<SPAN name="V2_CIV" id="V2_CIV"></SPAN>
<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
<p>Is it not unaccountable that, in the midst of all my increased veneration
for my patron, the first tumult of my emotion was scarcely subsided, before
the old question that had excited my conjectures recurred to my mind, Was he
the murderer? It was a kind of fatal impulse, that seemed destined to hurry
me to my destruction. I did not wonder at the disturbance that was given to
Mr. Falkland by any allusion, however distant, to this fatal affair. That
was as completely accounted for from the consideration of his excessive
sensibility in matters of honour, as it would have been upon the supposition
of the most atrocious guilt. Knowing, as he did, that such a charge had once
been connected with his name, he would of course be perpetually uneasy, and
suspect some latent insinuation at every possible opportunity. He would
doubt and fear, lest every man with whom he conversed harboured the foulest
suspicion against him. In my case he found that I was in possession of some
information, more than he was aware of, without its being possible for him
to decide to what it amounted, whether I had heard a just or unjust, a
candid or calumniatory tale. He had also reason to suppose that I gave
entertainment to thoughts derogatory to his honour, and that I did not form
that favourable judgment, which the exquisite refinement of his ruling
passion made indispensable to his peace. All these considerations would of
course maintain in him a state of perpetual uneasiness. But, though I could
find nothing that I could consider as justifying me in persisting in the
shadow of a doubt, yet, as I have said, the uncertainty and restlessness of
my contemplations would by no means depart from me.</p>
<p>The fluctuating state of my mind produced a contention of opposite
principles, that by turns usurped dominion over my conduct. Sometimes I was
influenced by the most complete veneration for my master; I placed an
unreserved confidence in his integrity and his virtue, and implicitly
surrendered my understanding for him to set it to what point he pleased. At
other times the confidence, which had before flowed with the most plenteous
tide, began to ebb; I was, as I had already been, watchful, inquisitive,
suspicious, full of a thousand conjectures as to the meaning of the most
indifferent actions. Mr. Falkland, who was most painfully alive to every
thing that related to his honour, saw these variations, and betrayed his
consciousness of them now in one manner, and now in another, frequently
before I was myself aware, sometimes almost before they existed. The
situation of both was distressing; we were each of us a plague to the other;
and I often wondered, that the forbearance and benignity of my master was
not at length exhausted, and that he did not determine to thrust from him
for ever so incessant an observer. There was indeed one eminent difference
between his share in the transaction and mine. I had some consolation in the
midst of my restlessness. Curiosity is a principle that carries its
pleasures, as well as its pains, along with it. The mind is urged by a
perpetual stimulus; it seems as if it were continually approaching to the
end of its race; and as the insatiable desire of satisfaction is its
principle of conduct, so it promises itself in that satisfaction an unknown
gratification, which seems as if it were capable of fully compensating any
injuries that may be suffered in the career. But to Mr. Falkland there was
no consolation. What he endured in the intercourse between us appeared to be
gratuitous evil. He had only to wish that there was no such person as myself
in the world, and to curse the hour when his humanity led him to rescue me
from my obscurity, and place me in his service.</p>
<p>A consequence produced upon me by the extraordinary nature of my
situation it is necessary to mention. The constant state of vigilance and
suspicion in which my mind was retained, worked a very rapid change in my
character. It seemed to have all the effect that might have been expected
from years of observation and experience. The strictness with which I
endeavoured to remark what passed in the mind of one man, and the variety of
conjectures into which I was led, appeared, as it were, to render me a
competent adept in the different modes in which the human intellect displays
its secret workings. I no longer said to myself, as I had done in the
beginning, "I will ask Mr. Falkland whether he were the murderer." On the
contrary, after having carefully examined the different kinds of evidence of
which the subject was susceptible, and recollecting all that had already
passed upon the subject, it was not without considerable pain, that I felt
myself unable to discover any way in which I could be perfectly and
unalterably satisfied of my patron's innocence. As to his guilt, I could
scarcely bring myself to doubt that in some way or other, sooner or later, I
should arrive at the knowledge of that, if it really existed. But I could
not endure to think, almost for a moment, of that side of the alternative as
true; and with all my ungovernable suspicion arising from the mysteriousness
of the circumstances, and all the delight which a young and unfledged mind
receives from ideas that give scope to all that imagination can picture of
terrible or sublime, I could not yet bring myself to consider Mr. Falkland's
guilt as a supposition attended with the remotest probability.</p>
<p>I hope the reader will forgive me for dwelling thus long on preliminary
circumstances. I shall come soon enough to the story of my own misery. I
have already said, that one of the motives which induced me to the penning
of this narrative, was to console myself in my insupportable distress. I
derive a melancholy pleasure from dwelling upon the circumstances which
imperceptibly paved the way to my ruin. While I recollect or describe past
scenes, which occurred in a more favourable period of my life, my attention
is called off for a short interval, from the hopeless misfortune in which I
am at present involved. The man must indeed possess an uncommon portion of
hardness of heart, who can envy me so slight a relief.—To proceed.</p>
<p>For some time after the explanation which had thus taken place between me
and Mr. Falkland, his melancholy, instead of being in the slightest degree
diminished by the lenient hand of time, went on perpetually to increase. His
fits of insanity—for such I must denominate them for want of a
distinct appellation, though it is possible they might not fall under the
definition that either the faculty or the court of chancery appropriate to
the term—became stronger and more durable than ever. It was no longer
practicable wholly to conceal them from the family, and even from the
neighbourhood. He would sometimes, without any previous notice, absent
himself from his house for two or three days, unaccompanied by servant or
attendant. This was the more extraordinary, as it was well known that he
paid no visits, nor kept up any sort of intercourse with the gentlemen of
the vicinity. But it was impossible that a man of Mr. Falkland's distinction
and fortune should long continue in such a practice, without its being
discovered what was become of him; though a considerable part of our county
was among the wildest and most desolate districts that are to be found in
South Britain. Mr. Falkland was sometimes seen climbing among the rocks,
reclining motionless for hours together upon the edge of a precipice, or
lulled into a kind of nameless lethargy of despair by the dashing of the
torrents. He would remain for whole nights together under the naked cope of
heaven, inattentive to the consideration either of place or time; insensible
to the variations of the weather, or rather seeming to be delighted with
that uproar of the elements, which partially called off his attention from
the discord and dejection that occupied his own mind.</p>
<p>At first, when we received intelligence at any time of the place to which
Mr. Falkland had withdrawn himself, some person of his household, Mr.
Collins or myself, but most generally myself, as I was always at home, and
always, in the received sense of the word, at leisure, went to him to
persuade him to return. But, after a few experiments, we thought it
advisable to desist, and leave him to prolong his absence, or to terminate
it, as might happen to suit his own inclination. Mr. Collins, whose grey
hairs and long services seemed to give him a sort of right to be
importunate, sometimes succeeded; though even in that case there was nothing
that could sit more uneasily upon Mr. Falkland than this insinuation as if
he wanted a guardian to take care of him, or as if he were in, or in danger
of falling into, a state in which he would be incapable of deliberately
controlling his own words and actions. At one time he would suddenly yield
to his humble, venerable friend, murmuring grievously at the constraint that
was put upon him, but without spirit enough even to complain of it with
energy. At another time, even though complying, he would suddenly burst out
in a paroxysm of resentment. Upon these occasions there was something
inconceivably, savagely terrible in his anger, that gave to the person
against whom it was directed the most humiliating and insupportable
sensations. Me he always treated, at these times, with fierceness, and drove
me from him with a vehemence lofty, emphatical, and sustained, beyond any
thing of which I should have thought human nature to be capable. These
sallies seemed always to constitute a sort of crisis in his indisposition;
and, whenever he was induced to such a premature return, he would fall
immediately after into a state of the most melancholy inactivity, in which
he usually continued for two or three days. It was by an obstinate fatality
that, whenever I saw Mr. Falkland in these deplorable situations, and
particularly when I lighted upon him after having sought him among the rocks
and precipices, pale, emaciated, solitary, and haggard, the suggestion would
continually recur to me, in spite of inclination, in spite of persuasion,
and in spite of evidence, Surely this man is a murderer!</p>
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