<h4><SPAN name="CHAPTER4" id="CHAPTER4">CHAPTER V.<br/>
MARCHMONT TOWERS.</SPAN></h4>
<p></p>
<p>There is a lapse of three years and a half between the acts; and the curtain
rises to reveal a widely–different picture:––the picture of a
noble mansion in the flat Lincolnshire country; a stately pile of building,
standing proudly forth against a background of black woodland; a noble
building, supported upon either side by an octagon tower, whose solid masonry
is half–hidden by the ivy which clings about the stonework, trailing here
and there, and flapping restlessly with every breath of wind against the narrow
casements.</p>
<p>A broad stone terrace stretches the entire length of the grim fa�ade, from
tower to tower; and three flights of steps lead from the terrace to the broad
lawn, which loses itself in a vast grassy flat, only broken by a few clumps of
trees and a dismal pool of black water, but called by courtesy a park. Grim
stone griffins surmount the terrace–steps, and griffins' heads and other
architectural monstrosities, worn and moss–grown, keep watch and ward
over every door and window, every archway and abutment––frowning
threat and defiance upon the daring visitor who approaches the great house by
this, the formidable chief entrance.</p>
<p>The mansion looks westward: but there is another approach, a low archway on
the southern side, which leads into a quadrangle, where there is a quaint
little door under a stone portico, ivy–covered like the rest; a
comfortable little door of massive oak, studded with knobs of rusty
iron,––a door generally affected by visitors familiar with the
house.</p>
<p>This is Marchmont Towers,––a grand and stately mansion, which
had been a monastery in the days when England and the Pope were friends and
allies; and which had been bestowed upon Hugh Marchmont, gentleman, by his
Sovereign Lord and Most Christian Majesty the King Henry VIII, of blessed
memory, and by that gentleman–commoner extended and improved at
considerable outlay. This is Marchmont Towers,––a splendid and a
princely habitation truly, but perhaps scarcely the kind of dwelling one would
choose for the holy resting–place we call home. The great mansion is a
little too dismal in its lonely grandeur: it lacks shelter when the dreary
winds come sweeping across the grassy flats in the bleak winter weather; it
lacks shade when the western sun blazes on every window–pane in the
stifling summer evening. It is at all times rather too stony in its aspect; and
is apt to remind one almost painfully of every weird and sorrowful story
treasured in the storehouse of memory. Ancient tales of enchantment, dark
German legends, wild Scottish fancies, grim fragments of half–forgotten
demonology, strange stories of murder, violence, mystery, and wrong, vaguely
intermingle in the stranger's mind as he looks, for the first time, at
Marchmont Towers.</p>
<p>But of course these feelings wear off in time. So invincible is the power of
custom, that we might make ourselves comfortable in the Castle of Otranto,
after a reasonable sojourn within its mysterious walls: familiarity would breed
contempt for the giant helmet, and all the other grim apparitions of the
haunted dwelling. The commonplace and ignoble wants of every–day life
must surely bring disenchantment with them. The ghost and the butcher's boy
cannot well exist contemporaneously; and the avenging shade can scarcely
continue to lurk beneath the portal which is visited by the matutinal milkman.
Indeed, this is doubtless the reason that the most restless and impatient
spirit, bent on early vengeance and immediate retribution, will yet wait until
the shades of night have fallen before he reveals himself, rather than run the
risk of an ignominious encounter with the postman or the parlour–maid. Be
it how it might, the phantoms of Marchmont Towers were not intrusive. They may
have perambulated the long tapestried corridors, the tenantless chambers, the
broad black staircase of shining oak; but, happily, no dweller in the mansion
was ever scared by the sight of their pale faces. All the
dead–and–gone beauties, and soldiers, and lawyers, and parsons, and
simple country–squires of the Marchmont race may have descended from
their picture–frames to hold a witches' sabbath in the old mansion; but
as the Lincolnshire servants were hearty eaters and heavy sleepers, the ghosts
had it all to themselves. I believe there was one dismal story attached to the
house,––the story of a Marchmont of the time of Charles I, who had
murdered his coachman in a fit of insensate rage; and it was even asserted,
upon the authority of an old housekeeper, that John Marchmont's grandmother,
when a young woman and lately come as a bride to the Towers, had beheld the
murdered coachman stalk into her chamber, ghastly and blood–bedabbled, in
the dim summer twilight. But as this story was not particularly romantic, and
possessed none of the elements likely to insure popularity,––such
as love, jealousy, revenge, mystery, youth, and beauty,––it had
never been very widely disseminated.</p>
<p>I should think that the new owner of Marchmont Towers––new
within the last six months––was about the last person in
Christendom to be hypercritical, or to raise fanciful objections to his
dwelling; for inasmuch as he had come straight from a wretched transpontine
lodging to this splendid Lincolnshire mansion, and had at the same time
exchanged a stipend of thirty shillings a week for an income of eleven thousand
a year (derivable from lands that spread far away, over fenny flats and
low–lying farms, to the solitary seashore), he had ample reason to be
grateful to Providence, and well pleased with his new abode.</p>
<p>Yes; Philip Marchmont, the childless widower, had died six months before, at
the close of the year '43, of a broken heart,––his old servants
said, broken by the loss of his only and idolised son; after which loss he had
never been known to smile. He was one of those undemonstrative men who can take
a great sorrow quietly, and only––die of it. Philip Marchmont lay
in a velvet–covered coffin, above his son's, in the stone recess set
apart for them in the Marchmont vault beneath Kemberling Church, three miles
from the Towers; and John reigned in his stead. John Marchmont, the
supernumerary, the banner–holder of Drury Lane, the patient,
conscientious copying and outdoor clerk of Lincoln's Inn, was now sole owner of
the Lincolnshire estate, sole master of a household of well–trained old
servants, sole proprietor of a very decent country–gentleman's stud, and
of chariots, barouches, chaises, phaetons, and other vehicles––a
little shabby and out of date it may be, but very comfortable to a man for whom
an omnibus ride had long been a treat and a rarity. Nothing had been touched or
disturbed since Philip Marchmont's death. The rooms he had used were still the
occupied apartments; the chambers he had chosen to shut up were still kept with
locked doors; the servants who had served him waited upon his successor, whom
they declared to be a quiet, easy gentleman, far too wise to interfere with old
servants, every one of whom knew the ways of the house a great deal better than
he did, though he was the master of it.</p>
<p>There was, therefore, no shadow of change in the stately mansion. The
dinner–bell still rang at the same hour; the same tradespeople left the
same species of wares at the low oaken door; the old housekeeper, arranging her
simple <em>menu</em>, planned her narrow round of soups and roasts, sweets and
made–dishes, exactly as she had been wont to do, and had no new tastes to
consult. A grey–haired bachelor, who had been own–man to Philip,
was now own–man to John. The carriage which had conveyed the late lord
every Sunday to morning and afternoon service at Kemberling conveyed the new
lord, who sat in the same seat that his predecessor had occupied in the great
family–pew, and read his prayers out of the same book,––a
noble crimson, morocco–covered volume, in which George, our most gracious
King and Governor, and all manner of dead–and–gone princes and
princesses were prayed for.</p>
<p>The presence of Mary Marchmont made the only change in the old house; and
even that change was a very trifling one. Mary and her father were as closely
united at Marchmont Towers as they had been in Oakley Street. The little girl
clung to her father as tenderly as ever––more tenderly than ever
perhaps; for she knew something of that which the physicians had said, and she
knew that John Marchmont's lease of life was not a long one. Perhaps it would
be better to say that he had no lease at all. His soul was a tenant on
sufferance in its frail earthly habitation, receiving a respite now and again,
when the flicker of the lamp was very low––every chance breath of
wind threatening to extinguish it for ever. It was only those who knew John
Marchmont very intimately who were fully acquainted with the extent of his
danger. He no longer bore any of those fatal outward signs of consumption,
which fatigue and deprivation had once made painfully conspicuous. The hectic
flush and the unnatural brightness of the eyes had subsided; indeed, John
seemed much stronger and heartier than of old; and it is only great medical
practitioners who can tell to a nicety what is going on <em>inside</em> a man,
when he presents a very fair exterior to the unprofessional eye. But John was
decidedly better than he had been. He might live three years, five, seven,
possibly even ten years; but he must live the life of a man who holds himself
perpetually upon his defence against death; and he must recognise in every
bleak current of wind, in every chilling damp, or perilous heat, or
over–exertion, or ill–chosen morsel of food, or hasty emotion, or
sudden passion, an insidious ally of his dismal enemy.</p>
<p>Mary Marchmont knew all this,––or divined it, perhaps, rather
than knew it, with the child–woman's subtle power of divination, which is
even stronger than the actual woman's; for her father had done his best to keep
all sorrowful knowledge from her. She knew that he was in danger; and she loved
him all the more dearly, as the one precious thing which was in constant peril
of being snatched away. The child's love for her father has not grown any less
morbid in its intensity since Edward Arundel's departure for India; nor has
Mary become more childlike since her coming to Marchmont Towers, and her
abandonment of all those sordid cares, those pitiful every–day duties,
which had made her womanly.</p>
<p>It may be that the last lingering glamour of childhood had for ever faded
away with the realisation of the day–dream which she had carried about
with her so often in the dingy transpontine thoroughfares around Oakley Street.
Marchmont Towers, that fairy palace, whose lighted windows had shone upon her
far away across a cruel forest of poverty and trouble, like the enchanted
castle which appears to the lost wanderer of the child's story, was now the
home of the father she loved. The grim enchanter Death, the only magician of
our modern histories, had waved his skeleton hand, more powerful than the
star–gemmed wand of any fairy godmother, and the obstacles which had
stood between John Marchmont and his inheritance had one by one been swept
away.</p>
<p>But was Marchmont Towers quite as beautiful as that fairy palace of Mary's
day–dream? No, not quite––not quite. The rooms were
handsome,––handsomer and larger, even, than the rooms she had
dreamed of; but perhaps none the better for that. They were grand and gloomy
and magnificent; but they were not the sunlit chambers which her fancy had
built up, and decorated with such shreds and patches of splendour as her narrow
experience enabled her to devise. Perhaps it was rather a disappointment to
Miss Marchmont to discover that the mansion was completely furnished, and that
there was no room in it for any of those splendours which she had so often
contemplated in the New Cut. The parrot at the greengrocer's was a vulgar bird,
and not by any means admissible in Lincolnshire. The carrying away and
providing for Mary's favourite tradespeople was not practicable; and John
Marchmont had demurred to her proposal of adopting the butcher's daughter.</p>
<p>There is always something to be given up even when our brightest visions are
realised; there is always some one figure (a low one perhaps) missing in the
fullest sum of earthly happiness. I dare say if Alnaschar had married the
Vizier's daughter, he would have found her a shrew, and would have looked back
yearningly to the humble days in which he had been an itinerant vendor of
crockery–ware.</p>
<p>If, therefore, Mary Marchmont found her sunlit fancies not quite realised by
the great stony mansion that frowned upon the fenny countryside, the wide
grassy flat, the black pool, with its dismal shelter of weird
pollard–willows, whose ugly reflections, distorted on the bosom of the
quiet water, looked like the shadows of hump–backed men;––if
these things did not compose as beautiful a picture as that which the little
girl had carried so long in her mind, she had no more reason to be sorry than
the rest of us, and had been no more foolish than other dreamers. I think she
had built her airy castle too much after the model of a last scene in a
pantomime, and that she expected to find spangled waters twinkling in perpetual
sunshine, revolving fountains, ever–expanding sunflowers, and gilded
clouds of rose–coloured gauze,––every thing except the
fairies, in short,––at Marchmont Towers. Well, the dream was over:
and she was quite a woman now, and very grateful to Providence when she
remembered that her father had no longer need to toil for his daily bread, and
that he was luxuriously lodged, and could have the first physicians in the land
at his beck and call.</p>
<p>"Oh, papa, it is so nice to be rich!" the young lady would exclaim now and
then, in a fleeting transport of enthusiasm. "How good we ought to be to the
poor people, when we remember how poor we once were!"</p>
<p>And the little girl did not forget to be good to the poor about Kemberling
and Marchmont Towers. There were plenty of poor, of
course––free–and–easy pensioners, who came to the
Towers for brandy, and wine, and milk, and woollen stuffs, and grocery,
precisely as they would have gone to a shop, except that there was to be no
bill. The housekeeper doled out her bounties with many short homilies upon the
depravity and ingratitude of the recipients, and gave tracts of an awful and
denunciatory nature to the pitiful petitioners––tracts
interrogatory, and tracts fiercely imperative; tracts that asked, "Where are
you going?" "Why are you wicked?" "What will become of you?" and other tracts
which cried, "Stop, and think!" "Pause, while there is time!" "Sinner,
consider!" "Evil–doer, beware!" Perhaps it may not be the wisest possible
plan to begin the work of reformation by frightening, threatening, and
otherwise disheartening the wretched sinner to be reformed. There is a certain
sermon in the New Testament, containing sacred and comforting words which were
spoken upon a mountain near at hand to Jerusalem, and spoken to an auditory
amongst which there must have been many sinful creatures; but there is more of
blessing than cursing in that sublime discourse, and it might be rather a
tender father pleading gently with his wayward children than an offended Deity
dealing out denunciation upon a stubborn and refractory race. But the authors
of the tracts may have never read this sermon, perhaps; and they may take their
ideas of composition from that comforting service which we read on
Ash–Wednesday, cowering in fear and trembling in our pews, and calling
down curses upon ourselves and our neighbours. Be it as it might, the tracts
were not popular amongst the pensioners of Marchmont Towers. They infinitely
preferred to hear Mary read a chapter in the New Testament, or some pretty
patriarchal story of primitive obedience and faith. The little girl would
discourse upon the Scripture histories in her simple, old–fashioned
manner; and many a stout Lincolnshire farm–labourer was content to sit
over his hearth, with a pipe of shag–tobacco and a mug of fettled beer,
while Miss Marchmont read and expounded the history of Abraham and Isaac, or
Joseph and his brethren.</p>
<p>"It's joost loike a story–book to hear her," the man would say to his
wife; "and yet she brings it all hoame, too, loike. If she reads about Abraham,
she'll say, maybe, 'That's joost how you gave your only son to be a soldier,
you know, Muster Moggins;'––she allus says Muster
Moggins;––'you gave un into God's hands, and you troosted God would
take care of un; and whatever cam' to un would be the best, even if it was
death.' That's what she'll say, bless her little heart! so gentle and tender
loike. The wust o' chaps couldn't but listen to her."</p>
<p>Mary Marchmont's morbidly sensitive nature adapted her to all charitable
offices. No chance word in her simple talk ever inflicted a wound upon the
listener. She had a subtle and intuitive comprehension of other people's
feelings, derived from the extreme susceptibility of her own. She had never
been vulgarised by the associations of poverty; for her self–contained
nature took no colour from the things that surrounded her, and she was only at
Marchmont Towers that which she had been from the age of six––a
little lady, grave and gentle, dignified, discreet, and wise.</p>
<p>There was one bright figure missing out of the picture which Mary had been
wont of late years to make of the Lincolnshire mansion, and that was the figure
of the yellow–haired boy who had breakfasted upon haddocks and hot rolls
in Oakley Street. She had imagined Edward Arundel an inhabitant of that fair
Utopia. He would live with them; or, if he could not live with them, he would
be with them as a visitor,––often––almost always. He
would leave off being a soldier, for of course her papa could give him more
money than he could get by being a soldier––(you see that Mary's
experience of poverty had taught her to take a mercantile and sordid view of
military life)––and he would come to Marchmont Towers, and ride,
and drive, and play tennis (what was tennis? she wondered), and read
three–volume novels all day long. But that part of the dream was at least
broken. Marchmont Towers was Mary's home, but the young soldier was far away;
in the Pass of Bolan, perhaps,––Mary had a picture of that cruel
rocky pass almost always in her mind,––or cutting his way through a
black jungle, with the yellow eyes of hungry tigers glaring out at him through
the rank tropical foliage; or dying of thirst and fever under a scorching sun,
with no better pillow than the neck of a dead camel, with no more tender
watcher than the impatient vulture flapping her wings above his head, and
waiting till he, too, should be carrion. What was the good of wealth, if it
could not bring this young soldier home to a safe shelter in his native land?
John Marchmont smiled when his daughter asked this question, and implored her
father to write to Edward Arundel, recalling him to England.</p>
<p>"God knows how glad I should be to have the boy here, Polly!" John said, as
he drew his little girl closer to his breast,––she sat on his knee
still, though she was thirteen years of age. "But Edward has a career before
him, my dear, and could not give it up for an inglorious life in this rambling
old house. It isn't as if I could hold out any inducement to him: you know,
Polly, I can't; for I mustn't leave any money away from my little girl."</p>
<p>"But he might have half my money, papa, or all of it," Mary added piteously.
"What could I do with money, if––––"</p>
<p>She didn't finish the sentence; she never could complete any such sentence
as this; but her father knew what she meant.</p>
<p>So six months had passed since a dreary January day upon which John
Marchmont had read, in the second column of the "Times," that he could hear of
something greatly to his advantage by applying to a certain solicitor, whose
offices were next door but one to those of Messrs. Paulette, Paulette, and
Mathewson's. His heart began to beat very violently when he read that
advertisement in the supplement, which it was one of his duties to air before
the fire in the clerks' office; but he showed no other sign of emotion. He
waited until he took the papers to his employer; and as he laid them at Mr.
Mathewson's elbow, murmured a respectful request to be allowed to go out for
half–an–hour, upon his own business.</p>
<p>"Good gracious me, Marchmont!" cried the lawyer; "what can you want to go
out for at this time in the morning? You've only just come; and there's that
agreement between Higgs and Sandyman must be copied
before––––"</p>
<p>"Yes, I know, sir. I'll be back in time to attend to it; but
I––I think I've come into a fortune, sir; and I should like to go
and see about it."</p>
<p>The solicitor turned in his revolving library–chair, and looked aghast
at his clerk. Had this Marchmont––always rather unnaturally
reserved and eccentric––gone suddenly mad? No; the
copying–clerk stood by his employer's side, grave, self–possessed
as ever, with his forefinger upon the advertisement.</p>
<p>"Marchmont––John––call––Messrs. Tindal
and Trollam––" gasped Mr. Mathewson. "Do you mean to tell me it's
<em>you</em>?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
<p>"Egad, I'll go with you!" cried the solicitor, hooking his arm through that
of his clerk, snatching his hat from an adjacent stand, and dashing through the
outer office, down the great staircase, and into the next door but one before
John Marchmont knew where he was.</p>
<p>John had not deceived his employer. Marchmont Towers was his, with all its
appurtenances. Messrs. Paulette, Paulette, and Mathewson took him in hand, much
to the chagrin of Messrs. Tindal and Trollam, and proved his identity in less
than a week. On a shelf above the high wooden desk at which John had sat,
copying law–papers, with a weary hand and an aching spine, appeared two
bran–new deed–boxes, inscribed, in white letters, with the name and
address of JOHN MARCHMONT, ESQ., MARCHMONT TOWERS. The copying–clerk's
sudden accession to fortune was the talk of all the <em>employ�s</em> in "The
Fields." Marchmont Towers was exaggerated into half Lincolnshire, and a tidy
slice of Yorkshire; eleven thousand a year was expanded into an annual million.
Everybody expected largesse from the legatee. How fond people had been of the
quiet clerk, and how magnanimously they had concealed their sentiments during
his poverty, lest they should wound him, as they urged, "which" they knew he
was sensitive; and how expansively they now dilated on their
long–suppressed emotions! Of course, under these circumstances, it is
hardly likely that everybody could be satisfied; so it is a small thing to say
that the dinner which John gave––by his late employers' suggestion
(he was about the last man to think of giving a dinner)––at the
"Albion Tavern," to the legal staff of Messrs. Paulette, Paulette, and
Mathewson, and such acquaintance of the legal profession as they should choose
to invite, was a failure; and that gentlemen who were pretty well used to dine
upon liver and bacon, or beefsteak and onions, or the joint, vegetables, bread,
cheese, and celery for a shilling, turned up their noses at the turbot,
murmured at the paucity of green fat in the soup, made light of red mullet and
ortolans, objected to the flavour of the truffles, and were contemptuous about
the wines.</p>
<p>John knew nothing of this. He had lived a separate and secluded existence;
and his only thought now was of getting away to Marchmont Towers, which had
been familiar to him in his boyhood, when he had been wont to go there on
occasional visits to his grandfather. He wanted to get away from the turmoil
and confusion of the big, heartless city, in which he had endured so much; he
wanted to carry away his little girl to a quiet country home, and live and die
there in peace. He liberally rewarded all the good people about Oakley Street
who had been kind to little Mary; and there was weeping in the regions of the
Ladies' Wardrobe when Mr. Marchmont and his daughter went away one bitter
winter's morning in a cab, which was to carry them to the hostelry whence the
coach started for Lincoln.</p>
<p>It is strange to think how far those Oakley–street days of privation
and endurance seem to have receded in the memories of both father and daughter.
The impalpable past fades away, and it is difficult for John and his little
girl to believe that they were once so poor and desolate. It is Oakley Street
now that is visionary and unreal. The stately county families bear down upon
Marchmont Towers in great lumbering chariots, with brazen crests upon the
hammer–cloths, and sulky coachmen in Brown–George wigs. The county
mammas patronise and caress Miss Marchmont––what a match she will
be for one of the county sons by–and–by!––the county
daughters discourse with Mary about her poor, and her fancy–work, and her
piano. She is getting on slowly enough with her piano, poor little girl! under
the tuition of the organist of Swampington, who gives lessons to that part of
the county. And there are solemn dinners now and then at Marchmont
Towers––dinners at which Miss Mary appears when the cloth has been
removed, and reflects in silent wonder upon the change that has come to her
father and herself. Can it be true that she has ever lived in Oakley Street,
whither came no more aristocratic visitors than her Aunt Sophia, who was the
wife of a Berkshire farmer, and always brought hogs' puddings, and butter, and
home–made bread, and other rustic delicacies to her
brother–in–law; or Mrs. Brigsome, the washer–woman, who made
a morning–call every Monday, to fetch John Marchmont's shabby shirts? The
shirts were not shabby now; and it was no longer Mary's duty to watch them day
by day, and manipulate them tenderly when the linen grew frayed at the sharp
edges of the folds, or the buttonholes gave signs of weakness. Corson, Mr.
Marchmont's own–man, had care of the shirts now: and John wore
diamond–studs and a black–satin waistcoat, when he gave a
dinner–party. They were not very lively, those Lincolnshire
dinner–parties; though the dessert was a sight to look upon, in Mary's
eyes. The long shining table, the red and gold and purple Indian china, the
fluffy woollen d'oyleys, the sparkling cut–glass, the sticky preserved
ginger and guava–jelly, and dried orange rings and chips, and all the
stereotyped sweetmeats, were very grand and beautiful, no doubt; but Mary had
seen livelier desserts in Oakley Street, though there had been nothing better
than a brown–paper bag of oranges from the Westminster Road, and a bottle
of two–and–twopenny Marsala from a licensed victualler's in the
Borough, to promote conviviality.</p>
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