<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0047" id="link2HCH0047"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER 47. The Thunderbolt </h2>
<p>The barrier between Mr Dombey and his wife was not weakened by time.
Ill-assorted couple, unhappy in themselves and in each other, bound
together by no tie but the manacle that joined their fettered hands, and
straining that so harshly, in their shrinking asunder, that it wore and
chafed to the bone, Time, consoler of affliction and softener of anger,
could do nothing to help them. Their pride, however different in kind and
object, was equal in degree; and, in their flinty opposition, struck out
fire between them which might smoulder or might blaze, as circumstances
were, but burned up everything within their mutual reach, and made their
marriage way a road of ashes.</p>
<p>Let us be just to him. In the monstrous delusion of his life, swelling
with every grain of sand that shifted in its glass, he urged her on, he
little thought to what, or considered how; but still his feeling towards
her, such as it was, remained as at first. She had the grand demerit of
unaccountably putting herself in opposition to the recognition of his vast
importance, and to the acknowledgment of her complete submission to it,
and so far it was necessary to correct and reduce her; but otherwise he
still considered her, in his cold way, a lady capable of doing honour, if
she would, to his choice and name, and of reflecting credit on his
proprietorship.</p>
<p>Now, she, with all her might of passionate and proud resentment, bent her
dark glance from day to day, and hour to hour—from that night in her
own chamber, when she had sat gazing at the shadows on the wall, to the
deeper night fast coming—upon one figure directing a crowd of
humiliations and exasperations against her; and that figure, still her
husband's.</p>
<p>Was Mr Dombey's master-vice, that ruled him so inexorably, an unnatural
characteristic? It might be worthwhile, sometimes, to inquire what Nature
is, and how men work to change her, and whether, in the enforced
distortions so produced, it is not natural to be unnatural. Coop any son
or daughter of our mighty mother within narrow range, and bind the
prisoner to one idea, and foster it by servile worship of it on the part
of the few timid or designing people standing round, and what is Nature to
the willing captive who has never risen up upon the wings of a free mind—drooping
and useless soon—to see her in her comprehensive truth!</p>
<p>Alas! are there so few things in the world, about us, most unnatural, and
yet most natural in being so? Hear the magistrate or judge admonish the
unnatural outcasts of society; unnatural in brutal habits, unnatural in
want of decency, unnatural in losing and confounding all distinctions
between good and evil; unnatural in ignorance, in vice, in recklessness,
in contumacy, in mind, in looks, in everything. But follow the good
clergyman or doctor, who, with his life imperilled at every breath he
draws, goes down into their dens, lying within the echoes of our carriage
wheels and daily tread upon the pavement stones. Look round upon the world
of odious sights—millions of immortal creatures have no other world
on earth—at the lightest mention of which humanity revolts, and
dainty delicacy living in the next street, stops her ears, and lisps 'I
don't believe it!' Breathe the polluted air, foul with every impurity that
is poisonous to health and life; and have every sense, conferred upon our
race for its delight and happiness, offended, sickened and disgusted, and
made a channel by which misery and death alone can enter. Vainly attempt
to think of any simple plant, or flower, or wholesome weed, that, set in
this foetid bed, could have its natural growth, or put its little leaves
off to the sun as GOD designed it. And then, calling up some ghastly
child, with stunted form and wicked face, hold forth on its unnatural
sinfulness, and lament its being, so early, far away from Heaven—but
think a little of its having been conceived, and born and bred, in Hell!</p>
<p>Those who study the physical sciences, and bring them to bear upon the
health of Man, tell us that if the noxious particles that rise from
vitiated air were palpable to the sight, we should see them lowering in a
dense black cloud above such haunts, and rolling slowly on to corrupt the
better portions of a town. But if the moral pestilence that rises with
them, and in the eternal laws of our Nature, is inseparable from them,
could be made discernible too, how terrible the revelation! Then should we
see depravity, impiety, drunkenness, theft, murder, and a long train of
nameless sins against the natural affections and repulsions of mankind,
overhanging the devoted spots, and creeping on, to blight the innocent and
spread contagion among the pure. Then should we see how the same poisoned
fountains that flow into our hospitals and lazar-houses, inundate the
jails, and make the convict-ships swim deep, and roll across the seas, and
over-run vast continents with crime. Then should we stand appalled to
know, that where we generate disease to strike our children down and
entail itself on unborn generations, there also we breed, by the same
certain process, infancy that knows no innocence, youth without modesty or
shame, maturity that is mature in nothing but in suffering and guilt,
blasted old age that is a scandal on the form we bear, unnatural humanity!
When we shall gather grapes from thorns, and figs from thistles; when
fields of grain shall spring up from the offal in the bye-ways of our
wicked cities, and roses bloom in the fat churchyards that they cherish;
then we may look for natural humanity, and find it growing from such seed.</p>
<p>Oh for a good spirit who would take the house-tops off, with a more potent
and benignant hand than the lame demon in the tale, and show a Christian
people what dark shapes issue from amidst their homes, to swell the
retinue of the Destroying Angel as he moves forth among them! For only one
night's view of the pale phantoms rising from the scenes of our too-long
neglect; and from the thick and sullen air where Vice and Fever propagate
together, raining the tremendous social retributions which are ever
pouring down, and ever coming thicker! Bright and blest the morning that
should rise on such a night: for men, delayed no more by stumbling-blocks
of their own making, which are but specks of dust upon the path between
them and eternity, would then apply themselves, like creatures of one
common origin, owing one duty to the Father of one family, and tending to
one common end, to make the world a better place!</p>
<p>Not the less bright and blest would that day be for rousing some who never
have looked out upon the world of human life around them, to a knowledge
of their own relation to it, and for making them acquainted with a
perversion of nature in their own contracted sympathies and estimates; as
great, and yet as natural in its development when once begun, as the
lowest degradation known.'</p>
<p>But no such day had ever dawned on Mr Dombey, or his wife; and the course
of each was taken.</p>
<p>Through six months that ensued upon his accident, they held the same
relations one towards the other. A marble rock could not have stood more
obdurately in his way than she; and no chilled spring, lying uncheered by
any ray of light in the depths of a deep cave, could be more sullen or
more cold than he.</p>
<p>The hope that had fluttered within her when the promise of her new home
dawned, was quite gone from the heart of Florence now. That home was
nearly two years old; and even the patient trust that was in her, could
not survive the daily blight of such experience. If she had any lingering
fancy in the nature of hope left, that Edith and her father might be
happier together, in some distant time, she had none, now, that her father
would ever love her. The little interval in which she had imagined that
she saw some small relenting in him, was forgotten in the long remembrance
of his coldness since and before, or only remembered as a sorrowful
delusion.</p>
<p>Florence loved him still, but, by degrees, had come to love him rather as
some dear one who had been, or who might have been, than as the hard
reality before her eyes. Something of the softened sadness with which she
loved the memory of little Paul, or of her mother, seemed to enter now
into her thoughts of him, and to make them, as it were, a dear
remembrance. Whether it was that he was dead to her, and that partly for
this reason, partly for his share in those old objects of her affection,
and partly for the long association of him with hopes that were withered
and tendernesses he had frozen, she could not have told; but the father
whom she loved began to be a vague and dreamy idea to her: hardly more
substantially connected with her real life, than the image she would
sometimes conjure up, of her dear brother yet alive, and growing to be a
man, who would protect and cherish her.</p>
<p>The change, if it may be called one, had stolen on her like the change
from childhood to womanhood, and had come with it. Florence was almost
seventeen, when, in her lonely musings, she was conscious of these
thoughts.'</p>
<p>She was often alone now, for the old association between her and her Mama
was greatly changed. At the time of her father's accident, and when he was
lying in his room downstairs, Florence had first observed that Edith
avoided her. Wounded and shocked, and yet unable to reconcile this with
her affection when they did meet, she sought her in her own room at night,
once more.</p>
<p>'Mama,' said Florence, stealing softly to her side, 'have I offended you?'</p>
<p>Edith answered 'No.'</p>
<p>'I must have done something,' said Florence. 'Tell me what it is. You have
changed your manner to me, dear Mama. I cannot say how instantly I feel
the least change; for I love you with my whole heart.'</p>
<p>'As I do you,' said Edith. 'Ah, Florence, believe me never more than now!'</p>
<p>'Why do you go away from me so often, and keep away?' asked Florence. 'And
why do you sometimes look so strangely on me, dear Mama? You do so, do you
not?'</p>
<p>Edith signified assent with her dark eyes.</p>
<p>'Why?' returned Florence imploringly. 'Tell me why, that I may know how to
please you better; and tell me this shall not be so any more.</p>
<p>'My Florence,' answered Edith, taking the hand that embraced her neck, and
looking into the eyes that looked into hers so lovingly, as Florence knelt
upon the ground before her; 'why it is, I cannot tell you. It is neither
for me to say, nor you to hear; but that it is, and that it must be, I
know. Should I do it if I did not?'</p>
<p>'Are we to be estranged, Mama?' asked Florence, gazing at her like one
frightened.</p>
<p>Edith's silent lips formed 'Yes.'</p>
<p>Florence looked at her with increasing fear and wonder, until she could
see her no more through the blinding tears that ran down her face.</p>
<p>'Florence! my life!' said Edith, hurriedly, 'listen to me. I cannot bear
to see this grief. Be calmer. You see that I am composed, and is it
nothing to me?'</p>
<p>She resumed her steady voice and manner as she said the latter words, and
added presently:</p>
<p>'Not wholly estranged. Partially: and only that, in appearance, Florence,
for in my own breast I am still the same to you, and ever will be. But
what I do is not done for myself.'</p>
<p>'Is it for me, Mama?' asked Florence.</p>
<p>'It is enough,' said Edith, after a pause, 'to know what it is; why,
matters little. Dear Florence, it is better—it is necessary—it
must be—that our association should be less frequent. The confidence
there has been between us must be broken off.'</p>
<p>'When?' cried Florence. 'Oh, Mama, when?'</p>
<p>'Now,' said Edith.</p>
<p>'For all time to come?' asked Florence.</p>
<p>'I do not say that,' answered Edith. 'I do not know that. Nor will I say
that companionship between us is, at the best, an ill-assorted and unholy
union, of which I might have known no good could come. My way here has
been through paths that you will never tread, and my way henceforth may
lie— God knows—I do not see it—'</p>
<p>Her voice died away into silence; and she sat, looking at Florence, and
almost shrinking from her, with the same strange dread and wild avoidance
that Florence had noticed once before. The same dark pride and rage
succeeded, sweeping over her form and features like an angry chord across
the strings of a wild harp. But no softness or humility ensued on that.
She did not lay her head down now, and weep, and say that she had no hope
but in Florence. She held it up as if she were a beautiful Medusa, looking
on him, face to face, to strike him dead. Yes, and she would have done it,
if she had had the charm.</p>
<p>'Mama,' said Florence, anxiously, 'there is a change in you, in more than
what you say to me, which alarms me. Let me stay with you a little.'</p>
<p>'No,' said Edith, 'no, dearest. I am best left alone now, and I do best to
keep apart from you, of all else. Ask me no questions, but believe that
what I am when I seem fickle or capricious to you, I am not of my own
will, or for myself. Believe, though we are stranger to each other than we
have been, that I am unchanged to you within. Forgive me for having ever
darkened your dark home—I am a shadow on it, I know well—and
let us never speak of this again.'</p>
<p>'Mama,' sobbed Florence, 'we are not to part?'</p>
<p>'We do this that we may not part,' said Edith. 'Ask no more. Go, Florence!
My love and my remorse go with you!'</p>
<p>She embraced her, and dismissed her; and as Florence passed out of her
room, Edith looked on the retiring figure, as if her good angel went out
in that form, and left her to the haughty and indignant passions that now
claimed her for their own, and set their seal upon her brow.</p>
<p>From that hour, Florence and she were, as they had been, no more. For days
together, they would seldom meet, except at table, and when Mr Dombey was
present. Then Edith, imperious, inflexible, and silent, never looked at
her. Whenever Mr Carker was of the party, as he often was, during the
progress of Mr Dombey's recovery, and afterwards, Edith held herself more
removed from her, and was more distant towards her, than at other times.
Yet she and Florence never encountered, when there was no one by, but she
would embrace her as affectionately as of old, though not with the same
relenting of her proud aspect; and often, when she had been out late, she
would steal up to Florence's room, as she had been used to do, in the
dark, and whisper 'Good-night,' on her pillow. When unconscious, in her
slumber, of such visits, Florence would sometimes awake, as from a dream
of those words, softly spoken, and would seem to feel the touch of lips
upon her face. But less and less often as the months went on.</p>
<p>And now the void in Florence's own heart began again, indeed, to make a
solitude around her. As the image of the father whom she loved had
insensibly become a mere abstraction, so Edith, following the fate of all
the rest about whom her affections had entwined themselves, was fleeting,
fading, growing paler in the distance, every day. Little by little, she
receded from Florence, like the retiring ghost of what she had been;
little by little, the chasm between them widened and seemed deeper; little
by little, all the power of earnestness and tenderness she had shown, was
frozen up in the bold, angry hardihood with which she stood, upon the
brink of a deep precipice unseen by Florence, daring to look down.</p>
<p>There was but one consideration to set against the heavy loss of Edith,
and though it was slight comfort to her burdened heart, she tried to think
it some relief. No longer divided between her affection and duty to the
two, Florence could love both and do no injustice to either. As shadows of
her fond imagination, she could give them equal place in her own bosom,
and wrong them with no doubts.</p>
<p>So she tried to do. At times, and often too, wondering speculations on the
cause of this change in Edith, would obtrude themselves upon her mind and
frighten her; but in the calm of its abandonment once more to silent grief
and loneliness, it was not a curious mind. Florence had only to remember
that her star of promise was clouded in the general gloom that hung upon
the house, and to weep and be resigned.</p>
<p>Thus living, in a dream wherein the overflowing love of her young heart
expended itself on airy forms, and in a real world where she had
experienced little but the rolling back of that strong tide upon itself,
Florence grew to be seventeen. Timid and retiring as her solitary life had
made her, it had not embittered her sweet temper, or her earnest nature. A
child in innocent simplicity; a woman m her modest self-reliance, and her
deep intensity of feeling; both child and woman seemed at once expressed
in her face and fragile delicacy of shape, and gracefully to mingle there;—as
if the spring should be unwilling to depart when summer came, and sought
to blend the earlier beauties of the flowers with their bloom. But in her
thrilling voice, in her calm eyes, sometimes in a sage ethereal light that
seemed to rest upon her head, and always in a certain pensive air upon her
beauty, there was an expression, such as had been seen in the dead boy;
and the council in the Servants' Hall whispered so among themselves, and
shook their heads, and ate and drank the more, in a closer bond of
good-fellowship.</p>
<p>This observant body had plenty to say of Mr and Mrs Dombey, and of Mr
Carker, who appeared to be a mediator between them, and who came and went
as if he were trying to make peace, but never could. They all deplored the
uncomfortable state of affairs, and all agreed that Mrs Pipchin (whose
unpopularity was not to be surpassed) had some hand in it; but, upon the
whole, it was agreeable to have so good a subject for a rallying point,
and they made a great deal of it, and enjoyed themselves very much.</p>
<p>The general visitors who came to the house, and those among whom Mr and
Mrs Dombey visited, thought it a pretty equal match, as to haughtiness, at
all events, and thought nothing more about it. The young lady with the
back did not appear for some time after Mrs Skewton's death; observing to
some particular friends, with her usual engaging little scream, that she
couldn't separate the family from a notion of tombstones, and horrors of
that sort; but when she did come, she saw nothing wrong, except Mr
Dombey's wearing a bunch of gold seals to his watch, which shocked her
very much, as an exploded superstition. This youthful fascinator
considered a daughter-in-law objectionable in principle; otherwise, she
had nothing to say against Florence, but that she sadly wanted 'style'—which
might mean back, perhaps. Many, who only came to the house on state
occasions, hardly knew who Florence was, and said, going home, 'Indeed,
was that Miss Dombey, in the corner? Very pretty, but a little delicate
and thoughtful in appearance!'</p>
<p>None the less so, certainly, for her life of the last six months. Florence
took her seat at the dinner-table, on the day before the second
anniversary of her father's marriage to Edith (Mrs Skewton had been lying
stricken with paralysis when the first came round), with an uneasiness,
amounting to dread. She had no other warrant for it, than the occasion,
the expression of her father's face, in the hasty glance she caught of it,
and the presence of Mr Carker, which, always unpleasant to her, was more
so on this day, than she had ever felt it before.</p>
<p>Edith was richly dressed, for she and Mr Dombey were engaged in the
evening to some large assembly, and the dinner-hour that day was late. She
did not appear until they were seated at table, when Mr Carker rose and
led her to her chair. Beautiful and lustrous as she was, there was that in
her face and air which seemed to separate her hopelessly from Florence,
and from everyone, for ever more. And yet, for an instant, Florence saw a
beam of kindness in her eyes, when they were turned on her, that made the
distance to which she had withdrawn herself, a greater cause of sorrow and
regret than ever.</p>
<p>There was very little said at dinner. Florence heard her father speak to
Mr Carker sometimes on business matters, and heard him softly reply, but
she paid little attention to what they said, and only wished the dinner at
an end. When the dessert was placed upon the table, and they were left
alone, with no servant in attendance, Mr Dombey, who had been several
times clearing his throat in a manner that augured no good, said:</p>
<p>'Mrs Dombey, you know, I suppose, that I have instructed the housekeeper
that there will be some company to dinner here to-morrow.</p>
<p>'I do not dine at home,' she answered.</p>
<p>'Not a large party,' pursued Mr Dombey, with an indifferent assumption of
not having heard her; 'merely some twelve or fourteen. My sister, Major
Bagstock, and some others whom you know but slightly.'</p>
<p>I do not dine at home,' she repeated.</p>
<p>'However doubtful reason I may have, Mrs Dombey,' said Mr Dombey, still
going majestically on, as if she had not spoken, 'to hold the occasion in
very pleasant remembrance just now, there are appearances in these things
which must be maintained before the world. If you have no respect for
yourself, Mrs Dombey—'</p>
<p>'I have none,' she said.</p>
<p>'Madam,' cried Mr Dombey, striking his hand upon the table, 'hear me if
you please. I say, if you have no respect for yourself—'</p>
<p>'And I say I have none,' she answered.</p>
<p>He looked at her; but the face she showed him in return would not have
changed, if death itself had looked.</p>
<p>'Carker,' said Mr Dombey, turning more quietly to that gentleman, 'as you
have been my medium of communication with Mrs Dombey on former occasions,
and as I choose to preserve the decencies of life, so far as I am
individually concerned, I will trouble you to have the goodness to inform
Mrs Dombey that if she has no respect for herself, I have some respect for
myself, and therefore insist on my arrangements for to-morrow.</p>
<p>'Tell your sovereign master, Sir,' said Edith, 'that I will take leave to
speak to him on this subject by-and-bye, and that I will speak to him
alone.'</p>
<p>'Mr Carker, Madam,' said her husband, 'being in possession of the reason
which obliges me to refuse you that privilege, shall be absolved from the
delivery of any such message.' He saw her eyes move, while he spoke, and
followed them with his own.</p>
<p>'Your daughter is present, Sir,' said Edith.</p>
<p>'My daughter will remain present,' said Mr Dombey.</p>
<p>Florence, who had risen, sat down again, hiding her face in her hands, and
trembling.</p>
<p>'My daughter, Madam'—began Mr Dombey.</p>
<p>But Edith stopped him, in a voice which, although not raised in the least,
was so clear, emphatic, and distinct, that it might have been heard in a
whirlwind.</p>
<p>'I tell you I will speak to you alone,' she said. 'If you are not mad,
heed what I say.'</p>
<p>'I have authority to speak to you, Madam,' returned her husband, 'when and
where I please; and it is my pleasure to speak here and now.'</p>
<p>She rose up as if to leave the room; but sat down again, and looking at
him with all outward composure, said, in the same voice:</p>
<p>'You shall!'</p>
<p>'I must tell you first, that there is a threatening appearance in your
manner, Madam,' said Mr Dombey, 'which does not become you.</p>
<p>She laughed. The shaken diamonds in her hair started and trembled. There
are fables of precious stones that would turn pale, their wearer being in
danger. Had these been such, their imprisoned rays of light would have
taken flight that moment, and they would have been as dull as lead.</p>
<p>Carker listened, with his eyes cast down.</p>
<p>'As to my daughter, Madam,' said Mr Dombey, resuming the thread of his
discourse, 'it is by no means inconsistent with her duty to me, that she
should know what conduct to avoid. At present you are a very strong
example to her of this kind, and I hope she may profit by it.'</p>
<p>'I would not stop you now,' returned his wife, immoveable in eye, and
voice, and attitude; 'I would not rise and go away, and save you the
utterance of one word, if the room were burning.'</p>
<p>Mr Dombey moved his head, as if in a sarcastic acknowledgment of the
attention, and resumed. But not with so much self-possession as before;
for Edith's quick uneasiness in reference to Florence, and Edith's
indifference to him and his censure, chafed and galled him like a
stiffening wound.</p>
<p>'Mrs Dombey,' said he, 'it may not be inconsistent with my daughter's
improvement to know how very much to be lamented, and how necessary to be
corrected, a stubborn disposition is, especially when it is indulged in—unthankfully
indulged in, I will add—after the gratification of ambition and
interest. Both of which, I believe, had some share in inducing you to
occupy your present station at this board.'</p>
<p>'No! I would not rise, and go away, and save you the utterance of one
word,' she repeated, exactly as before, 'if the room were burning.'</p>
<p>'It may be natural enough, Mrs Dombey,' he pursued, 'that you should be
uneasy in the presence of any auditors of these disagreeable truths;
though why'—he could not hide his real feeling here, or keep his
eyes from glancing gloomily at Florence—'why anyone can give them
greater force and point than myself, whom they so nearly concern, I do not
pretend to understand. It may be natural enough that you should object to
hear, in anybody's presence, that there is a rebellious principle within
you which you cannot curb too soon; which you must curb, Mrs Dombey; and
which, I regret to say, I remember to have seen manifested—with some
doubt and displeasure, on more than one occasion before our marriage—towards
your deceased mother. But you have the remedy in your own hands. I by no
means forgot, when I began, that my daughter was present, Mrs Dombey. I
beg you will not forget, to- morrow, that there are several persons
present; and that, with some regard to appearances, you will receive your
company in a becoming manner.</p>
<p>'So it is not enough,' said Edith, 'that you know what has passed between
yourself and me; it is not enough that you can look here,' pointing at
Carker, who still listened, with his eyes cast down, 'and be reminded of
the affronts you have put upon me; it is not enough that you can look
here,' pointing to Florence with a hand that slightly trembled for the
first and only time, 'and think of what you have done, and of the
ingenious agony, daily, hourly, constant, you have made me feel in doing
it; it is not enough that this day, of all others in the year, is
memorable to me for a struggle (well-deserved, but not conceivable by such
as you) in which I wish I had died! You add to all this, do you, the last
crowning meanness of making her a witness of the depth to which I have
fallen; when you know that you have made me sacrifice to her peace, the
only gentle feeling and interest of my life, when you know that for her
sake, I would now if I could—but I can not, my soul recoils from you
too much—submit myself wholly to your will, and be the meekest
vassal that you have!'</p>
<p>This was not the way to minister to Mr Dombey's greatness. The old feeling
was roused by what she said, into a stronger and fiercer existence than it
had ever had. Again, his neglected child, at this rough passage of his
life, put forth by even this rebellious woman, as powerful where he was
powerless, and everything where he was nothing!</p>
<p>He turned on Florence, as if it were she who had spoken, and bade her
leave the room. Florence with her covered face obeyed, trembling and
weeping as she went.</p>
<p>'I understand, Madam,' said Mr Dombey, with an angry flush of triumph,
'the spirit of opposition that turned your affections in that channel, but
they have been met, Mrs Dombey; they have been met, and turned back!'</p>
<p>'The worse for you!' she answered, with her voice and manner still
unchanged. 'Ay!' for he turned sharply when she said so, 'what is the
worse for me, is twenty million times the worse for you. Heed that, if you
heed nothing else.'</p>
<p>The arch of diamonds spanning her dark hair, flashed and glittered like a
starry bridge. There was no warning in them, or they would have turned as
dull and dim as tarnished honour. Carker still sat and listened, with his
eyes cast down.</p>
<p>'Mrs Dombey,' said Mr Dombey, resuming as much as he could of his arrogant
composure, 'you will not conciliate me, or turn me from any purpose, by
this course of conduct.'</p>
<p>'It is the only true although it is a faint expression of what is within
me,' she replied. 'But if I thought it would conciliate you, I would
repress it, if it were repressible by any human effort. I will do nothing
that you ask.'</p>
<p>'I am not accustomed to ask, Mrs Dombey,' he observed; 'I direct.'</p>
<p>'I will hold no place in your house to-morrow, or on any recurrence of
to-morrow. I will be exhibited to no one, as the refractory slave you
purchased, such a time. If I kept my marriage day, I would keep it as a
day of shame. Self-respect! appearances before the world! what are these
to me? You have done all you can to make them nothing to me, and they are
nothing.'</p>
<p>'Carker,' said Mr Dombey, speaking with knitted brows, and after a
moment's consideration, 'Mrs Dombey is so forgetful of herself and me in
all this, and places me in a position so unsuited to my character, that I
must bring this state of matters to a close.'</p>
<p>'Release me, then,' said Edith, immoveable in voice, in look, and bearing,
as she had been throughout, 'from the chain by which I am bound. Let me
go.'</p>
<p>'Madam?' exclaimed Mr Dombey.</p>
<p>'Loose me. Set me free!'</p>
<p>'Madam?' he repeated, 'Mrs Dombey?'</p>
<p>'Tell him,' said Edith, addressing her proud face to Carker, 'that I wish
for a separation between us, That there had better be one. That I
recommend it to him, Tell him it may take place on his own terms—his
wealth is nothing to me—but that it cannot be too soon.'</p>
<p>'Good Heaven, Mrs Dombey!' said her husband, with supreme amazement, 'do
you imagine it possible that I could ever listen to such a proposition? Do
you know who I am, Madam? Do you know what I represent? Did you ever hear
of Dombey and Son? People to say that Mr Dombey—Mr Dombey!—was
separated from his wife! Common people to talk of Mr Dombey and his
domestic affairs! Do you seriously think, Mrs Dombey, that I would permit
my name to be banded about in such connexion? Pooh, pooh, Madam! Fie for
shame! You're absurd.' Mr Dombey absolutely laughed.</p>
<p>But not as she did. She had better have been dead than laugh as she did,
in reply, with her intent look fixed upon him. He had better have been
dead, than sitting there, in his magnificence, to hear her.</p>
<p>'No, Mrs Dombey,' he resumed. 'No, Madam. There is no possibility of
separation between you and me, and therefore I the more advise you to be
awakened to a sense of duty. And, Carker, as I was about to say to you—</p>
<p>Mr Carker, who had sat and listened all this time, now raised his eyes, in
which there was a bright unusual light.</p>
<p>As I was about to say to you, resumed Mr Dombey, 'I must beg you, now that
matters have come to this, to inform Mrs Dombey, that it is not the rule
of my life to allow myself to be thwarted by anybody—anybody, Carker—or
to suffer anybody to be paraded as a stronger motive for obedience in
those who owe obedience to me than I am my self. The mention that has been
made of my daughter, and the use that is made of my daughter, in
opposition to me, are unnatural. Whether my daughter is in actual concert
with Mrs Dombey, I do not know, and do not care; but after what Mrs Dombey
has said today, and my daughter has heard to-day, I beg you to make known
to Mrs Dombey, that if she continues to make this house the scene of
contention it has become, I shall consider my daughter responsible in some
degree, on that lady's own avowal, and shall visit her with my severe
displeasure. Mrs Dombey has asked "whether it is not enough," that she had
done this and that. You will please to answer no, it is not enough.'</p>
<p>'A moment!' cried Carker, interposing, 'permit me! painful as my position
is, at the best, and unusually painful in seeming to entertain a different
opinion from you,' addressing Mr Dombey, 'I must ask, had you not better
reconsider the question of a separation. I know how incompatible it
appears with your high public position, and I know how determined you are
when you give Mrs Dombey to understand'—the light in his eyes fell
upon her as he separated his words each from each, with the distinctness
of so many bells—'that nothing but death can ever part you. Nothing
else. But when you consider that Mrs Dombey, by living in this house, and
making it as you have said, a scene of contention, not only has her part
in that contention, but compromises Miss Dombey every day (for I know how
determined you are), will you not relieve her from a continual irritation
of spirit, and a continual sense of being unjust to another, almost
intolerable? Does this not seem like—I do not say it is—sacrificing
Mrs Dombey to the preservation of your preeminent and unassailable
position?'</p>
<p>Again the light in his eyes fell upon her, as she stood looking at her
husband: now with an extraordinary and awful smile upon her face.</p>
<p>'Carker,' returned Mr Dombey, with a supercilious frown, and in a tone
that was intended to be final, 'you mistake your position in offering
advice to me on such a point, and you mistake me (I am surprised to find)
in the character of your advice. I have no more to say.</p>
<p>'Perhaps,' said Carker, with an unusual and indefinable taunt in his air,
'you mistook my position, when you honoured me with the negotiations in
which I have been engaged here'—with a motion of his hand towards
Mrs Dombey.</p>
<p>'Not at all, Sir, not at all,' returned the other haughtily. 'You were
employed—'</p>
<p>'Being an inferior person, for the humiliation of Mrs Dombey. I forgot'
Oh, yes, it was expressly understood!' said Carker. 'I beg your pardon!'</p>
<p>As he bent his head to Mr Dombey, with an air of deference that accorded
ill with his words, though they were humbly spoken, he moved it round
towards her, and kept his watching eyes that way.</p>
<p>She had better have turned hideous and dropped dead, than have stood up
with such a smile upon her face, in such a fallen spirit's majesty of
scorn and beauty. She lifted her hand to the tiara of bright jewels
radiant on her head, and, plucking it off with a force that dragged and
strained her rich black hair with heedless cruelty, and brought it
tumbling wildly on her shoulders, cast the gems upon the ground. From each
arm, she unclasped a diamond bracelet, flung it down, and trod upon the
glittering heap. Without a word, without a shadow on the fire of her
bright eye, without abatement of her awful smile, she looked on Mr Dombey
to the last, in moving to the door; and left him.</p>
<p>Florence had heard enough before quitting the room, to know that Edith
loved her yet; that she had suffered for her sake; and that she had kept
her sacrifices quiet, lest they should trouble her peace. She did not want
to speak to her of this—she could not, remembering to whom she was
opposed— but she wished, in one silent and affectionate embrace, to
assure her that she felt it all, and thanked her.</p>
<p>Her father went out alone, that evening, and Florence issuing from her own
chamber soon afterwards, went about the house in search of. Edith, but
unavailingly. She was in her own rooms, where Florence had long ceased to
go, and did not dare to venture now, lest she should unconsciously
engender new trouble. Still Florence hoping to meet her before going to
bed, changed from room to room, and wandered through the house so splendid
and so dreary, without remaining anywhere.</p>
<p>She was crossing a gallery of communication that opened at some little
distance on the staircase, and was only lighted on great occasions, when
she saw, through the opening, which was an arch, the figure of a man
coming down some few stairs opposite. Instinctively apprehensive of her
father, whom she supposed it was, she stopped, in the dark, gazing through
the arch into the light. But it was Mr Carker coming down alone, and
looking over the railing into the hall. No bell was rung to announce his
departure, and no servant was in attendance. He went down quietly, opened
the door for himself, glided out, and shut it softly after him.</p>
<p>Her invincible repugnance to this man, and perhaps the stealthy act of
watching anyone, which, even under such innocent circumstances, is in a
manner guilty and oppressive, made Florence shake from head to foot. Her
blood seemed to run cold. As soon as she could—for at first she felt
an insurmountable dread of moving—she went quickly to her own room
and locked her door; but even then, shut in with her dog beside her, felt
a chill sensation of horror, as if there were danger brooding somewhere
near her.</p>
<p>It invaded her dreams and disturbed the whole night. Rising in the
morning, unrefreshed, and with a heavy recollection of the domestic
unhappiness of the preceding day, she sought Edith again in all the rooms,
and did so, from time to time, all the morning. But she remained in her
own chamber, and Florence saw nothing of her. Learning, however, that the
projected dinner at home was put off, Florence thought it likely that she
would go out in the evening to fulfil the engagement she had spoken of;
and resolved to try and meet her, then, upon the staircase.</p>
<p>When the evening had set in, she heard, from the room in which she sat on
purpose, a footstep on the stairs that she thought to be Edith's. Hurrying
out, and up towards her room, Florence met her immediately, coming down
alone.</p>
<p>What was Florence's affright and wonder when, at sight of her, with her
tearful face, and outstretched arms, Edith recoiled and shrieked!</p>
<p>'Don't come near me!' she cried. 'Keep away! Let me go by!'</p>
<p>'Mama!' said Florence.</p>
<p>'Don't call me by that name! Don't speak to me! Don't look at me!—Florence!'
shrinking back, as Florence moved a step towards her, 'don't touch me!'</p>
<p>As Florence stood transfixed before the haggard face and staring eyes, she
noted, as in a dream, that Edith spread her hands over them, and
shuddering through all her form, and crouching down against the wall,
crawled by her like some lower animal, sprang up, and fled away.</p>
<p>Florence dropped upon the stairs in a swoon; and was found there by Mrs
Pipchin, she supposed. She knew nothing more, until she found herself
lying on her own bed, with Mrs Pipchin and some servants standing round
her.</p>
<p>'Where is Mama?' was her first question.</p>
<p>'Gone out to dinner,' said Mrs Pipchin.</p>
<p>'And Papa?'</p>
<p>'Mr Dombey is in his own room, Miss Dombey,' said Mrs Pipchin, 'and the
best thing you can do, is to take off your things and go to bed this
minute.' This was the sagacious woman's remedy for all complaints,
particularly lowness of spirits, and inability to sleep; for which
offences, many young victims in the days of the Brighton Castle had been
committed to bed at ten o'clock in the morning.</p>
<p>Without promising obedience, but on the plea of desiring to be very quiet,
Florence disengaged herself, as soon as she could, from the ministration
of Mrs Pipchin and her attendants. Left alone, she thought of what had
happened on the staircase, at first in doubt of its reality; then with
tears; then with an indescribable and terrible alarm, like that she had
felt the night before.</p>
<p>She determined not to go to bed until Edith returned, and if she could not
speak to her, at least to be sure that she was safe at home. What
indistinct and shadowy dread moved Florence to this resolution, she did
not know, and did not dare to think. She only knew that until Edith came
back, there was no repose for her aching head or throbbing heart.</p>
<p>The evening deepened into night; midnight came; no Edith.</p>
<p>Florence could not read, or rest a moment. She paced her own room, opened
the door and paced the staircase-gallery outside, looked out of window on
the night, listened to the wind blowing and the rain falling, sat down and
watched the faces in the fire, got up and watched the moon flying like a
storm-driven ship through the sea of clouds.</p>
<p>All the house was gone to bed, except two servants who were waiting the
return of their mistress, downstairs.</p>
<p>One o'clock. The carriages that rumbled in the distance, turned away, or
stopped short, or went past; the silence gradually deepened, and was more
and more rarely broken, save by a rush of wind or sweep of rain. Two
o'clock. No Edith!</p>
<p>Florence, more agitated, paced her room; and paced the gallery outside;
and looked out at the night, blurred and wavy with the raindrops on the
glass, and the tears in her own eyes; and looked up at the hurry in the
sky, so different from the repose below, and yet so tranquil and solitary.
Three o'clock! There was a terror in every ash that dropped out of the
fire. No Edith yet.</p>
<p>More and more agitated, Florence paced her room, and paced the gallery,
and looked out at the moon with a new fancy of her likeness to a pale
fugitive hurrying away and hiding her guilty face. Four struck! Five! No
Edith yet.</p>
<p>But now there was some cautious stir in the house; and Florence found that
Mrs Pipchin had been awakened by one of those who sat up, had risen and
had gone down to her father's door. Stealing lower down the stairs, and
observing what passed, she saw her father come out in his morning gown,
and start when he was told his wife had not come home. He dispatched a
messenger to the stables to inquire whether the coachman was there; and
while the man was gone, dressed himself very hurriedly.</p>
<p>The man came back, in great haste, bringing the coachman with him, who
said he had been at home and in bed, since ten o'clock. He had driven his
mistress to her old house in Brook Street, where she had been met by Mr
Carker—</p>
<p>Florence stood upon the very spot where she had seen him coming down.
Again she shivered with the nameless terror of that sight, and had hardly
steadiness enough to hear and understand what followed.—Who had told
him, the man went on to say, that his mistress would not want the carriage
to go home in; and had dismissed him.</p>
<p>She saw her father turn white in the face, and heard him ask in a quick,
trembling voice, for Mrs Dombey's maid. The whole house was roused; for
she was there, in a moment, very pale too, and speaking incoherently.</p>
<p>She said she had dressed her mistress early—full two hours before
she went out—and had been told, as she often was, that she would not
be wanted at night. She had just come from her mistress's rooms, but—</p>
<p>'But what! what was it?' Florence heard her father demand like a madman.</p>
<p>'But the inner dressing-room was locked and the key gone.'</p>
<p>Her father seized a candle that was flaming on the ground—someone
had put it down there, and forgotten it—and came running upstairs
with such fury, that Florence, in her fear, had hardly time to fly before
him. She heard him striking in the door, as she ran on, with her hands
widely spread, and her hair streaming, and her face like a distracted
person's, back to her own room.</p>
<p>When the door yielded, and he rushed in, what did he see there? No one
knew. But thrown down in a costly mass upon the ground, was every ornament
she had had, since she had been his wife; every dress she had worn; and
everything she had possessed. This was the room in which he had seen, in
yonder mirror, the proud face discard him. This was the room in which he
had wondered, idly, how these things would look when he should see them
next!</p>
<p>Heaping them back into the drawers, and locking them up in a rage of
haste, he saw some papers on the table. The deed of settlement he had
executed on their marriage, and a letter. He read that she was gone. He
read that he was dishonoured. He read that she had fled, upon her shameful
wedding-day, with the man whom he had chosen for her humiliation; and he
tore out of the room, and out of the house, with a frantic idea of finding
her yet, at the place to which she had been taken, and beating all trace
of beauty out of the triumphant face with his bare hand.</p>
<p>Florence, not knowing what she did, put on a shawl and bonnet, in a dream
of running through the streets until she found Edith, and then clasping
her in her arms, to save and bring her back. But when she hurried out upon
the staircase, and saw the frightened servants going up and down with
lights, and whispering together, and falling away from her father as he
passed down, she awoke to a sense of her own powerlessness; and hiding in
one of the great rooms that had been made gorgeous for this, felt as if
her heart would burst with grief.</p>
<p>Compassion for her father was the first distinct emotion that made head
against the flood of sorrow which overwhelmed her. Her constant nature
turned to him in his distress, as fervently and faithfully, as if, in his
prosperity, he had been the embodiment of that idea which had gradually
become so faint and dim. Although she did not know, otherwise than through
the suggestions of a shapeless fear, the full extent of his calamity, he
stood before her, wronged and deserted; and again her yearning love
impelled her to his side.</p>
<p>He was not long away; for Florence was yet weeping in the great room and
nourishing these thoughts, when she heard him come back. He ordered the
servants to set about their ordinary occupations, and went into his own
apartment, where he trod so heavily that she could hear him walking up and
down from end to end.</p>
<p>Yielding at once to the impulse of her affection, timid at all other
times, but bold in its truth to him in his adversity, and undaunted by
past repulse, Florence, dressed as she was, hurried downstairs. As she set
her light foot in the hall, he came out of his room. She hastened towards
him unchecked, with her arms stretched out, and crying 'Oh dear, dear
Papa!' as if she would have clasped him round the neck.</p>
<p>And so she would have done. But in his frenzy, he lifted up his cruel arm,
and struck her, crosswise, with that heaviness, that she tottered on the
marble floor; and as he dealt the blow, he told her what Edith was, and
bade her follow her, since they had always been in league.</p>
<p>She did not sink down at his feet; she did not shut out the sight of him
with her trembling hands; she did not weep; she did not utter one word of
reproach. But she looked at him, and a cry of desolation issued from her
heart. For as she looked, she saw him murdering that fond idea to which
she had held in spite of him. She saw his cruelty, neglect, and hatred
dominant above it, and stamping it down. She saw she had no father upon
earth, and ran out, orphaned, from his house.</p>
<p>Ran out of his house. A moment, and her hand was on the lock, the cry was
on her lips, his face was there, made paler by the yellow candles hastily
put down and guttering away, and by the daylight coming in above the door.
Another moment, and the close darkness of the shut-up house (forgotten to
be opened, though it was long since day) yielded to the unexpected glare
and freedom of the morning; and Florence, with her head bent down to hide
her agony of tears, was in the streets.</p>
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