<SPAN name="chap32"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER XXXII </h3>
<p>In the home-light.</p>
<p>It was a scene—glowing almost as those evening pictures at Longfield.
Those pictures, photographed on memory by the summer sun of our lives,
and which no paler after-sun could have power to reproduce. Nothing
earthly is ever reproduced in the same form. I suppose Heaven meant it
to be so; that in the perpetual progression of our existence we should
be reconciled to loss, and taught that change itself is but another
form for aspiration. Aspiration which never can rest, or ought to
rest, in anything short of the One absolute Perfection—the One
all-satisfying Good "IN WHOM IS NO VARIABLENESS, NEITHER SHADOW OF
TURNING."</p>
<p>I say this, to excuse myself for thoughts, which at times made me
grave—even in the happy home-light of John's study; where, for several
weeks after the last incident I have recorded, the family were in the
habit of gathering every evening. For poor Guy was a captive. The
"mere trifle" had turned out to be a sprained foot, which happening to
a tall and strong young man became serious. He bore his imprisonment
restlessly enough at first, but afterwards grew more reconciled—took
to reading, drawing, and society—and even began to interest himself in
the pursuits of his sister Maud, who every morning had her lessons in
the study.</p>
<p>Miss Silver first proposed this. She had evinced more feeling than was
usual to her, since Guy's accident; showed him many little feminine
kindnesses—out of compunction, it seemed; and altogether was much
improved. Of evenings, as now, she always made one of the "young
people," who were generally grouped together round Guy's sofa—Edwin,
Walter, and little Maud. The father and mother sat opposite—as usual,
side by side, he with his newspaper, she with her work. Or sometimes,
falling into pleasant idleness, they would slip hand in hand, and sit
talking to one another in an under-tone, or silently and smilingly
watch the humours of their children.</p>
<p>For me, I generally took to my nook in the chimney-corner—it was a
very ancient fire-place, with settles on each side, and dogs instead of
a grate, upon which many a faggot hissed and crackled its merry brief
life away. Nothing could be more cheery and comfortable than this
old-fashioned, low-roofed room, three sides of which were peopled with
books—all the books which John had gathered up during the course of
his life. Perhaps it was their long-familiar, friendly faces which
made this his favourite room, his own especial domain. But he did not
keep it tabooed from his family; he liked to have them about him, even
in his studious hours.</p>
<p>So, of evenings, we all sat together as now, each busy, and none
interrupting the rest. At intervals, flashes of talk or laughter broke
out, chiefly from Guy, Walter, or Maud, when Edwin would look up from
his everlasting book, and even the grave governess relax into a smile.
Since she had learnt to smile, it became more and more apparent how
very handsome Miss Silver was. "Handsome" is, I think, the fittest
word for her; that correctness of form and colour which attracts the
eye chiefly, and perhaps the eye of men rather than of women;—at
least, Mrs. Halifax could never be brought to see it. But then her
peculiar taste was for slender, small brunettes, like Grace Oldtower;
whereas Miss Silver was large and fair.</p>
<p>Fair, in every sense, most decidedly. And now that she evidently began
to pay a little more attention to her dress and her looks, we found out
that she was also young.</p>
<p>"Only twenty-one to-day, Guy says," I remarked one day to Ursula.</p>
<p>"How did Guy know it?"</p>
<p>"I believe he discovered the wonderful secret from Maud."</p>
<p>"Maud and her brother Guy have grown wonderful friends since his
illness. Do you not think so?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I found the two of them—and even Miss Silver—as merry as
possible, when I came into the study this morning."</p>
<p>"Did you?" said the mother, with an involuntary glance at the group
opposite.</p>
<p>There was nothing particular to observe. They all sat in most harmless
quietude, Edwin reading, Maud at his feet, playing with the cat, Miss
Silver busy at a piece of that delicate muslin-work with which young
women then used to ornament their gowns. Guy had been drawing a
pattern from it, and now leant back upon his sofa, shading off the fire
with his hand, and from behind it gazing, as I had often seen him gaze
lately, with a curious intentness—at the young governess.</p>
<p>"Guy," said his mother (and Guy started), "what were you thinking
about?"</p>
<p>"Oh, nothing; that is—" here, by some accident, Miss Silver quitted
the room. "Mother, come over here, I want your opinion. There, sit
down—though it's nothing of the least importance."</p>
<p>Nevertheless, it was with some hesitation that he brought out the
mighty question, namely, that it was Miss Silver's birthday to-day;
that he thought we ought to remember it, and give her some trifle as a
present.</p>
<p>"And I was considering this large Flora I ordered from London,—she
would like it extremely: she is so fond of botany."</p>
<p>"What do you know about botany?" said Edwin, sharply and rather
irrelevantly as it seemed, till I remembered how he plumed himself upon
his knowledge of this science, and how he had persisted in taking Maud,
and her governess also, long wintry walks across the country, "in order
to study the cryptogamia."</p>
<p>Guy vouchsafed no answer to his brother; he was too much absorbed in
turning over the pages of the beautiful Flora on his knee.</p>
<p>"What do you say, all of you? Father, don't you think she would like
it? Then, suppose you give it to her?"</p>
<p>At this inopportune moment Miss Silver returned.</p>
<p>She might have been aware that she was under discussion—at least so
much of discussion as was implied by Guy's eager words and his mother's
silence, for she looked around her uneasily, and was about to retire.</p>
<p>"Do not go," Guy exclaimed, anxiously.</p>
<p>"Pray do not," his mother added; "we were just talking about you, Miss
Silver. My son hopes you will accept this book from him, and from us
all, with all kind birthday wishes."</p>
<p>And rising, with a little more gravity than was her wont, Mrs. Halifax
touched the girl's forehead with her lips, and gave her the present.</p>
<p>Miss Silver coloured, and drew back. "You are very good, but indeed I
would much rather not have it."</p>
<p>"Why so? Do you dislike gifts, or this gift in particular?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no; certainly not."</p>
<p>"Then," said John, as he too came forward and shook hands with her with
an air of hearty kindness, "pray take the book. Do let us show how
much we respect you; how entirely we regard you as one of the family."</p>
<p>Guy turned a look of grateful pleasure to his father; but Miss Silver,
colouring more than ever, still held back.</p>
<p>"No, I cannot; indeed I cannot."</p>
<p>"Why can you not?"</p>
<p>"For several reasons."</p>
<p>"Give me only one of them—as much as can be expected from a young
lady," said Mr. Halifax, good-humouredly.</p>
<p>"Mr. Guy ordered the Flora for himself. I must not allow him to
renounce his pleasure for me."</p>
<p>"It would not be renouncing it if YOU had it," returned the lad, in a
low tone, at which once more his younger brother looked up, angrily.</p>
<p>"What folly about nothing! how can one read with such a clatter going
on?"</p>
<p>"You old book-worm! you care for nothing and nobody but yourself," Guy
answered, laughing. But Edwin, really incensed, rose and settled
himself in the far corner of the room.</p>
<p>"Edwin is right," said the father, in a tone which indicated his
determination to end the discussion, a tone which even Miss Silver
obeyed. "My dear young lady, I hope you will like your book; Guy,
write her name in it at once."</p>
<p>Guy willingly obeyed, but was a good while over the task; his mother
came and looked over his shoulder.</p>
<p>"Louisa Eugenie—how did you know that, Guy? Louisa Eugenie Sil—is
that your name, my dear?"</p>
<p>The question, simple as it was, seemed to throw the governess into much
confusion, even agitation. At last, she drew herself up with the old
repulsive gesture, which of late had been slowly wearing off.</p>
<p>"No—I will not deceive you any longer. My right name is Louise
Eugenie D'Argent."</p>
<p>Mrs. Halifax started. "Are you a Frenchwoman?"</p>
<p>"On my father's side—yes."</p>
<p>"Why did you not tell me so?"</p>
<p>"Because, if you remember, at our first interview, you said no
Frenchwoman should educate your daughter. And I was
homeless—friendless."</p>
<p>"Better starve than tell a falsehood," cried the mother, indignantly.</p>
<p>"I told no falsehood. You never asked me of my parentage."</p>
<p>"Nay," said John, interfering, "you must not speak in that manner to
Mrs. Halifax. Why did you renounce your father's name?"</p>
<p>"Because English people would have scouted my father's daughter. You
knew him—everybody knew him—he was D'Argent the Jacobin—D'Argent the
Bonnet Rouge."</p>
<p>She threw out these words defiantly, and quitted the room.</p>
<p>"This is a dreadful discovery. Edwin, you have seen most of her—did
you ever imagine—"</p>
<p>"I knew it, mother," said Edwin, without lifting his eyes from his
book. "After all, French or English, it makes no difference."</p>
<p>"I should think not, indeed!" cried Guy, angrily. "Whatever her father
is, if any one dared to think the worse of her—"</p>
<p>"Hush!—till another time," said the father, with a glance at Maud,
who, with wide-open eyes, in which the tears were just springing, had
been listening to all these revelations about her governess.</p>
<p>But Maud's tears were soon stopped, as well as this painful
conversation, by the entrance of our daily, or rather nightly, visitor
for these six weeks past, Lord Ravenel. His presence, always welcome,
was a great relief now. We never discussed family affairs before
people. The boys began to talk to Lord Ravenel: and Maud took her
privileged place on a footstool beside him. From the first sight she
had been his favourite, he said, because of her resemblance to Muriel.
But I think, more than any fancied likeness to that sweet lost face,
which he never spoke of without tenderness inexpressible, there was
something in Maud's buoyant youth—just between childhood and girlhood,
having the charms of one and the immunities of the other—which was
especially attractive to this man, who, at three-and-thirty, found life
a weariness and a burthen—at least, he said so.</p>
<p>Life was never either weary or burthensome in our house—not even
to-night, though our friend found us less lively than usual—though
John maintained more than his usual silence, and Mrs. Halifax fell into
troubled reveries. Guy and Edwin, both considerably excited, argued
and contradicted one another more warmly than even the Beechwood
liberty of speech allowed. For Miss Silver, she did not appear again.</p>
<p>Lord Ravenel seemed to take these slight desagremens very calmly. He
stayed his customary time, smiling languidly as ever at the boys'
controversies, or listening with a half-pleased, half-melancholy
laziness to Maud's gay prattle, his eye following her about the room
with the privileged tenderness that twenty years' seniority allows a
man to feel and show towards a child. At his wonted hour he rode away,
sighingly contrasting pleasant Beechwood with dreary and solitary
Luxmore.</p>
<p>After his departure we did not again close round the fire. Maud
vanished; the younger boys also; Guy settled himself on his sofa,
having first taken the pains to limp across the room and fetch the
Flora, which Edwin had carefully stowed away in the book-case. Then
making himself comfortable, as the pleasure-loving lad liked well
enough to do, he lay dreamily gazing at the title-page, where was
written her name, and "From Guy Halifax, with—"</p>
<p>"What are you going to add, my son?"</p>
<p>He, glancing up at his mother, made her no answer, and hastily closed
the book.</p>
<p>She looked hurt; but, saying nothing more, began moving about the room,
putting things in order before retiring. John sat in the
arm-chair—meditative. She asked him what he was thinking about?</p>
<p>"About that man, Jacques D'Argent."</p>
<p>"You have heard of him, then?"</p>
<p>"Few had not, twenty years ago. He was one of the most 'blatant
beasts' of the Reign of Terror. A fellow without honesty, conscience,
or even common decency."</p>
<p>"And that man's daughter we have had in our house, teaching our
innocent child!"</p>
<p>Alarm and disgust were written on every feature of the mother's face.
It was scarcely surprising. Now that the ferment which had convulsed
society in our younger days was settling down,—though still we were
far from that ultimate calm which enables posterity to judge fully and
fairly such a remarkable historical crisis as the French
Revolution,—most English people looked back with horror on the extreme
opinions of that time. If Mrs. Halifax had a weak point, it was her
prejudice against anything French or Jacobinical. Partly, from that
tendency to moral conservatism which in most persons, especially women,
strengthens as old age advances; partly, I believe, from the terrible
warning given by the fate of one—of whom for years we had never
heard—whose very name was either unknown to, or forgotten by, our
children.</p>
<p>"John, can't you speak? Don't you see the frightful danger?"</p>
<p>"Love, try and be calmer."</p>
<p>"How can I? Remember—remember Caroline."</p>
<p>"Nay, we are not talking of her, but of a girl whom we know, and have
had good opportunity of knowing. A girl, who, whatever may have been
her antecedents, has lived for six months blamelessly in our house."</p>
<p>"Would to Heaven she had never entered it! But it is not too late. She
may leave—she shall leave, immediately."</p>
<p>"Mother!" burst out Guy. Never since she bore him had his mother heard
her name uttered in such a tone.</p>
<p>She stood petrified.</p>
<p>"Mother, you are unjust, heartless, cruel. She shall NOT leave; she
shall NOT, I say!"</p>
<p>"Guy, how dare you speak to your mother in that way?"</p>
<p>"Yes, father, I dare. I'll dare anything rather than—"</p>
<p>"Stop. Mind what you are saying—or you may repent it."</p>
<p>And Mr. Halifax, speaking in that low tone to which his voice fell in
serious displeasure, laid a heavy hand on the lad's shoulder. Father
and son exchanged fiery glances. The mother, terrified, rushed between
them.</p>
<p>"Don't, John! Don't be angry with him. He could not help it,—my poor
boy!"</p>
<p>At her piteous look Guy and his father both drew back. John put his
arm round his wife, and made her sit down. She was trembling
exceedingly.</p>
<p>"You see, Guy, how wrong you have been. How could you wound your
mother so?"</p>
<p>"I did not mean to wound her," the lad answered. "I only wished to
prevent her from being unjust and unkind to one to whom she must show
all justice and kindness. One whom I respect, esteem—whom I LOVE."</p>
<p>"Love!"</p>
<p>"Yes, mother! Yes, father! I love her. I intend to marry her."</p>
<p>Guy said this with an air of quiet determination, very different from
the usual impetuosity of his character. It was easy to perceive that a
great change had come over him; that in this passion, the silent growth
of which no one had suspected, he was most thoroughly in earnest. From
the boy he had suddenly started up into the man; and his parents saw it.</p>
<p>They looked at him, and then mournfully at one another. The father was
the first to speak.</p>
<p>"All this is very sudden. You should have told us of it before."</p>
<p>"I did not know it myself till—till very lately," the youth answered
more softly, lowering his head and blushing.</p>
<p>"Is Miss Silver—is the lady aware of it?"</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>"That is well," said the father, after a pause. "In this silence you
have acted as an honourable lover should towards her; as a dutiful son
should act towards his parents."</p>
<p>Guy looked pleased. He stole his hand nearer his mother's, but she
neither took it nor repelled it; she seemed quite stunned.</p>
<p>At this point I noticed that Maud had crept into the room;—I sent her
out again as quickly as I could. Alas! this was the first secret that
needed to be kept from her; the first painful mystery in our happy,
happy home!</p>
<p>In any such home the "first falling in love," whether of son or
daughter, necessarily makes a great change. Greater if the former than
the latter. There is often a pitiful truth—I know not why it should
be so, but so it is—in the foolish rhyme which the mother had
laughingly said over to me this morning!</p>
<p class="poem">
"My son's my son till he gets him a wife,<br/>
My daughter's my daughter all her life."<br/></p>
<p>And when, as in this case, the son wishes to marry one whom his father
may not wholly approve, whom his mother does not heartily love, surely
the pain is deepened tenfold.</p>
<p>Those who in the dazzled vision of youth see only the beauty and
splendour of love—first love, who deem it comprises the whole of life,
beginning, aim, and end—may marvel that I, who have been young and now
am old, see as I saw that night, not only the lover's but the parents'
side of the question. I felt overwhelmed with sadness, as, viewing the
three, I counted up in all its bearings and consequences, near and
remote, this attachment of poor Guy's.</p>
<p>"Well, father," he said at last, guessing by intuition that the
father's heart would best understand his own.</p>
<p>"Well, my son," John answered, sadly.</p>
<p>"YOU were young once."</p>
<p>"So I was;" with a tender glance upon the lad's heated and excited
countenance. "Do not suppose I cannot feel with you. Still, I wish
you had been less precipitate."</p>
<p>"You were little older than I am when you married?"</p>
<p>"But my marriage was rather different from this projected one of yours.
I knew your mother well, and she knew me. Both of us had been
tried—by trouble which we shared together, by absence, by many and
various cares. We chose one another, not hastily or blindly, but with
free will and open eyes. No, Guy," he added, speaking earnestly and
softly, "mine was no sudden fancy, no frantic passion. I honoured your
mother above all women. I loved her as my own soul."</p>
<p>"So do I love Louise. I would die for her any day."</p>
<p>At the son's impetuosity the father smiled; not incredulously, only
sadly.</p>
<p>All this while the mother had sat motionless, never uttering a sound.
Suddenly, hearing a footstep and a light knock at the door, she darted
forward and locked it, crying, in a voice that one could hardly have
recognized as hers—</p>
<p>"No admittance! Go away."</p>
<p>A note was pushed in under the door. Mrs. Halifax picked it up—opened
it, read it mechanically, and sat down again; taking no notice, even
when Guy, catching sight of the hand-writing, eagerly seized the paper.</p>
<p>It was merely a line, stating Miss Silver's wish to leave Beechwood
immediately; signed, with her full name—her right name—"Louise
Eugenie D'Argent."</p>
<p>A postscript added: "Your silence I shall take as permission to
depart; and shall be gone early to-morrow."</p>
<p>"To-morrow! Gone to-morrow! And she does not even know that—that I
love her. Mother, you have ruined my happiness. I will never forgive
you—never!"</p>
<p>Never forgive his mother! His mother, who had borne him, nursed him,
reared him; who had loved him with that love—like none other in the
world—the love of a woman for her firstborn son, all these twenty-one
years!</p>
<p>It was hard. I think the most passionate lover, in reasonable moments,
would allow that it was hard. No marvel that even her husband's clasp
could not remove the look of heart-broken, speechless suffering which
settled stonily down in Ursula's face, as she watched her boy—storming
about, furious with uncontrollable passion and pain.</p>
<p>At last, mother-like, she forgot the passion in pity of the pain.</p>
<p>"He is not strong yet; he will do himself harm. Let me go to him!
John, let me!" Her husband released her.</p>
<p>Faintly, with a weak, uncertain walk, she went up to Guy and touched
his arm.</p>
<p>"You must keep quiet, or you will be ill. I cannot have my son
ill—not for any girl. Come, sit down—here, beside your mother."</p>
<p>She was obeyed. Looking into her eyes, and seeing no anger there,
nothing but grief and love, the young man's right spirit came into him
again.</p>
<p>"O mother, mother, forgive me! I am so miserable—so miserable."</p>
<p>He laid his head on her shoulder. She kissed and clasped him
close—her boy who never could be wholly hers again, who had learned to
love some one else dearer than his mother.</p>
<p>After a while she said, "Father, shake hands with Guy. Tell him that
we forgive his being angry with us; that perhaps, some day—"</p>
<p>She stopped, uncertain as to the father's mind, or seeking strength for
her own.</p>
<p>"Some day," John continued, "Guy will find out that we can have nothing
in the world—except our children's good—so dear to us as their
happiness."</p>
<p>Guy looked up, beaming with hope and joy. "O father! O mother! will
you, indeed—"</p>
<p>"We will indeed say nothing," the father answered, smiling; "nothing,
until to-morrow. Then we will all three talk the matter quietly over,
and see what can be done."</p>
<p>Of course I knew to a certainty the conclusion they would come to.</p>
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