p>
<p>Mrs Douglas was about to direct his praise to its rightful owner,
but Laura silenced her by a look. The stranger's last expression had
excited an interest which no other earthly subject could have
awakened. Her labours might, it appeared, relieve the wants or
increase the comforts of her father's age; and, with a face that glowed
with enthusiasm, and eyes that sparkled with renovated hope, she
eagerly advanced to question the critic as to the value of her work. In
reply, he named a price so far exceeding her expectations, that her
resolution was formed in a moment. She would accompany her father
to London, and there try what pecuniary advantage was to be derived
from her talent. On a scheme which was to repair all her father's
losses, prudence had not time to pause; and, feeling company rather
a restraint on her pleasure, Laura ran to her apartment, rather to
enjoy than to reconsider her plan. Having spent some time in
delighted anticipation of the pleasure which her father would take in
the new team and thrashing-mill with which she would adorn his
farm, and the comfort he would enjoy in the new books and easy sofa
with which her labours would furnish his library, she recollected a
hundred questions that she wished to ask the stranger, concerning
the best means of disposing of her future productions, and she ran
down stairs to renew the conversation—but the parlour was empty,
the stranger was gone. No matter. No trifle could at this moment
have discomposed Laura; and, with steps as light as a heart from
which, for a time, all selfish griefs were banished, she crossed the
little lawn in search of her father.</p>
<p>The moment she overtook him, locking her arm in his, and looking
smilingly up in his face, she began so urgent an entreaty to be
admitted as the companion of his journey, that Captain Montreville,
with some curiosity, inquired what had excited in her this sudden
inclination to travel? Laura blushed and hesitated; for though her
plan had, in her own opinion, all the charms which we usually
attribute to the new born children of our fancy, she felt that an air of
more prudence and forethought might be requisite to render it
equally attractive in the eyes of Captain Montreville. She exerted,
however, all the rhetoric she could at that moment command, to give
her scheme a plausible appearance. With respect to herself, she was
entirely successful; and she ventured to cast a look of triumphant<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</SPAN></span>
appeal on her father. Captain Montreville, unwilling to refuse the
request of his darling, remained silent; but at the detail of her plan,
he shook his head. Now, to a projector of eighteen, a shake of the
head is, of all gestures, the most offensive; and the smile which
usually accompanies it, miserably perverts the office of a smile.
Tears, half of sorrow, half of vexation, forced their way to the eyes of
Laura; and she walked silently on, without courage to renew the
attack, till they were joined by Mrs Douglas. Disconcerted by her ill
success with her father, Laura felt little inclination to subject her
scheme to the animadversions of her friend; but Captain Montreville,
expecting an auxiliary, by whose aid he might conquer the weakness
of yielding without conviction, called upon Mrs Douglas, in a manner
which shewed him secure of her reply, to give her opinion of Laura's
proposal. Mrs Douglas, who had heard, with a degree of horror, of
the intention to consign Laura to solitude in her present state of
suppressed dejection, and who considered new scenes and new
interests as indispensable to her restoration, interpreting the asking
looks of the fair petitioner, surprised Captain Montreville by a
decided verdict in her favour. Rapturously thanking her advocate,
Laura now renewed her intreaties with such warmth, that her father,
not possessed of that facility in refusing which results from practice,
gave a half-reluctant acquiescence. The delight which his consent
conveyed to Laura, which sparkled in her expressive features, and
animated her artless gestures, converted his half-extorted assent into
cordial concurrence; for to the defects of any scheme that gave her
pleasure, he was habitually blind.</p>
<p>In the course of the evening, Captain Montreville announced that,
in order to give his daughter time to prepare for her journey, it would
be necessary for them to return to Glenalbert on the following
morning.</p>
<p>While Mrs Douglas was assisting Laura to pack up her little
wardrobe, she attempted to break her guarded silence on the subject
of Hargrave, by saying, 'I doubt this same journey of your's will
prevent Colonel Hargrave from trying the effects of perseverance,
which I used to think the most infallible resort in love, as well as in
more serious undertakings.' Laura began a most diligent search for
something upon the carpet. 'Poor Hargrave,' Mrs Douglas resumed,
'he is a great favourite of mine. I wish he had been more successful.'
Laura continued industriously cramming a bandbox. 'All these gowns
and petticoats will crush your new bonnet to pieces, my dear.' Laura<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</SPAN></span>
suddenly desisted from her employment, rose, and turning full
towards Mrs Douglas, said—'It is unkind, it is cruel, thus to urge
me, when you know that duty more than inclination keeps me silent.'
'Pardon me, my dear Laura,' said Mrs Douglas, 'I have no wish to
persecute you; but you know I was ignorant that Colonel Hargrave
was our interdicted subject.'</p>
<p>She then entered on another topic; and Laura, vexed at the partial
disclosure she had inadvertently made, uneasy at being the object of
constant scrutiny, and hurt at being obliged to thwart the habitual
openness of her temper, felt less sorry than relieved as she sprung
into the carriage that was to convey her to Glenalbert. So true is it,
that concealment is the bane of friendship.</p>
<p>Other interests, too, quickened her desire to return home. She
longed, with a feeling which could not be called hope, though it far
exceeded curiosity, to know whether Hargrave had called or written
during her absence; and the moment the chaise stopped, she flew to
the table where the letters were deposited to wait their return. There
were none for her. She interrupted Nanny's expression of joy at the
sight of her mistress, by asking who had called while they were from
home. 'Nobody but Miss Willis.' Laura's eyes filled with tears of
bitterness. 'I am easily relinquished,' thought she—'but it is better
that it should be so;' and she dashed away the drops as they rose.</p>
<p>She would fain have vented her feelings in the solitude of her
chamber; but this was her father's first return to a widowed home,
and she would not leave him to its loneliness. She entered the
parlour. Captain Montreville was already there; and, cheerfully
welcoming him home, she shook up the cushion of an elbow-chair by
the fire-side, and invited him to sit. 'No, love,' said he, gently
compelling her, 'do you take that seat; it was your mother's.' Laura
saw his lip quiver, and, suppressing the sob that swelled her bosom,
she tenderly withdrew him from the room, led him to the garden,
invited his attention to her new-blown carnations, and gradually
diverted his regard to such cheerful objects, that, had Captain
Montreville examined what was passing in his own mind, he must
have confessed that he felt the loss of Lady Harriet less as a
companion than an antagonist. She was more a customary something
which it was unpleasant to miss from its place, than a real want which
no substitute could supply. Laura's conversation, on the contrary,
amusing without effort, ingenious without constraint, and rational
without stiffness, furnished to her father a real and constant source of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</SPAN></span>
enjoyment; because, wholly exempt from all desire to shine, she had
leisure to direct to the more practicable art of pleasing, those efforts
by which so many others vainly attempt to dazzle.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</SPAN></span></p>
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