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<h1 class="title">RACHEL RAY</h1>
<h2>A Novel.</h2>
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<h2><span class="smallcaps">By</span> ANTHONY TROLLOPE,</h2>
<h3><i>IN TWO VOLUMES.</i><br/> <br/> <span class="smallcaps">Vol</span>. I.</h3>
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<h3>CHAPTER I.</h3>
<h4>THE RAY FAMILY.<br/> </h4>
<p>There are women who cannot grow alone as standard trees;—for whom
the support and warmth of some wall, some paling, some post, is
absolutely necessary;—who, in their growth, will bend and incline
themselves towards some such prop for their life, creeping with their
tendrils along the ground till they reach it when the circumstances
of life have brought no such prop within their natural and immediate
reach. Of most women it may be said that it would be well for them
that they should marry,—as indeed of most men also, seeing that man
and wife will each lend the other strength, and yet in lending lose
none; but to the women of whom I now speak some kind of marriage is
quite indispensable, and by them some kind of marriage is always
made, though the union is often unnatural. A woman in want of a wall
against which to nail herself will swear conjugal obedience sometimes
to her cook, sometimes to her grandchild, sometimes to her lawyer.
Any standing corner, post, or stump, strong enough to bear her weight
will suffice; but to some standing corner, post, or stump, she will
find her way and attach herself, and there will she be married.</p>
<p>Such a woman was our Mrs. Ray. As her name imports, she had been
married in the way most popular among ladies, with bell, book, and
parson. She had been like a young peach tree that, in its early days,
is carefully taught to grow against a propitious southern wall. Her
natural prop had been found for her, and all had been well. But her
heaven had been made black with storms; the heavy winds had come, and
the warm sheltering covert against which she had felt herself so safe
had been torn away from her branches as they were spreading
themselves forth to the fulness of life. She had been married at
eighteen, and then, after ten years of wedded security, she had
become a widow.</p>
<p>Her husband had been some years older than herself,—a steady, sober,
hardworking, earnest man, well fitted to act as a protecting screen
to such a woman as he had chosen. They had lived in Exeter, both of
them having belonged to Devonshire from their birth; and Mr. Ray,
though not a clergyman himself, had been employed in matters
ecclesiastical. He was a lawyer,—but a lawyer of that sort that is
so nearly akin to the sacerdotal profession, as to make him quite
clerical and almost a clergyman. He managed the property of the dean
and chapter, and knew what were the rights, and also what were the
wrongs, of prebendaries and minor canons,—of vicars choral, and even
of choristers. But he had been dead many years before our story
commences, and so much as this is now said of him simply to explain
under what circumstances Mrs. Ray had received the first tinge of
that colouring which was given to her life by church matters.</p>
<p>They had been married somewhat over ten years when he died, and she
was left with two surviving daughters, the eldest and the youngest of
the children she had borne. The eldest, Dorothea, was then more than
nine years old, and as she took much after her father, being stern,
sober, and steady, Mrs. Ray immediately married herself to her eldest
child. Dorothea became the prop against which she would henceforth
grow. And against Dorothea she had grown ever since, with the
exception of one short year. In that year Dorothea had taken a
husband to herself and had lost him;—so that there were two widows
in the same house. She, like her mother, had married early, having
joined her lot to that of a young clergyman near Baslehurst; but he
had lived but a few months, and Mrs. Ray's eldest child had come back
to her mother's cottage, black, and stiff, and stern, in widow's
weeds,—Mrs. Prime by name. Black, and stiff, and stern, in widow's
weeds, she had remained since, for nine years following, and those
nine years will bring us to the beginning of our story.</p>
<p>As regards Mrs. Ray herself, I think it was well that poor Mr. Prime
had died. It assured to her the support which she needed. It must,
however, be acknowledged that Mrs. Prime was a harder taskmaster than
Dorothea Ray had been, and that the mother might have undergone a
gentler ruling had the daughter never become a wife. I think there
was much in the hardness of the weeds she wore. It seemed as though
Mrs. Prime in selecting her crape, her bombazine, and the models of
her caps, had resolved to repress all ideas of feminine softness;—as
though she had sworn to herself, with a great oath, that man should
never again look on her with gratified eyes. The materials she wore
have made other widows very pleasant to be seen,—with a sad
thoughtful pleasantness indeed, but still very pleasant. There was
nothing of that with Mrs. Prime. When she came back to her mother's
cottage near Baslehurst she was not yet twenty years old, but she was
rough with weeds. Her caps were lumpy, heavy, full of woe, and clean
only as decency might require,—not nicely clean with feminine care.
The very stuff of which they were made was brown, rather than white,
and her dress was always the same. It was rough, and black, and
clinging,—disagreeable to the eye in its shape, as will always be
the dress of any woman which is worn day after day through all hours.
By nature and education Mrs. Prime was a prim, tidy woman, but it
seemed that her peculiar ideas of duty required her to militate
against her nature and education, at any rate in appearance. And this
was her lot in life before she had yet reached her twentieth year!</p>
<p>Dorothea Ray had not been wanting in some feminine attraction. She
had ever been brown and homely, but her features had been
well-formed, and her eyes had been bright. Now, as she approached to
thirty years of age, she might have been as well-looking as at any
earlier period of her life if it had been her wish to possess good
looks. But she had had no such wish. On the contrary, her desire had
been to be ugly, forbidding, unattractive, almost repulsive; so that,
in very truth, she might be known to be a widow indeed. And here I
must not be misunderstood. There was nothing hypocritical about Mrs.
Prime, nor did she make any attempt to appear before men to be
weighted with a deeper sorrow than that which she truly bore;
hypocrisy was by no means her fault. Her fault was this; that she had
taught herself to believe that cheerfulness was a sin, and that the
more she became morose, the nearer would she be to the fruition of
those hopes of future happiness on which her heart was set. In all
her words and thoughts she was genuine; but, then, in so very many of
them she was mistaken! This was the wall against which Mrs. Ray had
allowed herself to be fastened for many years past, and though the
support was strong it must be admitted that it could hardly have been
at all times pleasant.</p>
<p>Mrs. Ray had become a widow before she was thirty; and she had
grieved for her husband with truest sorrow, pouring herself out at
first in tears, and afterwards expending herself in long hours of
vain regrets. But she had never been rough or hard in her widowhood.
It had ever been her nature to be soft. She was a woman all over, and
had about her so much of a woman's prettiness, that she had not
altogether divested herself of it, even when her weepers had been of
the broadest. To obtain favour in men's eyes had never been in her
mind since she had first obtained favour in the eyes of him who had
been her lord; but yet she had never absolutely divested herself of
her woman charms, of that look half retreating, half beseeching,
which had won the heart of the ecclesiastical lawyer. Gradually her
weeds and her deep heavy crapes had fallen away from her, and then,
without much thought on the matter, she dressed herself much as did
other women of forty or forty-five,—being driven, however, on
certain occasions by her daughter to a degree of dinginess, not by
any means rivalling that of the daughter herself, but which she would
not have achieved had she been left to her own devices. She was a
sweet-tempered, good-humoured, loving, timid woman, ever listening
and believing and learning, with a certain aptitude for gentle mirth
at her heart which, however, was always being repressed and
controlled by the circumstances of her life. She could gossip over a
cup of tea, and enjoy buttered toast and hot cake very thoroughly, if
only there was no one near her to whisper into her ear that any such
enjoyment was wicked. In spite of the sorrows she had suffered she
would have taught herself to believe this world to be a pleasant
place, were it not so often preached into her ears that it is a vale
of tribulation in which no satisfaction can abide. And it may be said
of Mrs. Ray that her religion, though it sufficed her, tormented her
grievously. It sufficed her; and if on such a subject I may venture
to give an opinion, I think it was of a nature to suffice her in that
great strait for which it had been prepared. But in this world it
tormented her, carrying her hither and thither, and leaving her in
grievous doubt, not as to its own truth in any of its details, but as
to her own conduct under its injunctions, and also as to her own mode
of believing in it. In truth she believed too much. She could never
divide the minister from the Bible;—nay, the very clerk in the
church was sacred to her while exercising his functions therein. It
never occurred to her to question any word that was said to her. If a
linen-draper were to tell her that one coloured calico was better for
her than another, she would take that point as settled by the man's
word, and for the time would be free from all doubt on that heading.
So also when the clergyman in his sermon told her that she should
live simply and altogether for heaven, that all thoughts as to this
world were wicked thoughts, and that nothing belonging to this world
could be other than painful, full of sorrow and vexations, she would
go home believing him absolutely, and with tear-laden eyes would
bethink herself how utterly she was a castaway, because of that tea,
and cake, and innocent tittle tattle with which the hours of her
Saturday evening had been beguiled. She would weakly resolve that she
would laugh no more, and that she would live in truth in a valley of
tears. But then as the bright sun came upon her, and the birds sang
around her, and some one that she loved would cling to her and kiss
her, she would be happy in her own despite, and would laugh with a
low musical sweet tone, forgetting that such laughter was a sin.</p>
<p>And then that very clergyman himself would torment her;—he that told
her from the pulpit on Sundays how frightfully vain were all attempts
at worldly happiness. He would come to her on the Monday with a
good-natured, rather rubicund face, and would ask after all her
little worldly belongings,—for he knew of her history and her
means,—and he would joke with her, and tell her comfortably of his
grown sons and daughters, who were prospering in worldly matters, and
express the fondest solicitude as to their worldly advancement. Twice
or thrice a year Mrs. Ray would go to the parsonage, and such
evenings would be by no means hours of wailing. Tea and buttered
toast on such occasions would be very manifestly in the ascendant.
Mrs. Ray never questioned the propriety of her clergyman's life, nor
taught herself to see a discrepancy between his doctrine and his
conduct. But she believed in both, and was unconsciously troubled at
having her belief so varied. She never thought about it, or
discovered that her friend allowed himself to be carried away in his
sermons by his zeal, and that he condemned this world in all things,
hoping that he might thereby teach his hearers to condemn it in some
things. Mrs. Ray would allow herself the privilege of no such
argument as that. It was all gospel to her. The parson in the church,
and the parson out of the church, were alike gospels to her sweet,
white, credulous mind; but these differing gospels troubled her and
tormented her.</p>
<p>Of that particular clergyman, I may as well here say that he was the
Rev. Charles Comfort, and that he was rector of Cawston, a parish in
Devonshire, about two miles out of Baslehurst. Mr. Prime had for a
year or two been his curate, and during that term of curacy he had
married Dorothea Ray. Then he had died, and his widow had returned
from the house her husband had occupied near the church to her
mother's cottage. Mr. Prime had been possessed of some property, and
when he died he left his widow in the uncontrolled possession of two
hundred a year. As it was well known that Mrs. Ray's income was
considerably less than this, the people of Baslehurst and Cawston had
declared how comfortable for Mrs. Ray would be this accession of
wealth to the family. But Mrs. Ray had not become much the richer.
Mrs. Prime did no doubt pay her fair quota towards the maintenance of
the humble cottage at Bragg's End, for such was the name of the spot
at which Mrs. Ray lived. But she did not do more than this. She
established a Dorcas society at Baslehurst, of which she became
permanent president, and spent her money in carrying on this
institution in the manner most pleasing to herself. I fear that Mrs.
Prime liked to be more powerful at these charitable meetings than her
sister labourers in the same vineyard, and that she achieved this
power by the means of her money. I do not bring this as a heavy
accusation against her. In such institutions there is generally need
of a strong, stirring, leading mind. If some one would not assume
power, the power needed would not be exercised. Such a one as Mrs.
Prime is often necessary. But we all have our own pet temptations,
and I think that Mrs. Prime's temptation was a love of power.</p>
<p>It will be understood that Baslehurst is a town,—a town with a
market, and hotels, and a big brewery, and a square, and street;
whereas Cawston is a village, or rather a rural parish, three miles
out of Baslehurst, north of it, lying on the river Avon. But Bragg's
End, though within the parish of Cawston, lies about a mile and a
half from the church and village, on the road to Baslehurst, and
partakes therefore almost as much of the township of Baslehurst as it
does of the rusticity of Cawston. How Bragg came to such an end, or
why this corner of the parish came to be thus united for ever to
Bragg's name, no one in the parish knew. The place consisted of a
little green, and a little wooden bridge, over a little stream that
trickled away into the Avon. Here were clustered half a dozen
labourers' cottages, and a beer or cider shop. Standing back from the
green was the house and homestead of Farmer Sturt, and close upon the
green, with its garden hedge running down to the bridge, was the
pretty cottage of Mrs. Ray. Mr. Comfort had known her husband, and he
had found for her this quiet home. It was a pretty place, with one
small sitting-room opening back upon the little garden, and with
another somewhat larger fronting towards the road and the green. In
the front room Mrs. Ray lived, looking out upon so much of the world
as Bragg's End green afforded to her view. The other seemed to be
kept with some faint expectation of company that never came. Many of
the widow's neatest belongings were here preserved in most perfect
order; but one may say that they were altogether thrown away,—unless
indeed they afforded solace to their owner in the very act of dusting
them. Here there were four or five books, prettily bound, with gilt
leaves, arranged in shapes on the small round table. Here also was
deposited a spangled mat of wondrous brightness, made of short white
sticks of glass strung together. It must have taken care and time in
its manufacture, but was, I should say, but of little efficacy either
for domestic use or domestic ornament. There were shells on the
chimneypiece, and two or three china figures. There was a birdcage
hung in the window but without a bird. It was all very clean, but the
room conveyed at the first glance an overpowering idea of its own
absolute inutility and vanity. It was capable of answering no purpose
for which men and women use rooms; but he who could have said so to
Mrs. Ray must have been a cruel and a hardhearted man.</p>
<p>The other room which looked out upon the green was snug enough, and
sufficed for all the widow's wants. There was a little book-case
laden with books. There was the family table at which they ate their
meals; and there was the little table near the window at which Mrs.
Ray worked. There was an old sofa, and an old arm-chair; and there
was, also, a carpet, alas, so old that the poor woman had become
painfully aware that she must soon have either no carpet or a new
one. A word or two had already been said between her and Mrs. Prime
on that matter, but the word or two had not as yet been comfortable.
Then, over the fire, there was an old round mirror; and, having told
of that, I believe I need not further describe the furniture of the
sitting room at Bragg's End.</p>
<p>But I have not as yet described the whole of Mrs. Ray's family. Had I
done so, her life would indeed have been sour, and sorrowful, for she
was a woman who especially needed companionship. Though I have
hitherto spoken but of one daughter, I have said that two had been
left with her when her husband died. She had one whom she feared and
obeyed, seeing that a master was necessary to her; but she had
another whom she loved and caressed, and I may declare, that some
such object for her tenderness was as necessary to her as the master.
She could not have lived without something to kiss, something to
tend, something to which she might speak in short, loving, pet terms
of affection. This youngest girl, Rachel, had been only two years old
when her father died, and now, at the time of this story, was not yet
quite twenty. Her sister was, in truth, only seven years her senior,
but in all the facts and ways of life, she seemed to be the elder by
at least half a century. Rachel indeed, at the time, felt herself to
be much nearer of an age with her mother. With her mother she could
laugh and talk, ay, and form little wicked whispered schemes behind
the tyrant's back, during some of those Dorcas hours, in which Mrs.
Prime would be employed at Baslehurst; schemes, however, for the
final perpetration of which, the courage of the elder widow would too
frequently be found insufficient.</p>
<p>Rachel Ray was a fair-haired, well-grown, comely girl,—very like her
mother in all but this, that whereas about the mother's eyes there
was always a look of weakness, there was a shadowing of coming
strength of character round those of the daughter. On her brow there
was written a capacity for sustained purpose which was wanting to
Mrs. Ray. Not that the reader is to suppose that she was masterful
like her sister. She had been brought up under Mrs. Prime's
directions, and had not, as yet, learned to rebel. Nor was she in any
way prone to domineer. A little wickedness now and then, to the
extent, perhaps, of a vain walk into Baslehurst on a summer evening,
a little obstinacy in refusing to explain whither she had been and
whom she had seen, a yawn in church, or a word of complaint as to the
length of the second Sunday sermon,—these were her sins; and when
rebuked for them by her sister, she would of late toss her head, and
look slily across to her mother, with an eye that was not penitent.
Then Mrs. Prime would become black and angry, and would foretell hard
things for her sister, denouncing her as fashioning herself wilfully
in the world's ways. On such occasions Mrs. Ray would become very
unhappy, believing first in the one child and then in the other. She
would defend Rachel, till her weak defence would be knocked to
shivers, and her poor vacillating words taken from out of her mouth.
Then, when forced to acknowledge that Rachel was in danger of
backsliding, she would kiss her and cry over her, and beg her to
listen to the sermons. Rachel hitherto had never rebelled. She had
never declared that a walk into Baslehurst was better than a sermon.
She had never said out boldly that she liked the world and its
wickednesses. But an observer of physiognomy, had such observer been
there, might have seen that the days of such rebellion were coming.</p>
<p>She was a fair-haired girl, with hair, not flaxen, but of light-brown
tint,—thick, and full, and glossy, so that its charms could not all
be hidden away let Mrs. Prime do what she would to effect such
hiding. She was well made, being tall and straight, with great
appearance of health and strength. She walked as though the motion
were pleasant to her, and easy,—as though the very act of walking
were a pleasure. She was bright too, and clever in their little
cottage, striving hard with her needle to make things look well, and
not sparing her strength in giving household assistance. One little
maiden Mrs. Ray employed, and a gardener came to her for half a day
once a week;—but I doubt whether the maiden in the house, or the
gardener out of the house, did as much hard work as Rachel. How she
had toiled over that carpet, patching it and piecing it! Even
Dorothea could not accuse her of idleness. Therefore Dorothea accused
her of profitless industry, because she would not attend more
frequently at those Dorcas meetings.</p>
<p>"But, Dolly, how on earth am I to make my own things, and look after
mamma's? Charity begins at home." Then had Dorothea put down her huge
Dorcas basket, and explained to her sister, at considerable length,
her reading of that text of Scripture. "One's own clothes must be
made all the same," Rachel said when the female preacher had
finished. "And I don't suppose even you would like mamma to go to
church without a decent gown." Then Dorothea had seized up her huge
basket angrily, and had trudged off into Baslehurst at a quick
pace,—at a pace much too quick when the summer's heat is
considered;—and as she went, unhappy thoughts filled her mind. A
coloured dress belonging to Rachel herself had met her eye, and she
had heard tidings of—a young man!</p>
<p>Such tidings, to her ears, were tidings of iniquity, of vanity, of
terrible sin; they were tidings which hardly admitted of being
discussed with decency, and which had to be spoken of below the
breath. A young man! Could it be that such disgrace had fallen upon
her sister! She had not as yet mentioned the subject to Rachel, but
she had given a dark hint to their afflicted mother.</p>
<p>"No, I didn't see it myself, but I heard it from Miss Pucker."</p>
<p>"She that was to have been married to William Whitecoat, the baker's
son, only he went away to Torquay and picked up with somebody else.
People said he did it because she does squint so dreadfully."</p>
<p>"Mother!"—and Dorothea spoke very sternly as she answered—"what
does it matter to us about William Whitecoat, or Miss Pucker's
squint? She is a woman eager in doing good."</p>
<p>"It's only since he left Baslehurst, my dear."</p>
<p>"Mother!—does that matter to Rachel? Will that save her if she be in
danger? I tell you that Miss Pucker saw her walking with that young
man from the brewery!"</p>
<p>Though Mrs. Ray had been strongly inclined to throw what odium she
could upon Miss Pucker, and though she hated Miss Pucker in her
heart,—at this special moment,—for having carried tales against her
darling, she could not deny, even to herself, that a terrible state
of things had arrived if it were really true that Rachel had been
seen walking with a young man. She was not bitter on the subject as
was Mrs. Prime and poor Miss Pucker, but she was filled full of
indefinite horror with regard to young men in general. They were all
regarded by her as wolves,—as wolves, either with or without sheep's
clothing. I doubt whether she ever brought it home to herself that
those whom she now recognized as the established and well-credited
lords of the creation had ever been young men themselves. When she
heard of a wedding,—when she learned that some struggling son of
Adam had taken to himself a wife, and had settled himself down to the
sober work of the world, she rejoiced greatly, thinking that the son
of Adam had done well to get himself married. But whenever it was
whispered into her ear that any young man was looking after a young
woman,—that he was taking the only step by which he could hope to
find a wife for himself,—she was instantly shocked at the wickedness
of the world, and prayed inwardly that the girl at least might be
saved like a brand from the burning. A young man, in her estimation,
was a wicked wild beast, seeking after young women to devour them, as
a cat seeks after mice. This at least was her established idea,—the
idea on which she worked, unless some other idea on any special
occasion were put into her head. When young Butler Cornbury, the
eldest son of the neighbouring squire, came to Cawston after pretty
Patty Comfort,—for Patty Comfort was said to have been the prettiest
girl in Devonshire;—and when Patty Comfort had been allowed to go to
the assemblies at Torquay almost on purpose to meet him, Mrs. Ray had
thought it all right, because it had been presented to her mind as
all right by the Rector. Butler Cornbury had married Patty Comfort
and it was all right. But had she heard of Patty's dancings without
the assistance of a few hints from Mr. Comfort himself, her mind
would have worked in a different way.</p>
<p>She certainly desired that her own child Rachel should some day find
a husband, and Rachel was already older than she had been when she
married, or than Mrs. Prime had been at her wedding; but,
nevertheless, there was something terrible in the very thought of—a
young man; and she, though she would fain have defended her child,
hardly knew how to do so otherwise than by discrediting the words of
Miss Pucker. "She always was very ill-natured, you know," Mrs. Ray
ventured to hint.</p>
<p>"Mother!" said Mrs. Prime, in that peculiarly stern voice of hers.
"There can be no reason for supposing that Miss Pucker wishes to
malign the child. It is my belief that Rachel will be in Baslehurst
this evening. If so, she probably intends to meet him again."</p>
<p>"I know she is going into Baslehurst after tea," said Mrs. Ray,
"because she has promised to walk with the Miss Tappitts. She told me
so."</p>
<p>"Exactly;—with the brewery girls! Oh, mother!" Now it is certainly
true that the three Miss Tappitts were the daughters of Bungall and
Tappitt, the old-established brewers of Baslehurst. They were, at
least, the actual children of Mr. Tappitt, who was the sole surviving
partner in the brewery. The name of Bungall had for many years been
used merely to give solidity and standing to the Tappitt family. The
Miss Tappitts certainly came from the brewery, and Miss Pucker had
said that the young man came from the same quarter. There was ground
in this for much suspicion, and Mrs. Ray became uneasy. This
conversation between the two widows had occurred before dinner at the
cottage on a Saturday;—and it was after dinner that the elder sister
had endeavoured to persuade the younger one to accompany her to the
Dorcas workshop;—but had endeavoured in vain.</p>
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