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<h3>CHAPTER XCII.</h3>
<h4>TREVELYAN DISCOURSES ON LIFE.<br/> </h4>
<p>Stanbury made his journey without pause or hindrance till he reached
Florence, and as the train for Siena made it necessary that he should
remain there for four or five hours, he went to an inn, and dressed
and washed himself, and had a meal, and was then driven to Mr.
Spalding's house. He found the American Minister at home, and was
received with cordiality; but Mr. Spalding could tell him little or
nothing about Trevelyan. They went up to Mrs. Spalding's room, and
Hugh was told by her that she had seen Mrs. Trevelyan once since her
niece's marriage, and that then she had represented her husband as
being very feeble. Hugh, in the midst of his troubles, was amused by
a second and a third, perhaps by a fourth, reference to "Lady
Peterborough." Mrs. Spalding's latest tidings as to the Trevelyans
had been received through "Lady Peterborough" from Nora Rowley. "Lady
Peterborough" was at the present moment at Naples, but was expected
to pass north through Florence in a day or two. They, the Spaldings
themselves, were kept in Florence in this very hot weather by this
circumstance. They were going up to the Tyrolese mountains for a few
weeks as soon as "Lady Peterborough" should have left them for
England. "Lady Peterborough" would have been so happy to make Mr.
Stanbury's acquaintance, and to have heard something direct from her
friend Nora. Then Mrs. Spalding smiled archly, showing thereby that
she knew all about Hugh Stanbury and his relation to Nora Rowley.
From all which, and in accordance with the teaching which we
got,—alas, now many years ago,—from a great master on the subject,
we must conclude that poor, dear Mrs. Spalding was a snob.
Nevertheless, with all deference to the memory of that great master,
we think that Mrs. Spalding's allusions to the success in life
achieved by her niece were natural and altogether pardonable; and
that reticence on the subject,—a calculated determination to abstain
from mentioning a triumph which must have been very dear to
her,—would have betrayed on the whole a condition of mind lower than
that which she exhibited. While rank, wealth, and money are held to
be good things by all around us, let them be acknowledged as such. It
is natural that a mother should be as proud when her daughter marries
an Earl's heir as when her son becomes Senior Wrangler; and when we
meet a lady in Mrs. Spalding's condition who purposely abstains from
mentioning the name of her titled daughter, we shall be disposed to
judge harshly of the secret workings of that lady's thoughts on the
subject. We prefer the exhibition, which we feel to be natural. Mr.
Spalding got our friend by the button-hole, and was making him a
speech on the perilous condition in which Mrs. Trevelyan was placed;
but Stanbury, urged by the circumstances of his position, pulled out
his watch, pleaded the hour, and escaped.</p>
<p>He found Mrs. Trevelyan waiting for him at the station at Siena. He
would hardly have known her,—not from any alteration that was
physically personal to herself, not that she had become older in
face, or thin, or grey, or sickly,—but that the trouble of her life
had robbed her for the time of that brightness of apparel, of that
pride of feminine gear, of that sheen of high-bred womanly bearing
with which our wives and daughters are so careful to invest
themselves. She knew herself to be a wretched woman, whose work in
life now was to watch over a poor prostrate wretch, and who had
thrown behind her all ideas of grace and beauty. It was not quickly
that this condition had come upon her. She had been unhappy at
Nuncombe Putney; but unhappiness had not then told upon the outward
woman. She had been more wretched still at St. Diddulph's, and all
the outward circumstances of life in her uncle's parsonage had been
very wearisome to her; but she had striven against it all, and the
sheen and outward brightness had still been there. After that her
child had been taken from her, and the days which she had passed in
Manchester Street had been very grievous;—but even yet she had not
given way. It was not till her child had been brought back to her,
and she had seen the life which her husband was living, and that her
anger,—hot anger,—had been changed to pity, and that with pity love
had returned, it was not till this point had come in her sad life
that her dress became always black and sombre, that a veil habitually
covered her face, that a bonnet took the place of the jaunty hat that
she had worn, and that the prettinesses of her life were lain aside.
"It is very good of you to come," she said; "very good. I hardly knew
what to do, I was so wretched. On the day that I sent he was so bad
that I was obliged to do something." Stanbury, of course, inquired
after Trevelyan's health, as they were being driven up to Mrs.
Trevelyan's lodgings. On the day on which she had sent the telegram
her husband had again been furiously angry with her. She had
interfered, or had endeavoured to interfere, in some arrangements as
to his health and comfort, and he had turned upon her with an order
that the child should be at once sent back to him, and that she
should immediately quit Siena. "When I said that Louey could not be
sent,—and who could send a child into such keeping,—he told me that
I was the basest liar that ever broke a promise, and the vilest
traitor that had ever returned evil for good. I was never to come to
him again,—never; and the gate of the house would be closed against
me if I appeared there."</p>
<p>On the next day she had gone again, however, and had seen him, and
had visited him on every day since. Nothing further had been said
about the child, and he had now become almost too weak for violent
anger. "I told him you were coming, and though he would not say so, I
think he is glad of it. He expects you to-morrow."</p>
<p>"I will go this evening, if he will let me."</p>
<p>"Not to-night. I think he goes to bed almost as the sun sets. I am
never there myself after four or five in the afternoon. I told him
that you should be there to-morrow,—alone. I have hired a little
carriage, and you can take it. He said specially that I was not to
come with you. Papa goes certainly on next Saturday?" It was a
Saturday now,—this day on which Stanbury had arrived at Siena.</p>
<p>"He leaves town on Friday."</p>
<p>"You must make him believe that. Do not tell him suddenly, but bring
it in by degrees. He thinks that I am deceiving him. He would go back
if he knew that papa were gone."</p>
<p>They spent a long evening together, and Stanbury learned all that
Mrs. Trevelyan could tell him of her husband's state. There was no
doubt, she said, that his reason was affected; but she thought the
state of his mind was diseased in a ratio the reverse of that of his
body, and that when he was weakest in health, then were his ideas the
most clear and rational. He never now mentioned Colonel Osborne's
name, but would refer to the affairs of the last two years as though
they had been governed by an inexorable Fate which had utterly
destroyed his happiness without any fault on his part. "You may be
sure," she said, "that I never accuse him. Even when he says terrible
things of me,—which he does,—I never excuse myself. I do not think
I should answer a word, if he called me the vilest thing on earth."
Before they parted for the night many questions were of course asked
about Nora, and Hugh described the condition in which he and she
stood to each other. "Papa has consented, then?"</p>
<p>"Yes,—at four o'clock in the morning,—just as I was leaving them."</p>
<p>"And when is it to be?"</p>
<p>"Nothing has been settled, and I do not as yet know where she will go
to when they leave London. I think she will visit Monkhams when the
Glascock people return to England."</p>
<p>"What an episode in life,—to go and see the place, when it might all
now have been hers!"</p>
<p>"I suppose I ought to feel dreadfully ashamed of myself for having
marred such promotion," said Hugh.</p>
<p>"Nora is such a singular girl;—so firm, so headstrong, so good, and
so self-reliant that she will do as well with a poor man as she would
have done with a rich. Shall I confess to you that I did wish that
she should accept Mr. Glascock, and that I pressed it on her very
strongly? You will not be angry with me?"</p>
<p>"I am only the more proud of her;—and of myself."</p>
<p>"When she was told of all that he had to give in the way of wealth
and rank, she took the bit between her teeth and would not be turned
an inch. Of course she was in love."</p>
<p>"I hope she may never regret it;—that is all."</p>
<p>"She must change her nature first. Everything she sees at Monkhams
will make her stronger in her choice. With all her girlish ways, she
is like a rock;—nothing can move her."</p>
<p>Early on the next morning Hugh started alone for Casalunga, having
first, however, seen Mrs. Trevelyan. He took out with him certain
little things for the sick man's table;—as to which, however, he was
cautioned to say not a word to the sick man himself. And it was
arranged that he should endeavour to fix a day for Trevelyan's return
to England. That was to be the one object in view. "If we could get
him to England," she said, "he and I would, at any rate, be together,
and gradually he would be taught to submit himself to advice." Before
ten in the morning, Stanbury was walking up the hill to the house,
and wondering at the dreary, hot, hopeless desolation of the spot. It
seemed to him that no one could live alone in such a place, in such
weather, without being driven to madness. The soil was parched and
dusty, as though no drop of rain had fallen there for months. The
lizards, glancing in and out of the broken walls, added to the
appearance of heat. The vegetation itself was of a faded yellowish
green, as though the glare of the sun had taken the fresh colour out
of it. There was a noise of grasshoppers and a hum of flies in the
air, hardly audible, but all giving evidence of the heat. Not a human
voice was to be heard, nor the sound of a human foot, and there was
no shelter; but the sun blazed down full upon everything. He took off
his hat, and rubbed his head with his handkerchief as he struck the
door with his stick. Oh God, to what misery had a little folly
brought two human beings who had had every blessing that the world
could give within their reach!</p>
<p>In a few minutes he was conducted through the house, and found
Trevelyan seated in a chair under the verandah which looked down upon
the olive trees. He did not even get up from his seat, but put out
his left hand and welcomed his old friend. "Stanbury," he said, "I am
glad to see you,—for auld lang syne's sake. When I found out this
retreat, I did not mean to have friends round me here. I wanted to
try what solitude was;—and, by heaven, I've tried it!" He was
dressed in a bright Italian dressing-gown or woollen
paletot,—Italian, as having been bought in Italy, though, doubtless,
it had come from France,—and on his feet he had green worked
slippers, and on his head a brocaded cap. He had made but little
other preparation for his friend in the way of dressing. His long
dishevelled hair came down over his neck, and his beard covered his
face. Beneath his dressing-gown he had on a night-shirt and drawers,
and was as dirty in appearance as he was gaudy in colours. "Sit down
and let us two moralise," he said. "I spend my life here doing
nothing,—nothing,—nothing; while you cudgel your brain from day to
day to mislead the British public. Which of us two is taking the
nearest road to the devil?"</p>
<p>Stanbury seated himself in a second arm-chair, which there was there
in the verandah, and looked as carefully as he dared to do at his
friend. There could be no mistake as to the restless gleam of that
eye. And then the affected air of ease, and the would-be cynicism,
and the pretence of false motives, all told the same story. "They
used to tell us," said Stanbury, "that idleness is the root of all
evil."</p>
<p>"They have been telling us since the world began so many lies, that I
for one have determined never to believe anything again. Labour leads
to greed, and greed to selfishness, and selfishness to treachery, and
treachery straight to the devil,—straight to the devil. Ha, my
friend, all your leading articles won't lead you out of that. What's
the news? Who's alive? Who dead? Who in? Who out? What think you of a
man who has not seen a newspaper for two months; and who holds no
conversation with the world further than is needed for the cooking of
his polenta and the cooling of his modest wine-flask?"</p>
<p>"You see your wife sometimes," said Stanbury.</p>
<p>"My wife! Now, my friend, let us drop that subject. Of all topics of
talk it is the most distressing to man in general, and I own that I
am no exception to the lot. Wives, Stanbury, are an evil, more or
less necessary to humanity, and I own to being one who has not
escaped. The world must be populated, though for what reason one does
not see. I have helped,—to the extent of one male bantling; and if
you are one who consider population desirable, I will express my
regret that I should have done no more."</p>
<p>It was very difficult to force Trevelyan out of this humour, and it
was not till Stanbury had risen apparently to take his leave that he
found it possible to say a word as to his mission there. "Don't you
think you would be happier at home?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Where is my home, Sir Knight of the midnight pen?"</p>
<p>"England is your home, Trevelyan."</p>
<p>"No, sir; England was my home once; but I have taken the liberty
accorded to me by my Creator of choosing a new country. Italy is now
my nation, and Casalunga is my home."</p>
<p>"Every tie you have in the world is in England."</p>
<p>"I have no tie, sir;—no tie anywhere. It has been my study to untie
all the ties; and, by Jove, I have succeeded. Look at me here. I have
got rid of the trammels pretty well,—haven't I?—have unshackled
myself, and thrown off the paddings, and the wrappings, and the
swaddling clothes. I have got rid of the conventionalities, and can
look Nature straight in the face. I don't even want the Daily Record,
Stanbury;—think of that!"</p>
<p>Stanbury paced the length of the terrace, and then stopped for a
moment down under the blaze of the sun, in order that he might think
how to address this philosopher. "Have you heard," he said at last,
"that I am going to marry your sister-in-law, Nora Rowley?"</p>
<p>"Then there will be two more full-grown fools in the world certainly,
and probably an infinity of young fools coming afterwards. Excuse me,
Stanbury, but this solitude is apt to make one plain-spoken."</p>
<p>"I got Sir Marmaduke's sanction the day before I left."</p>
<p>"Then you got the sanction of an illiterate, ignorant,
self-sufficient, and most contemptible old man; and much good may it
do you."</p>
<p>"Let him be what he may, I was glad to have it. Most probably I shall
never see him again. He sails from Southampton for the Mandarins on
this day week."</p>
<p>"He does,—does he? May the devil sail along with him!—that is all I
say. And does my much-respected and ever-to-be-beloved mother-in-law
sail with him?"</p>
<p>"They all return together,—except Nora."</p>
<p>"Who remains to comfort you? I hope you may be comforted;—that is
all. Don't be too particular. Let her choose her own friends, and go
her own gait, and have her own way, and do you be blind and deaf and
dumb and properly submissive; and it may be that she'll give you your
breakfast and dinner in your own house,—so long as your hours don't
interfere with her pleasures. If she should even urge you beside
yourself by her vanity, folly, and disobedience,—so that at last you
are driven to express your feeling,—no doubt she will come to you
after a while and tell you with the sweetest condescension that she
forgives you. When she has been out of your house for a twelvemonth
or more, she will offer to come back to you, and to forget
everything,—on condition that you will do exactly as she bids you
for the future."</p>
<p>This attempt at satire, so fatuous, so plain, so false, together with
the would-be jaunty manner of the speaker, who, however, failed
repeatedly in his utterances from sheer physical exhaustion, was
excessively painful to Stanbury. What can one do at any time with a
madman? "I mentioned my marriage," said he, "to prove my right to
have an additional interest in your wife's happiness."</p>
<p>"You are quite welcome, whether you marry the other one or
not;—welcome to take any interest you please. I have got beyond all
that, Stanbury;—yes, by Jove, a long way beyond all that."</p>
<p>"You have not got beyond loving your wife, and your child,
Trevelyan?"</p>
<p>"Upon my word, yes;—I think I have. There may be a grain of weakness
left, you know. But what have you to do with my love for my wife?"</p>
<p>"I was thinking more just now of her love for you. There she is at
Siena. You cannot mean that she should remain there?"</p>
<p>"Certainly not. What the deuce is there to keep her there?"</p>
<p>"Come with her then to England."</p>
<p>"Why should I go to England with her? Because you bid me, or because
she wishes it,—or simply because England is the most damnable,
puritanical, God-forgotten, and stupid country on the face of the
globe? I know no other reason for going to England. Will you take a
glass of wine, Stanbury?" Hugh declined the offer. "You will excuse
me," continued Trevelyan; "I always take a glass of wine at this
hour." Then he rose from his chair, and helped himself from a
cupboard that was near at hand. Stanbury, watching him as he filled
his glass, could see that his legs were hardly strong enough to carry
him. And Stanbury saw, moreover, that the unfortunate man took two
glasses out of the bottle. "Go to England indeed. I do not think much
of this country; but it is, at any rate, better than England."</p>
<p>Hugh perceived that he could do nothing more on the present occasion.
Having heard so much of Trevelyan's debility, he had been astonished
to hear the man speak with so much volubility and attempts at
high-flown spirit. Before he had taken the wine he had almost sunk
into his chair, but still he had continued to speak with the same
fluent would-be cynicism. "I will come and see you again," said Hugh,
getting up to take his departure.</p>
<p>"You might as well save your trouble, Stanbury; but you can come if
you please, you know. If you should find yourself locked out, you
won't be angry. A hermit such as I am must assume privileges."</p>
<p>"I won't be angry," said Hugh, good humouredly.</p>
<p>"I can smell what you are come about," said Trevelyan. "You and my
wife want to take me away from here among you, and I think it best to
stay here. I don't want much for myself, and why should I not live
here? My wife can remain at Siena if she pleases, or she can go to
England if she pleases. She must give me the same liberty;—the same
liberty,—the same liberty." After this he fell a-coughing violently,
and Stanbury thought it better to leave him. He had been at Casalunga
about two hours, and did not seem as yet to have done any good. He
had been astonished both by Trevelyan's weakness, and by his
strength; by his folly, and by his sharpness. Hitherto he could see
no way for his future sister-in-law out of her troubles.</p>
<p>When he was with her at Siena, he described what had taken place with
all the accuracy in his power. "He has intermittent days," said
Emily. "To-morrow he will be in quite another frame of
mind,—melancholy, silent perhaps, and self-reproachful. We will both
go to-morrow, and we shall find probably that he has forgotten
altogether what has passed to-day between you and him."</p>
<p>So their plans for the morrow were formed.</p>
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