<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XI</h2>
<p>Captain Montreville and his daughter were engaged in a
friendly contest on the subject of a companion for the picture, when
De Courcy made his visit. Though, as he entered the room,
something unfashionably like a blush visited his face, his manner was
free from rustic embarrassment. 'I believe,' said he, advancing
towards Captain Montreville, 'I must apologize for the intrusion of a
stranger. My person must have outgrown your recollection. My
name, I hope, has been more fortunate. It is De Courcy.' 'The son I
presume of Major De Courcy,' said Montreville, cordially extending
his hand to him. 'Yes,' replied Montague, heartily taking the offered
hand; 'the same whose childhood was indebted to you for so many of
its pleasures.' 'My old friend Montague!' cried the Captain, 'though
your present form is new to me, I remember my lovely little noble-spirited
play-fellow with an interest which I have never felt in any
other child except this girl.' 'And who knows,' said De Courcy,
turning to Laura with a smile, 'who knows what cause I may find to
rue that Miss Montreville is past the age when I might have repaid
her father's kindness by assiduities to her doll?' 'That return,' said
Laura, colouring, as she recollected her late champion, 'would not
have been quite so arduous as the one you have already made. I hope
you have had no further trouble with those rude people?' 'No,
Madam,' answered De Courcy, 'nor did I expect it; the spirits that
are so insolent where they dare, are submissive enough where they
must.' Laura now explained to her father her obligation to De
Courcy; and the Captain having thanked him for his interference, the
conversation took a general turn.</p>
<p>Elated as he was with the successful industry and genius of his
child, and pleased with the attentions of the son of his friend, the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</SPAN></span>
spirits of Montreville rose higher than they had ever done since his
arrival in London. Won by the happy mixture of familiarity and
respect, of spirit and gentleness, which distinguished the manners of
De Courcy, the Captain became cheerful, and Laura almost talkative:
the conversation rose from easy to animated, from animated to
gay; and two hours had passed before any of the party was aware that
one-fourth of that time was gone. Laura's general reserve with
strangers seemed to have forsaken her while she conversed with De
Courcy. But De Courcy was not a stranger. By character she knew
him well. Hargrave had mentioned to her his intimacy with De
Courcy. Nay, De Courcy had, at the hazard of his life, saved the life
of Hargrave. Laura had heard her lover dwell with the eloquence of
gratitude upon the courage, the presence of mind, with which (while
others, confounded by his danger, or fearing for their own safety, left
him to perish without aid), De Courcy had seized a fisher's net, and,
binding one end of it to a tree, the other to his body, had plunged
into the water, and intercepted Hargrave, just as the stream was
hurrying him to the brink of a tremendous fall. 'All struggle was in
vain,' had Hargrave said to the breathless Laura; 'but for that noble
fellow, that minute would have been my last, and I should have died
without awakening this interest so dear to my heart.' 'I wish I could
see this De Courcy,' had Laura fervently exclaimed. 'Heaven forbid!'
had been the hasty reply, 'for your habits—your pursuits—your
sentiments are so similar, that he would gain without labour, perhaps
without a wish, the heart that has cost me such anxious toil.' A
recollection of this dialogue stole into the mind of Laura, as De
Courcy was expressing an opinion which, though not a common one,
coincided exactly with her own. For a moment she was absent and
thoughtful; but De Courcy continued the conversation, and she
resumed her gaiety.</p>
<p>When unwillingly at last he rose to take his leave, Captain
Montreville detained him while he made some friendly inquiries into
the history of the family for the last twenty years. As the questions of
the Captain, however, were not impertinently minute, nor the
answers of De Courcy very copious, it may not be improper to supply
what was wanting in the narrative.</p>
<p>Major De Courcy was the representative of a family which could
trace its descent from the times of the Conqueror,—an advantage
which they valued above the hereditary possessions of their fathers;
and if an advantage ought to be estimated by its durability, they were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</SPAN></span>
in the right; for the former, of necessity, was improved by time, the
latter seemed tending towards decline. Frederick De Courcy was
suffered to follow his inclinations in entering the army; because that
was the profession the most suitable to the dignity of an ancient
house. That it was of all professions the least likely to improve his
fortune, was a consideration equally despised by his father and
himself. When he attained his seventeenth year, a commission was
purchased for him. Stored with counsels sufficient, if he followed
them, to conduct him to wisdom and happiness, and with money
sufficient to make these counsels of no avail, he set out from his
paternal home to join his regiment. Thus was De Courcy, in his
dangerous passage from youth to manhood, committed to the
guidance of example, and the discretion belonging to his years;
fortified, indeed, by the injunctions of his parents, and his own
resolutions, never to disgrace his descent. This bulwark, he soon
found, was too weak to resist the number and variety of the weapons
which attacked him. The shafts of ridicule assailed him; his own
passions took up arms; his pride itself turned against him. Unable to
resist with vigour, he ceased to resist at all; and was hurried into
every folly in which his companions wished for the assistance of his
purse, or the countenance of his example.</p>
<p>His father's liberal allowance was soon insufficient to supply his
extravagance. He contracted debts. After severe but well-merited
reproof, his father paid them; and De Courcy promised amendment.
A whole week of strict sobriety ensued; and the young soldier was
convinced that his resolution was immutable. And so he would
probably have found it, if now, for the first time since man was made,
temptation had become weaker by victory, or virtue stronger by
defeat. But though he had tasted the glittering bait of folly, and
though he at times confessed its insipidity, the same lure again
prevailed, and De Courcy was again entangled in pecuniary
embarrassments. What was to be done? His father had declared his
irrevocable determination no further to injure the interests of his
younger children by supplying the prodigality of the eldest. By the
advice of a veteran in profusion, De Courcy had recourse to Jews. As
it was in his father's power to disinherit him, it was necessary to
conceal these transactions; and the high spirit of Frederick was
compelled to submit to all the evasions, embarrassments, and
wretchedness that attend a clandestine course of action.</p>
<p>Often did he illustrate the trite observation that no life is more<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</SPAN></span>
remote from happiness than a life of pleasure. The reward of all his
labour was satiety; the wages of all his self-reproaches were the
applause of the thoughtless for his spirit; the lamentations of the
wise, that an honourable mind should be so perverted. In his twenty-second
year, his father's death left him at liberty to pay his old debts,
and to contract new. That which has preserved the virtue of many
young men, prevented the total ruin of De Courcy. He became
attached to a virtuous woman; and, influenced much by inclination,
more by the wishes of her friends, she married him.</p>
<p>Mrs De Courcy brought no dower except the beauty which had
captivated her husband, the sweetness which prolonged her power,
and the good sense which made that power useful. She therefore did
not think herself entitled to remonstrate very warmly on the
negligence that appeared in the conduct of her husband's affairs; and
it was not until after she became a mother that she judged it proper
to interfere. Her gentle remonstrances, however, produced little
effect beyond promises and vague resolutions, that at some '<i>convenient
season</i>' the Major would examine into the real state of his fortune.</p>
<p>Accident at last befriended her endeavours. Soon after the birth of
her second child (a daughter), a demand was made on De Courcy for
a debt which he had not the means of discharging. He could not
apply to the Jew; for he had solemnly pledged to Mrs De Courcy,
that he would never more have recourse to that ruinous expedient.
He was discussing with his wife the possibility of procuring the
money by a new mortgage, while Montague, then a child of four
year's old, was playing in the room. Struck by the melancholy tone of
his mother's voice, the child forsook his play, and taking hold of her
gown, looked anxiously from one mournful face to the other. 'I am as
averse to it as you can be, my dear,' said the Major, 'but there is no
other way of raising the money.' 'Wait till I am a man, Papa,' said the
child; 'and then Betty says, I shall have a good two thousand pounds
a-year, and I will give it all to you. And here,' added he, searching his
little pocket, 'here is my pretty shilling that Captain Montreville gave
me; take it, and don't look sorry any more.' Mrs De Courcy
passionately loved this child. Overcome by the feeling of the moment,
she clasped him in her arms. 'My poor wronged child!' she
exclaimed, and burst into tears.</p>
<p>These were the first words of bitterness which Major De Courcy
had ever heard from her lips; and overcome by them, and by her
tears, he gave her a hasty promise, that he would, that very hour,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</SPAN></span>
begin the examination of his affairs. Sensible of her advantage, she
permitted not his purpose to slumber, but persuaded him to a full
inquiry into the extent of his debts; and in order to remove him from
future temptation, she prevailed on him to sell his commission, and
reside at his paternal Norwood.</p>
<p>After selling so much of his estate as to clear the remainder from
all incumbrance, he found his income diminished to little more than
a third of its original extent. His family pride reviving at the sight of
the halls of his fathers, and a better affection awakening in his
intercourse with the descendants of those whom his ancestors had
protected, he determined to guard against the possibility of Norwood
and its tenants being transferred to strangers, and entailed the
remains of his property on Montague De Courcy, in the strictest
form of English law. For Mrs De Courcy he made but a slender
provision. For his daughter he made none: but he determined to save
from his income a sum sufficient to supply this deficiency. He was
still a young man, and never thought of doubting whether he might
live long enough to accomplish his design, or whether the man who
had found an income of £2000 a-year too small for his necessities,
might be able to make savings from one of £800. In spite of the
soberness of the establishment, which during the novelty of his
reform he allowed Mrs De Courcy to arrange, he continued to find
uses for all the money he could command. His fields wanted
inclosures; his houses needed repairs; his son's education was an
increasing expence; and he died while Montague was yet a boy,
without having realized any part of his plans in favour of his
daughter.</p>
<p>He left the highest testimony to the understanding and worth of
Mrs De Courcy, by making her the sole guardian of his children; and
the steady rectitude and propriety of her conduct justified his
confidence. Aware of the radical defect of every mode of education
that neglects or severs the domestic tie, yet convinced that the house
where he was master, and the dependents he could command, were
dangerous scenes and companions for a youth of Montague's spirit,
she committed him to the care of a clergyman, whose residence was a
few miles distant from Norwood, and who also took charge of four
other boys of about the same age.</p>
<p>This gentleman was admirably fitted for his trust; for he had a
cultivated understanding, an affectionate heart, sound piety, and a
calm but inflexible temper. Add to which, he had travelled, and, in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</SPAN></span>
his youth, associated much with men of rank, and more with men of
talents; though, since he had become a pastor, the range of his moral
observation had been narrowed to the hearts of a few simple villagers,
which were open to him as to their father and their friend. The boys
studied and played together, but they each had a separate apartment;
for Mr Wentworth had himself been educated at a public school, and
never recollected without shuddering, the hour when his youthful
modesty had shrunk from sharing his bed with a stranger, and when
the prayer for his parents, which he was mingling with his tears, had
been disturbed by the jokes of a little rabble.</p>
<p>Every Saturday did Montague bend his joyful course homewards,
regardless of summer's heat or winter storms. Every Sunday did his
mother spend in mixing the lessons of piety with the endearments of
love; in striving to connect the idea of a superintending God with all
that is beautiful—all that is majestic—in nature. As her children
grew up, she unfolded to them the peculiar doctrines of Christianity,
so sublime, so consolatory, so suitable to the wants of man. Aware
how much occasion favours the strength of impressions, she chose
the hour of strong remorse on account of a youthful fault, while the
culprit yet trembled before the offended Majesty of Heaven, to
explain to her son the impossibility that repentance should, of itself,
cancel errors past, or that the great Lawgiver should accept a few
ineffectual tears, or a tardy and imperfect obedience, as a
compensation for the breach of a law that is perfect. When she saw
that the intended impression was made, she spoke of the great
atonement that once was offered, not to make repentance unnecessary,
but to make it effectual; and, from that time, using this as one of
the great landmarks of faith, she contributed to make it in the mind
of De Courcy a practical and abiding principle. The peculiar precepts
of Christianity she taught him to apply to his actions, by applying
them herself; and the praise that is so often lavished upon boldness,
dexterity, and spirit, she conscientiously reserved for acts of candour,
humility, and self-denial.</p>
<p>Her cares were amply rewarded, and Montague became all that
she wished him to be. He was a Christian from the heart, without
being either forward to claim, or ashamed to own, the distinction. He
was industrious in his pursuits, and simple in his pleasures. But the
distinctive feature of his character, was the total absence of
selfishness. His own pleasure or his own amusement he never
hesitated to sacrifice to the wishes of others; or, to speak more<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</SPAN></span>
correctly, he found his pleasure and amusement in theirs. Upon the
whole, we do not say that Montague De Courcy had no faults; but we
are sure he had none that he did not strive to conquer. Like other
human beings, he sometimes acted wrong; but we believe he would
not deliberately have neglected a known duty to escape any worldly
misfortune; we are sure he would not deliberately have committed a
crime to attain any earthly advantage.</p>
<p>Desirous that her darling should enjoy the benefits of the most
liberal education, yet afraid to trust him to the temptations of an
English university, Mrs De Courcy went for some years to reside in
Edinburgh during the winter—in summer she returned with her
family to Norwood. To his private studies, and his paternal home,
Montague returned with ever new delight; for his tastes and his
habits were all domestic. He had no ambitious wishes to lure him
from his retreat, for his wants were even more moderate than his
fortune. Except in so far as he could make it useful to others, he had
no value for money, nor for anything that money could buy, exclusive
of the necessaries of life, books, and implements of chemistry. The
profession which he had chosen was that of improving and
embellishing his estate; and, in the tranquil pleasures of a country
gentleman, a man of taste, a classical scholar, and a chemist, he found
means to occupy himself without injury to his health, his morals, or
his fortune. His favourite amusements were drawing and physiognomy;
and, like other favourites, these were sometimes in danger of
making encroachments, and advancing into the rank of higher
concerns. But this he prevented by an exact distribution of his time,
to which he resolutely adhered.</p>
<p>With his mother and his sister he lived in the most perfect
harmony, though the young lady had the reputation of a wit, and was
certainly a little addicted to sarcasm. But she was in other respects
amiable, and incapable of doing anything to offend her brother,
whose indignation indeed never rose but against cruelty, meanness,
or deceit.</p>
<p>De Courcy had just entered his twenty-fifth year, when a
rheumatic fever deprived his mother of the use of her limbs; and,
forsaking all his employments, he had quitted his beloved Norwood
to attend her in London, whither she had come for the benefit of
medical advice. He had been but a few days in town when he met
with Miss Montreville, and the impression which her beauty made,
the second interview tended to confirm.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Montague had never, even in imagination, been in love. The
regulation of his passions, the improvement of his mind, and the care
of his property, had hitherto left him no leisure for the tender folly.
He had scarcely ever thought of a young woman's face, except with a
reference to Lavater's opinion, nor of her manners, except to wonder
how she could be so obtrusive. But in contemplating Laura's face, he
forgot the rules of the physiognomist; and, in the interesting reserve
of her manners, he found continually something to desire. If, at the
close of his visit, he was not in love, he was at least in a fair way for
being so. He was assailed at once by beauty, grace, good sense, and
sweetness; and to these Laura added the singular charm of being
wholly insensible to their effects upon the beholder. No side glance
was sent in search of admiration; no care was taken to compose her
drapery; no look of triumph accompanied her judicious remarks; no
parade of sensibility disgraced her tenderness. Every charm was
heightened by a matchless absence of all design; and against this
formidable battery had poor De Courcy to make his stand, just at the
inauspicious hour when, for the first time in his life, he had nothing
else to do.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr class="c65" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />