<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0030" id="link2HCH0030"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER 30. The interval before the Marriage </h2>
<p>Although the enchanted house was no more, and the working world had broken
into it, and was hammering and crashing and tramping up and down stairs
all day long keeping Diogenes in an incessant paroxysm of barking, from
sunrise to sunset—evidently convinced that his enemy had got the
better of him at last, and was then sacking the premises in triumphant
defiance—there was, at first, no other great change in the method of
Florence's life. At night, when the workpeople went away, the house was
dreary and deserted again; and Florence, listening to their voices echoing
through the hall and staircase as they departed, pictured to herself the
cheerful homes to which the were returning, and the children who were
waiting for them, and was glad to think that they were merry and well
pleased to go.</p>
<p>She welcomed back the evening silence as an old friend, but it came now
with an altered face, and looked more kindly on her. Fresh hope was in it.
The beautiful lady who had soothed and carressed her, in the very room in
which her heart had been so wrung, was a spirit of promise to her. Soft
shadows of the bright life dawning, when her father's affection should be
gradually won, and all, or much should be restored, of what she had lost
on the dark day when a mother's love had faded with a mother's last breath
on her cheek, moved about her in the twilight and were welcome company.
Peeping at the rosy children her neighbours, it was a new and precious
sensation to think that they might soon speak together and know each
other; when she would not fear, as of old, to show herself before them,
lest they should be grieved to see her in her black dress sitting there
alone!</p>
<p>In her thoughts of her new mother, and in the love and trust overflowing
her pure heart towards her, Florence loved her own dead mother more and
more. She had no fear of setting up a rival in her breast. The new flower
sprang from the deep-planted and long-cherished root, she knew. Every
gentle word that had fallen from the lips of the beautiful lady, sounded
to Florence like an echo of the voice long hushed and silent. How could
she love that memory less for living tenderness, when it was her memory of
all parental tenderness and love!</p>
<p>Florence was, one day, sitting reading in her room, and thinking of the
lady and her promised visit soon—for her book turned on a kindred
subject— when, raising her eyes, she saw her standing in the
doorway.</p>
<p>'Mama!' cried Florence, joyfully meeting her. 'Come again!'</p>
<p>'Not Mama yet,' returned the lady, with a serious smile, as she encircled
Florence's neck with her arm.</p>
<p>'But very soon to be,' cried Florence.</p>
<p>'Very soon now, Florence: very soon.</p>
<p>Edith bent her head a little, so as to press the blooming cheek of
Florence against her own, and for some few moments remained thus silent.
There was something so very tender in her manner, that Florence was even
more sensible of it than on the first occasion of their meeting.</p>
<p>She led Florence to a chair beside her, and sat down: Florence looking in
her face, quite wondering at its beauty, and willingly leaving her hand In
hers.</p>
<p>'Have you been alone, Florence, since I was here last?'</p>
<p>'Oh yes!' smiled Florence, hastily.</p>
<p>She hesitated and cast down her eyes; for her new Mama was very earnest in
her look, and the look was intently and thoughtfully fixed upon her face.</p>
<p>'I—I—am used to be alone,' said Florence. 'I don't mind it at
all. Di and I pass whole days together, sometimes.' Florence might have
said, whole weeks and months.</p>
<p>'Is Di your maid, love?'</p>
<p>'My dog, Mama,' said Florence, laughing. 'Susan is my maid.'</p>
<p>'And these are your rooms,' said Edith, looking round. 'I was not shown
these rooms the other day. We must have them improved, Florence. They
shall be made the prettiest in the house.'</p>
<p>'If I might change them, Mama,' returned Florence; 'there is one upstairs
I should like much better.'</p>
<p>'Is this not high enough, dear girl?' asked Edith, smiling.</p>
<p>'The other was my brother's room,' said Florence, 'and I am very fond of
it. I would have spoken to Papa about it when I came home, and found the
workmen here, and everything changing; but—'</p>
<p>Florence dropped her eyes, lest the same look should make her falter
again.</p>
<p>'but I was afraid it might distress him; and as you said you would be here
again soon, Mama, and are the mistress of everything, I determined to take
courage and ask you.'</p>
<p>Edith sat looking at her, with her brilliant eyes intent upon her face,
until Florence raising her own, she, in her turn, withdrew her gaze, and
turned it on the ground. It was then that Florence thought how different
this lady's beauty was, from what she had supposed. She had thought it of
a proud and lofty kind; yet her manner was so subdued and gentle, that if
she had been of Florence's own age and character, it scarcely could have
invited confidence more.</p>
<p>Except when a constrained and singular reserve crept over her; and then
she seemed (but Florence hardly understood this, though she could not
choose but notice it, and think about it) as if she were humbled before
Florence, and ill at ease. When she had said that she was not her Mama
yet, and when Florence had called her the mistress of everything there,
this change in her was quick and startling; and now, while the eyes of
Florence rested on her face, she sat as though she would have shrunk and
hidden from her, rather than as one about to love and cherish her, in
right of such a near connexion.</p>
<p>She gave Florence her ready promise, about her new room, and said she
would give directions about it herself. She then asked some questions
concerning poor Paul; and when they had sat in conversation for some time,
told Florence she had come to take her to her own home.</p>
<p>'We have come to London now, my mother and I,' said Edith, 'and you shall
stay with us until I am married. I wish that we should know and trust each
other, Florence.'</p>
<p>'You are very kind to me,' said Florence, 'dear Mama. How much I thank
you!'</p>
<p>'Let me say now, for it may be the best opportunity,' continued Edith,
looking round to see that they were quite alone, and speaking in a lower
voice, 'that when I am married, and have gone away for some weeks, I shall
be easier at heart if you will come home here. No matter who invites you
to stay elsewhere. Come home here. It is better to be alone than—what
I would say is,' she added, checking herself, 'that I know well you are
best at home, dear Florence.'</p>
<p>'I will come home on the very day, Mama'</p>
<p>'Do so. I rely on that promise. Now, prepare to come with me, dear girl.
You will find me downstairs when you are ready.'</p>
<p>Slowly and thoughtfully did Edith wander alone through the mansion of
which she was so soon to be the lady: and little heed took she of all the
elegance and splendour it began to display. The same indomitable
haughtiness of soul, the same proud scorn expressed in eye and lip, the
same fierce beauty, only tamed by a sense of its own little worth, and of
the little worth of everything around it, went through the grand saloons
and halls, that had got loose among the shady trees, and raged and rent
themselves. The mimic roses on the walls and floors were set round with
sharp thorns, that tore her breast; in every scrap of gold so dazzling to
the eye, she saw some hateful atom of her purchase-money; the broad high
mirrors showed her, at full length, a woman with a noble quality yet
dwelling in her nature, who was too false to her better self, and too
debased and lost, to save herself. She believed that all this was so
plain, more or less, to all eyes, that she had no resource or power of
self-assertion but in pride: and with this pride, which tortured her own
heart night and day, she fought her fate out, braved it, and defied it.</p>
<p>Was this the woman whom Florence—an innocent girl, strong only in
her earnestness and simple truth—could so impress and quell, that by
her side she was another creature, with her tempest of passion hushed, and
her very pride itself subdued? Was this the woman who now sat beside her
in a carriage, with her arms entwined, and who, while she courted and
entreated her to love and trust her, drew her fair head to nestle on her
breast, and would have laid down life to shield it from wrong or harm?</p>
<p>Oh, Edith! it were well to die, indeed, at such a time! Better and happier
far, perhaps, to die so, Edith, than to live on to the end!</p>
<p>The Honourable Mrs Skewton, who was thinking of anything rather than of
such sentiments—for, like many genteel persons who have existed at
various times, she set her face against death altogether, and objected to
the mention of any such low and levelling upstart—had borrowed a
house in Brook Street, Grosvenor Square, from a stately relative (one of
the Feenix brood), who was out of town, and who did not object to lending
it, in the handsomest manner, for nuptial purposes, as the loan implied
his final release and acquittance from all further loans and gifts to Mrs
Skewton and her daughter. It being necessary for the credit of the family
to make a handsome appearance at such a time, Mrs Skewton, with the
assistance of an accommodating tradesman resident In the parish of
Mary-le-bone, who lent out all sorts of articles to the nobility and
gentry, from a service of plate to an army of footmen, clapped into this
house a silver-headed butler (who was charged extra on that account, as
having the appearance of an ancient family retainer), two very tall young
men in livery, and a select staff of kitchen-servants; so that a legend
arose, downstairs, that Withers the page, released at once from his
numerous household duties, and from the propulsion of the wheeled-chair
(inconsistent with the metropolis), had been several times observed to rub
his eyes and pinch his limbs, as if he misdoubted his having overslept
himself at the Leamington milkman's, and being still in a celestial dream.
A variety of requisites in plate and china being also conveyed to the same
establishment from the same convenient source, with several miscellaneous
articles, including a neat chariot and a pair of bays, Mrs Skewton
cushioned herself on the principal sofa, in the Cleopatra attitude, and
held her court in fair state.</p>
<p>'And how,' said Mrs Skewton, on the entrance of her daughter and her
charge, 'is my charming Florence? You must come and kiss me, Florence, if
you please, my love.'</p>
<p>Florence was timidly stooping to pick out a place In the white part of Mrs
Skewton's face, when that lady presented her ear, and relieved her of her
difficulty.</p>
<p>'Edith, my dear,' said Mrs Skewton, 'positively, I—stand a little
more in the light, my sweetest Florence, for a moment.</p>
<p>Florence blushingly complied.</p>
<p>'You don't remember, dearest Edith,' said her mother, 'what you were when
you were about the same age as our exceedingly precious Florence, or a few
years younger?'</p>
<p>'I have long forgotten, mother.'</p>
<p>'For positively, my dear,' said Mrs Skewton, 'I do think that I see a
decided resemblance to what you were then, in our extremely fascinating
young friend. And it shows,' said Mrs Skewton, in a lower voice, which
conveyed her opinion that Florence was in a very unfinished state, 'what
cultivation will do.'</p>
<p>'It does, indeed,' was Edith's stern reply.</p>
<p>Her mother eyed her sharply for a moment, and feeling herself on unsafe
ground, said, as a diversion:</p>
<p>'My charming Florence, you must come and kiss me once more, if you please,
my love.'</p>
<p>Florence complied, of course, and again imprinted her lips on Mrs
Skewton's ear.</p>
<p>'And you have heard, no doubt, my darling pet,' said Mrs Skewton,
detaining her hand, 'that your Papa, whom we all perfectly adore and dote
upon, is to be married to my dearest Edith this day week.'</p>
<p>'I knew it would be very soon,' returned Florence, 'but not exactly when.'</p>
<p>'My darling Edith,' urged her mother, gaily, 'is it possible you have not
told Florence?'</p>
<p>'Why should I tell Florence?' she returned, so suddenly and harshly, that
Florence could scarcely believe it was the same voice.</p>
<p>Mrs Skewton then told Florence, as another and safer diversion, that her
father was coming to dinner, and that he would no doubt be charmingly
surprised to see her; as he had spoken last night of dressing in the City,
and had known nothing of Edith's design, the execution of which, according
to Mrs Skewton's expectation, would throw him into a perfect ecstasy.
Florence was troubled to hear this; and her distress became so keen, as
the dinner-hour approached, that if she had known how to frame an entreaty
to be suffered to return home, without involving her father in her
explanation, she would have hurried back on foot, bareheaded, breathless,
and alone, rather than incur the risk of meeting his displeasure.</p>
<p>As the time drew nearer, she could hardly breathe. She dared not approach
a window, lest he should see her from the street. She dared not go
upstairs to hide her emotion, lest, in passing out at the door, she should
meet him unexpectedly; besides which dread, she felt as though she never
could come back again if she were summoned to his presence. In this
conflict of fears; she was sitting by Cleopatra's couch, endeavouring to
understand and to reply to the bald discourse of that lady, when she heard
his foot upon the stair.</p>
<p>'I hear him now!' cried Florence, starting. 'He is coming!'</p>
<p>Cleopatra, who in her juvenility was always playfully disposed, and who in
her self-engrossment did not trouble herself about the nature of this
agitation, pushed Florence behind her couch, and dropped a shawl over her,
preparatory to giving Mr Dombey a rapture of surprise. It was so quickly
done, that in a moment Florence heard his awful step in the room.</p>
<p>He saluted his intended mother-in-law, and his intended bride. The strange
sound of his voice thrilled through the whole frame of his child.</p>
<p>'My dear Dombey,' said Cleopatra, 'come here and tell me how your pretty
Florence is.'</p>
<p>'Florence is very well,' said Mr Dombey, advancing towards the couch.</p>
<p>'At home?'</p>
<p>'At home,' said Mr Dombey.</p>
<p>'My dear Dombey,' returned Cleopatra, with bewitching vivacity; 'now are
you sure you are not deceiving me? I don't know what my dearest Edith will
say to me when I make such a declaration, but upon my honour I am afraid
you are the falsest of men, my dear Dombey.'</p>
<p>Though he had been; and had been detected on the spot, in the most
enormous falsehood that was ever said or done; he could hardly have been
more disconcerted than he was, when Mrs Skewton plucked the shawl away,
and Florence, pale and trembling, rose before him like a ghost. He had not
yet recovered his presence of mind, when Florence had run up to him,
clasped her hands round his neck, kissed his face, and hurried out of the
room. He looked round as if to refer the matter to somebody else, but
Edith had gone after Florence, instantly.</p>
<p>'Now, confess, my dear Dombey,' said Mrs Skewton, giving him her hand,
'that you never were more surprised and pleased in your life.'</p>
<p>'I never was more surprised,' said Mr Dombey.</p>
<p>'Nor pleased, my dearest Dombey?' returned Mrs Skewton, holding up her
fan.</p>
<p>'I—yes, I am exceedingly glad to meet Florence here,' said Mr
Dombey. He appeared to consider gravely about it for a moment, and then
said, more decidedly, 'Yes, I really am very glad indeed to meet Florence
here.'</p>
<p>'You wonder how she comes here?' said Mrs Skewton, 'don't you?'</p>
<p>'Edith, perhaps—' suggested Mr Dombey.</p>
<p>'Ah! wicked guesser!' replied Cleopatra, shaking her head. 'Ah! cunning,
cunning man! One shouldn't tell these things; your sex, my dear Dombey,
are so vain, and so apt to abuse our weakness; but you know my open soul—very
well; immediately.'</p>
<p>This was addressed to one of the very tall young men who announced dinner.</p>
<p>'But Edith, my dear Dombey,' she continued in a whisper, when she cannot
have you near her—and as I tell her, she cannot expect that always—will
at least have near her something or somebody belonging to you. Well, how
extremely natural that is! And in this spirit, nothing would keep her from
riding off to-day to fetch our darling Florence. Well, how excessively
charming that is!'</p>
<p>As she waited for an answer, Mr Dombey answered, 'Eminently so.</p>
<p>'Bless you, my dear Dombey, for that proof of heart!' cried Cleopatra,
squeezing his hand. 'But I am growing too serious! Take me downstairs,
like an angel, and let us see what these people intend to give us for
dinner. Bless you, dear Dombey!'</p>
<p>Cleopatra skipping off her couch with tolerable briskness, after the last
benediction, Mr Dombey took her arm in his and led her ceremoniously
downstairs; one of the very tall young men on hire, whose organ of
veneration was imperfectly developed, thrusting his tongue into his cheek,
for the entertainment of the other very tall young man on hire, as the
couple turned into the dining-room.</p>
<p>Florence and Edith were already there, and sitting side by side. Florence
would have risen when her father entered, to resign her chair to him; but
Edith openly put her hand upon her arm, and Mr Dombey took an opposite
place at the round table.</p>
<p>The conversation was almost entirely sustained by Mrs Skewton. Florence
hardly dared to raise her eyes, lest they should reveal the traces of
tears; far less dared to speak; and Edith never uttered one word, unless
in answer to a question. Verily, Cleopatra worked hard, for the
establishment that was so nearly clutched; and verily it should have been
a rich one to reward her!</p>
<p>And so your preparations are nearly finished at last, my dear Dombey?'
said Cleopatra, when the dessert was put upon the table, and the
silver-headed butler had withdrawn. 'Even the lawyers' preparations!'</p>
<p>'Yes, madam,' replied Mr Dombey; 'the deed of settlement, the professional
gentlemen inform me, is now ready, and as I was mentioning to you, Edith
has only to do us the favour to suggest her own time for its execution.'</p>
<p>Edith sat like a handsome statue; as cold, as silent, and as still.</p>
<p>'My dearest love,' said Cleopatra, 'do you hear what Mr Dombey says? Ah,
my dear Dombey!' aside to that gentleman, 'how her absence, as the time
approaches, reminds me of the days, when that most agreeable of creatures,
her Papa, was in your situation!'</p>
<p>'I have nothing to suggest. It shall be when you please,' said Edith,
scarcely looking over the table at Mr Dombey.</p>
<p>'To-morrow?' suggested Mr Dombey.</p>
<p>'If you please.'</p>
<p>'Or would next day,' said Mr Dombey, 'suit your engagements better?'</p>
<p>'I have no engagements. I am always at your disposal. Let it be when you
like.'</p>
<p>'No engagements, my dear Edith!' remonstrated her mother, 'when you are in
a most terrible state of flurry all day long, and have a thousand and one
appointments with all sorts of trades-people!'</p>
<p>'They are of your making,' returned Edith, turning on her with a slight
contraction of her brow. 'You and Mr Dombey can arrange between you.'</p>
<p>'Very true indeed, my love, and most considerate of you!' said Cleopatra.
'My darling Florence, you must really come and kiss me once more, if you
please, my dear!'</p>
<p>Singular coincidence, that these gushes of interest In Florence hurried
Cleopatra away from almost every dialogue in which Edith had a share,
however trifling! Florence had certainly never undergone so much
embracing, and perhaps had never been, unconsciously, so useful in her
life.</p>
<p>Mr Dombey was far from quarrelling, in his own breast, with the manner of
his beautiful betrothed. He had that good reason for sympathy with
haughtiness and coldness, which is found In a fellow-feeling. It flattered
him to think how these deferred to him, in Edith's case, and seemed to
have no will apart from his. It flattered him to picture to himself, this
proud and stately woman doing the honours of his house, and chilling his
guests after his own manner. The dignity of Dombey and Son would be
heightened and maintained, indeed, in such hands.</p>
<p>So thought Mr Dombey, when he was left alone at the dining-table, and
mused upon his past and future fortunes: finding no uncongeniality in an
air of scant and gloomy state that pervaded the room, in colour a dark
brown, with black hatchments of pictures blotching the walls, and
twenty-four black chairs, with almost as many nails in them as so many
coffins, waiting like mutes, upon the threshold of the Turkey carpet; and
two exhausted negroes holding up two withered branches of candelabra on
the sideboard, and a musty smell prevailing as if the ashes of ten
thousand dinners were entombed in the sarcophagus below it. The owner of
the house lived much abroad; the air of England seldom agreed long with a
member of the Feenix family; and the room had gradually put itself into
deeper and still deeper mourning for him, until it was become so funereal
as to want nothing but a body in it to be quite complete.</p>
<p>No bad representation of the body, for the nonce, in his unbending form,
if not in his attitude, Mr Dombey looked down into the cold depths of the
dead sea of mahogany on which the fruit dishes and decanters lay at
anchor: as if the subjects of his thoughts were rising towards the surface
one by one, and plunging down again. Edith was there In all her majesty of
brow and figure; and close to her came Florence, with her timid head
turned to him, as it had been, for an instant, when she left the room; and
Edith's eyes upon her, and Edith's hand put out protectingly. A little
figure in a low arm-chair came springing next into the light, and looked
upon him wonderingly, with its bright eyes and its old-young face,
gleaming as in the flickering of an evening fire. Again came Florence
close upon it, and absorbed his whole attention. Whether as a fore-doomed
difficulty and disappointment to him; whether as a rival who had crossed
him in his way, and might again; whether as his child, of whom, in his
successful wooing, he could stoop to think as claiming, at such a time, to
be no more estranged; or whether as a hint to him that the mere appearance
of caring for his own blood should be maintained in his new relations; he
best knew. Indifferently well, perhaps, at best; for marriage company and
marriage altars, and ambitious scenes—still blotted here and there
with Florence—always Florence—turned up so fast, and so
confusedly, that he rose, and went upstairs to escape them.</p>
<p>It was quite late at night before candles were brought; for at present
they made Mrs Skewton's head ache, she complained; and in the meantime
Florence and Mrs Skewton talked together (Cleopatra being very anxious to
keep her close to herself), or Florence touched the piano softly for Mrs
Skewton's delight; to make no mention of a few occasions in the course of
the evening, when that affectionate lady was impelled to solicit another
kiss, and which always happened after Edith had said anything. They were
not many, however, for Edith sat apart by an open window during the whole
time (in spite of her mother's fears that she would take cold), and
remained there until Mr Dombey took leave. He was serenely gracious to
Florence when he did so; and Florence went to bed in a room within
Edith's, so happy and hopeful, that she thought of her late self as if it
were some other poor deserted girl who was to be pitied for her sorrow;
and in her pity, sobbed herself to sleep.</p>
<p>The week fled fast. There were drives to milliners, dressmakers,
jewellers, lawyers, florists, pastry-cooks; and Florence was always of the
party. Florence was to go to the wedding. Florence was to cast off her
mourning, and to wear a brilliant dress on the occasion. The milliner's
intentions on the subject of this dress—the milliner was a
Frenchwoman, and greatly resembled Mrs Skewton—were so chaste and
elegant, that Mrs Skewton bespoke one like it for herself. The milliner
said it would become her to admiration, and that all the world would take
her for the young lady's sister.</p>
<p>The week fled faster. Edith looked at nothing and cared for nothing. Her
rich dresses came home, and were tried on, and were loudly commended by
Mrs Skewton and the milliners, and were put away without a word from her.
Mrs Skewton made their plans for every day, and executed them. Sometimes
Edith sat in the carriage when they went to make purchases; sometimes,
when it was absolutely necessary, she went into the shops. But Mrs Skewton
conducted the whole business, whatever it happened to be; and Edith looked
on as uninterested and with as much apparent indifference as if she had no
concern in it. Florence might perhaps have thought she was haughty and
listless, but that she was never so to her. So Florence quenched her
wonder in her gratitude whenever it broke out, and soon subdued it.</p>
<p>The week fled faster. It had nearly winged its flight away. The last night
of the week, the night before the marriage, was come. In the dark room—for
Mrs Skewton's head was no better yet, though she expected to recover
permanently to-morrow—were that lady, Edith, and Mr Dombey. Edith
was at her open window looking out into the street; Mr Dombey and
Cleopatra were talking softly on the sofa. It was growing late; and
Florence, being fatigued, had gone to bed.</p>
<p>'My dear Dombey,' said Cleopatra, 'you will leave me Florence to-morrow,
when you deprive me of my sweetest Edith.'</p>
<p>Mr Dombey said he would, with pleasure.</p>
<p>'To have her about me, here, while you are both at Paris, and to think at
her age, I am assisting in the formation of her mind, my dear Dombey,'
said Cleopatra, 'will be a perfect balm to me in the extremely shattered
state to which I shall be reduced.'</p>
<p>Edith turned her head suddenly. Her listless manner was exchanged, in a
moment, to one of burning interest, and, unseen in the darkness, she
attended closely to their conversation.</p>
<p>Mr Dombey would be delighted to leave Florence in such admirable
guardianship.</p>
<p>'My dear Dombey,' returned Cleopatra, 'a thousand thanks for your good
opinion. I feared you were going, with malice aforethought' as the
dreadful lawyers say—those horrid proses!—to condemn me to
utter solitude.'</p>
<p>'Why do me so great an injustice, my dear madam?' said Mr Dombey.</p>
<p>'Because my charming Florence tells me so positively she must go home
tomorrow, returned Cleopatra, that I began to be afraid, my dearest
Dombey, you were quite a Bashaw.'</p>
<p>'I assure you, madam!' said Mr Dombey, 'I have laid no commands on
Florence; and if I had, there are no commands like your wish.'</p>
<p>'My dear Dombey,' replied Cleopatra, what a courtier you are! Though I'll
not say so, either; for courtiers have no heart, and yours pervades your
farming life and character. And are you really going so early, my dear
Dombey!'</p>
<p>Oh, indeed! it was late, and Mr Dombey feared he must.</p>
<p>'Is this a fact, or is it all a dream!' lisped Cleopatra. 'Can I believe,
my dearest Dombey, that you are coming back tomorrow morning to deprive me
of my sweet companion; my own Edith!'</p>
<p>Mr Dombey, who was accustomed to take things literally, reminded Mrs
Skewton that they were to meet first at the church.</p>
<p>'The pang,' said Mrs Skewton, 'of consigning a child, even to you, my dear
Dombey, is one of the most excruciating imaginable, and combined with a
naturally delicate constitution, and the extreme stupidity of the
pastry-cook who has undertaken the breakfast, is almost too much for my
poor strength. But I shall rally, my dear Dombey, In the morning; do not
fear for me, or be uneasy on my account. Heaven bless you! My dearest
Edith!' she cried archly. 'Somebody is going, pet.'</p>
<p>Edith, who had turned her head again towards the window, and whose
interest in their conversation had ceased, rose up in her place, but made
no advance towards him, and said nothing. Mr Dombey, with a lofty
gallantry adapted to his dignity and the occasion, betook his creaking
boots towards her, put her hand to his lips, said, 'Tomorrow morning I
shall have the happiness of claiming this hand as Mrs Dombey's,' and bowed
himself solemnly out.</p>
<p>Mrs Skewton rang for candles as soon as the house-door had closed upon
him. With the candles appeared her maid, with the juvenile dress that was
to delude the world to-morrow. The dress had savage retribution in it, as
such dresses ever have, and made her infinitely older and more hideous
than her greasy flannel gown. But Mrs Skewton tried it on with mincing
satisfaction; smirked at her cadaverous self in the glass, as she thought
of its killing effect upon the Major; and suffering her maid to take it
off again, and to prepare her for repose, tumbled into ruins like a house
of painted cards.</p>
<p>All this time, Edith remained at the dark window looking out into the
street. When she and her mother were at last left alone, she moved from it
for the first time that evening, and came opposite to her. The yawning,
shaking, peevish figure of the mother, with her eyes raised to confront
the proud erect form of the daughter, whose glance of fire was bent
downward upon her, had a conscious air upon it, that no levity or temper
could conceal.</p>
<p>'I am tired to death,' said she. 'You can't be trusted for a moment. You
are worse than a child. Child! No child would be half so obstinate and
undutiful.'</p>
<p>'Listen to me, mother,' returned Edith, passing these words by with a
scorn that would not descend to trifle with them. 'You must remain alone
here until I return.'</p>
<p>'Must remain alone here, Edith, until you return!' repeated her mother.</p>
<p>'Or in that name upon which I shall call to-morrow to witness what I do,
so falsely: and so shamefully, I swear I will refuse the hand of this man
in the church. If I do not, may I fall dead upon the pavement!'</p>
<p>The mother answered with a look of quick alarm, in no degree diminished by
the look she met.</p>
<p>'It is enough,' said Edith, steadily, 'that we are what we are. I will
have no youth and truth dragged down to my level. I will have no guileless
nature undermined, corrupted, and perverted, to amuse the leisure of a
world of mothers. You know my meaning. Florence must go home.'</p>
<p>'You are an idiot, Edith,' cried her angry mother. 'Do you expect there
can ever be peace for you in that house, till she is married, and away?'</p>
<p>'Ask me, or ask yourself, if I ever expect peace in that house,' said her
daughter, 'and you know the answer.</p>
<p>'And am I to be told to-night, after all my pains and labour, and when you
are going, through me, to be rendered independent,' her mother almost
shrieked in her passion, while her palsied head shook like a leaf, 'that
there is corruption and contagion in me, and that I am not fit company for
a girl! What are you, pray? What are you?'</p>
<p>'I have put the question to myself,' said Edith, ashy pale, and pointing
to the window, 'more than once when I have been sitting there, and
something in the faded likeness of my sex has wandered past outside; and
God knows I have met with my reply. Oh mother, mother, if you had but left
me to my natural heart when I too was a girl—a younger girl than
Florence—how different I might have been!'</p>
<p>Sensible that any show of anger was useless here, her mother restrained
herself, and fell a whimpering, and bewailed that she had lived too long,
and that her only child had cast her off, and that duty towards parents
was forgotten in these evil days, and that she had heard unnatural taunts,
and cared for life no longer.</p>
<p>'If one is to go on living through continual scenes like this,' she
whined,'I am sure it would be much better for me to think of some means of
putting an end to my existence. Oh! The idea of your being my daughter,
Edith, and addressing me in such a strain!'</p>
<p>'Between us, mother,' returned Edith, mournfully, 'the time for mutual
reproaches is past.</p>
<p>'Then why do you revive it?' whimpered her mother. 'You know that you are
lacerating me in the cruellest manner. You know how sensitive I am to
unkindness. At such a moment, too, when I have so much to think of, and am
naturally anxious to appear to the best advantage! I wonder at you, Edith.
To make your mother a fright upon your wedding-day!'</p>
<p>Edith bent the same fixed look upon her, as she sobbed and rubbed her
eyes; and said in the same low steady voice, which had neither risen nor
fallen since she first addressed her, 'I have said that Florence must go
home.'</p>
<p>'Let her go!' cried the afflicted and affrighted parent, hastily. 'I am
sure I am willing she should go. What is the girl to me?'</p>
<p>'She is so much to me, that rather than communicate, or suffer to be
communicated to her, one grain of the evil that is in my breast, mother, I
would renounce you, as I would (if you gave me cause) renounce him in the
church to-morrow,' replied Edith. 'Leave her alone. She shall not, while I
can interpose, be tampered with and tainted by the lessons I have learned.
This is no hard condition on this bitter night.'</p>
<p>'If you had proposed it in a filial manner, Edith,' whined her mother,
'perhaps not; very likely not. But such extremely cutting words—'</p>
<p>'They are past and at an end between us now,' said Edith. 'Take your own
way, mother; share as you please in what you have gained; spend, enjoy,
make much of it; and be as happy as you will. The object of our lives is
won. Henceforth let us wear it silently. My lips are closed upon the past
from this hour. I forgive you your part in to-morrow's wickedness. May God
forgive my own!'</p>
<p>Without a tremor in her voice, or frame, and passing onward with a foot
that set itself upon the neck of every soft emotion, she bade her mother
good- night, and repaired to her own room.</p>
<p>But not to rest; for there was no rest in the tumult of her agitation when
alone to and fro, and to and fro, and to and fro again, five hundred
times, among the splendid preparations for her adornment on the morrow;
with her dark hair shaken down, her dark eyes flashing with a raging
light, her broad white bosom red with the cruel grasp of the relentless
hand with which she spurned it from her, pacing up and down with an
averted head, as if she would avoid the sight of her own fair person, and
divorce herself from its companionship. Thus, In the dead time of the
night before her bridal, Edith Granger wrestled with her unquiet spirit,
tearless, friendless, silent, proud, and uncomplaining.</p>
<p>At length it happened that she touched the open door which led into the
room where Florence lay.</p>
<p>She started, stopped, and looked in.</p>
<p>A light was burning there, and showed her Florence in her bloom of
innocence and beauty, fast asleep. Edith held her breath, and felt herself
drawn on towards her.</p>
<p>Drawn nearer, nearer, nearer yet; at last, drawn so near, that stooping
down, she pressed her lips to the gentle hand that lay outside the bed,
and put it softly to her neck. Its touch was like the prophet's rod of old
upon the rock. Her tears sprung forth beneath it, as she sunk upon her
knees, and laid her aching head and streaming hair upon the pillow by its
side.</p>
<p>Thus Edith Granger passed the night before her bridal. Thus the sun found
her on her bridal morning.</p>
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