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<h2> CHAPTER XVII. CAPTAIN AND MRS. FRERE. </h2>
<p>Sylvia had become the wife of Maurice Frere. The wedding created
excitement in the convict settlement, for Maurice Frere, though oppressed
by the secret shame at open matrimony which affects men of his character,
could not in decency—seeing how "good a thing for him" was this
wealthy alliance—demand unceremonious nuptials. So, after the
fashion of the town—there being no "continent" or "Scotland"
adjacent as a hiding place for bridal blushes—the alliance was
entered into with due pomp of ball and supper; bride and bridegroom
departing through the golden afternoon to the nearest of Major Vickers's
stations. Thence it had been arranged they should return after a
fortnight, and take ship for Sydney.</p>
<p>Major Vickers, affectionate though he was to the man whom he believed to
be the saviour of his child, had no notion of allowing him to live on
Sylvia's fortune. He had settled his daughter's portion—ten thousand
pounds—upon herself and children, and had informed Frere that he
expected him to live upon an income of his own earning. After many
consultations between the pair, it had been arranged that a civil
appointment in Sydney would best suit the bridegroom, who was to sell out
of the service. This notion was Frere's own. He never cared for military
duty, and had, moreover, private debts to no inconsiderable amount. By
selling his commission he would be enabled at once to pay these debts, and
render himself eligible for any well-paid post under the Colonial
Government that the interest of his father-in-law, and his own reputation
as a convict disciplinarian, might procure. Vickers would fain have kept
his daughter with him, but he unselfishly acquiesced in the scheme,
admitting that Frere's plea as to the comforts she would derive from the
society to be found in Sydney was a valid one.</p>
<p>"You can come over and see us when we get settled, papa," said Sylvia,
with a young matron's pride of place, "and we can come and see you. Hobart
Town is very pretty, but I want to see the world."</p>
<p>"You should go to London, Poppet," said Maurice, "that's the place. Isn't
it, sir?"</p>
<p>"Oh, London!" cries Sylvia, clapping her hands. "And Westminster Abbey,
and the Tower, and St. James's Palace, and Hyde Park, and Fleet-street!
'Sir,' said Dr. Johnson, 'let us take a walk down Fleet-street.' Do you
remember, in Mr. Croker's book, Maurice? No, you don't I know, because you
only looked at the pictures, and then read Pierce Egan's account of the
Topping Fight between Bob Gaynor and Ned Neal, or some such person."</p>
<p>"Little girls should be seen and not heard," said Maurice, between a laugh
and a blush. "You have no business to read my books."</p>
<p>"Why not?" she asked, with a gaiety which already seemed a little
strained; "husband and wife should have no secrets from each other, sir.
Besides, I want you to read my books. I am going to read Shelley to you."</p>
<p>"Don't, my dear," said Maurice simply. "I can't understand him."</p>
<p>This little scene took place at the dinner-table of Frere's cottage, in
New Town, to which Major Vickers had been invited, in order that future
plans might be discussed.</p>
<p>"I don't want to go to Port Arthur," said the bride, later in the evening.
"Maurice, there can be no necessity to go there."</p>
<p>"Well," said Maurice. "I want to have a look at the place. I ought to be
familiar with all phases of convict discipline, you know."</p>
<p>"There is likely to be a report ordered upon the death of a prisoner,"
said Vickers. "The chaplain, a fussy but well-meaning person, has been
memorializing about it. You may as well do it as anybody else, Maurice."</p>
<p>"Ay. And save the expenses of the trip," said Maurice.</p>
<p>"But it is so melancholy," cried Sylvia.</p>
<p>"The most delightful place in the island, my dear. I was there for a few
days once, and I really was charmed."</p>
<p>It was remarkable—so Vickers thought—how each of these
newly-mated ones had caught something of the other's manner of speech.
Sylvia was less choice in her mode of utterance; Frere more so. He caught
himself wondering which of the two methods both would finally adopt.</p>
<p>"But those dogs, and sharks, and things. Oh, Maurice, haven't we had
enough of convicts?"</p>
<p>"Enough! Why, I'm going to make my living out of 'em," said Maurice, with
his most natural manner.</p>
<p>Sylvia sighed.</p>
<p>"Play something, darling," said her father; and so the girl, sitting down
to the piano, trilled and warbled in her pure young voice, until the Port
Arthur question floated itself away upon waves of melody, and was heard of
no more for that time. But upon pursuing the subject, Sylvia found her
husband firm. He wanted to go, and he would go. Having once assured
himself that it was advantageous to him to do a certain thing, the native
obstinacy of the animal urged him to do it despite all opposition from
others, and Sylvia, having had her first "cry" over the question of the
visit, gave up the point. This was the first difference of their short
married life, and she hastened to condone it. In the sunshine of Love and
Marriage—for Maurice at first really loved her; and love, curbing
the worst part of him, brought to him, as it brings to all of us, that
gentleness and abnegation of self which is the only token and assurance of
a love aught but animal—Sylvia's fears and doubts melted away, as
the mists melt in the beams of morning. A young girl, with passionate
fancy, with honest and noble aspiration, but with the dark shadow of her
early mental sickness brooding upon her childlike nature, Marriage made
her a woman, by developing in her a woman's trust and pride in the man to
whom she had voluntarily given herself. Yet by-and-by out of this
sentiment arose a new and strange source of anxiety. Having accepted her
position as a wife, and put away from her all doubts as to her own
capacity for loving the man to whom she had allied herself, she began to
be haunted by a dread lest he might do something which would lessen the
affection she bore him. On one or two occasions she had been forced to
confess that her husband was more of an egotist than she cared to think.
He demanded of her no great sacrifices—had he done so she would have
found, in making them, the pleasure that women of her nature always find
in such self-mortification—but he now and then intruded on her that
disregard for the feeling of others which was part of his character. He
was fond of her—almost too passionately fond, for her staider liking—but
he was unused to thwart his own will in anything, least of all in those
seeming trifles, for the consideration of which true selfishness bethinks
itself. Did she want to read when he wanted to walk, he good-humouredly
put aside her book, with an assumption that a walk with him must, of
necessity, be the most pleasing thing in the world. Did she want to walk
when he wanted to rest, he laughingly set up his laziness as an
all-sufficient plea for her remaining within doors. He was at no pains to
conceal his weariness when she read her favourite books to him. If he felt
sleepy when she sang or played, he slept without apology. If she talked
about a subject in which he took no interest, he turned the conversation
remorselessly. He would not have wittingly offended her, but it seemed to
him natural to yawn when he was weary, to sleep when he was fatigued, and
to talk only about those subjects which interested him. Had anybody told
him that he was selfish, he would have been astonished. Thus it came about
that Sylvia one day discovered that she led two lives—one in the
body, and one in the spirit—and that with her spiritual existence
her husband had no share. This discovery alarmed her, but then she smiled
at it. "As if Maurice could be expected to take interest in all my silly
fancies," said she; and, despite a harassing thought that these same
fancies were not foolish, but were the best and brightest portion of her,
she succeeded in overcoming her uneasiness. "A man's thoughts are
different from a woman's," she said; "he has his business and his worldly
cares, of which a woman knows nothing. I must comfort him, and not worry
him with my follies."</p>
<p>As for Maurice, he grew sometimes rather troubled in his mind. He could
not understand his wife. Her nature was an enigma to him; her mind was a
puzzle which would not be pieced together with the rectangular correctness
of ordinary life. He had known her from a child, had loved her from a
child, and had committed a mean and cruel crime to obtain her; but having
got her, he was no nearer to the mystery of her than before. She was all
his own, he thought. Her golden hair was for his fingers, her lips were
for his caress, her eyes looked love upon him alone. Yet there were times
when her lips were cold to his kisses, and her eyes looked disdainfully
upon his coarser passion. He would catch her musing when he spoke to her,
much as she would catch him sleeping when she read to him—but she
awoke with a start and a blush at her forgetfulness, which he never did.
He was not a man to brood over these things; and, after some reflective
pipes and ineffectual rubbings of his head, he "gave it up". How was it
possible, indeed, for him to solve the mental enigma when the woman
herself was to him a physical riddle? It was extraordinary that the child
he had seen growing up by his side day by day should be a young woman with
little secrets, now to be revealed to him for the first time. He found
that she had a mole on her neck, and remembered that he had noticed it
when she was a child. Then it was a thing of no moment, now it was a
marvellous discovery. He was in daily wonderment at the treasure he had
obtained. He marvelled at her feminine devices of dress and adornment. Her
dainty garments seemed to him perfumed with the odour of sanctity.</p>
<p>The fact was that the patron of Sarah Purfoy had not met with many
virtuous women, and had but just discovered what a dainty morsel Modesty
was.</p>
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