<h2><SPAN name="2HCH0004"></SPAN> CHAPTER IV.</h2>
<p class="poem">
“<i>Gorgibus.</i>— * * * Je te dis que le mariage est une chose
sainte et sacrée: et que c’est faire en honnêtes gens, que de débuter par
là.<br/>
“<i>Madelon.</i>—Mon Dieu! que si tout le monde vous ressemblait,
un roman serait bientôt fini! La belle chose que ce serait, si d’abord
Cyrus épousait Mandane, et qu’Aronce de plain-pied fût marié à Clélie! *
* * Laissez-nous faire à loisir le tissu de notre roman, et n’en pressez
pas tant la conclusion.”<br/>
MOLIÈRE. <i>Les Précieuses Ridicules.</i></p>
<p>It would be a little hard to blame the rector of Pennicote that in the course
of looking at things from every point of view, he looked at Gwendolen as a girl
likely to make a brilliant marriage. Why should he be expected to differ from
his contemporaries in this matter, and wish his niece a worse end of her
charming maidenhood than they would approve as the best possible? It is rather
to be set down to his credit that his feelings on the subject were entirely
good-natured. And in considering the relation of means to ends, it would have
been mere folly to have been guided by the exceptional and idyllic—to
have recommended that Gwendolen should wear a gown as shabby as
Griselda’s in order that a marquis might fall in love with her, or to
have insisted that since a fair maiden was to be sought, she should keep
herself out of the way. Mr. Gascoigne’s calculations were of the kind
called rational, and he did not even think of getting a too frisky horse in
order that Gwendolen might be threatened with an accident and be rescued by a
man of property. He wished his niece well, and he meant her to be seen to
advantage in the best society of the neighborhood.</p>
<p>Her uncle’s intention fell in perfectly with Gwendolen’s own
wishes. But let no one suppose that she also contemplated a brilliant marriage
as the direct end of her witching the world with her grace on horseback, or
with any other accomplishment. That she was to be married some time or other
she would have felt obliged to admit; and that her marriage would not be of a
middling kind, such as most girls were contented with, she felt quietly,
unargumentatively sure. But her thoughts never dwelt on marriage as the
fulfillment of her ambition; the dramas in which she imagined herself a heroine
were not wrought up to that close. To be very much sued or hopelessly sighed
for as a bride was indeed an indispensable and agreeable guarantee of womanly
power; but to become a wife and wear all the domestic fetters of that
condition, was on the whole a vexatious necessity. Her observation of matrimony
had inclined her to think it rather a dreary state in which a woman could not
do what she liked, had more children than were desirable, was consequently
dull, and became irrevocably immersed in humdrum. Of course marriage was social
promotion; she could not look forward to a single life; but promotions have
sometimes to be taken with bitter herbs—a peerage will not quite do
instead of leadership to the man who meant to lead; and this delicate-limbed
sylph of twenty meant to lead. For such passions dwell in feminine breasts
also. In Gwendolen’s, however, they dwelt among strictly feminine
furniture, and had no disturbing reference to the advancement of learning or
the balance of the constitution; her knowledge being such as with no sort of
standing-room or length of lever could have been expected to move the world.
She meant to do what was pleasant to herself in a striking manner; or rather,
whatever she could do so as to strike others with admiration and get in that
reflected way a more ardent sense of living, seemed pleasant to her fancy.</p>
<p>“Gwendolen will not rest without having the world at her feet,”
said Miss Merry, the meek governess: hyperbolical words which have long come to
carry the most moderate meanings; for who has not heard of private persons
having the world at their feet in the shape of some half-dozen items of
flattering regard generally known in a genteel suburb? And words could hardly
be too wide or vague to indicate the prospect that made a hazy largeness about
poor Gwendolen on the heights of her young self-exultation. Other people
allowed themselves to be made slaves of, and to have their lives blown hither
and thither like empty ships in which no will was present. It was not to be so
with her; she would no longer be sacrificed to creatures worth less than
herself, but would make the very best of the chances that life offered her, and
conquer circumstances by her exceptional cleverness. Certainly, to be settled
at Offendene, with the notice of Lady Brackenshaw, the archery club, and
invitations to dine with the Arrowpoints, as the highest lights in her scenery,
was not a position that seemed to offer remarkable chances; but
Gwendolen’s confidence lay chiefly in herself. She felt well equipped for
the mastery of life. With regard to much in her lot hitherto, she held herself
rather hardly dealt with, but as to her “education,” she would have
admitted that it had left her under no disadvantages. In the school-room her
quick mind had taken readily that strong starch of unexplained rules and
disconnected facts which saves ignorance from any painful sense of limpness;
and what remained of all things knowable, she was conscious of being
sufficiently acquainted with through novels, plays and poems. About her French
and music, the two justifying accomplishments of a young lady, she felt no
ground for uneasiness; and when to all these qualifications, negative and
positive, we add the spontaneous sense of capability some happy persons are
born with, so that any subject they turn their attention to impresses them with
their own power of forming a correct judgment on it, who can wonder if
Gwendolen felt ready to manage her own destiny?</p>
<p>There were many subjects in the world—perhaps the majority—in which
she felt no interest, because they were stupid; for subjects are apt to appear
stupid to the young as light seems dull to the old; but she would not have felt
at all helpless in relation to them if they had turned up in conversation. It
must be remembered that no one had disputed her power or her general
superiority. As on the arrival at Offendene, so always, the first thought of
those about her had been, what will Gwendolen think?—if the footman trod
heavily in creaking boots, or if the laundress’s work was unsatisfactory,
the maid said, “This will never do for Miss Harleth”; if the wood
smoked in the bedroom fire-place, Mrs. Davilow, whose own weak eyes suffered
much from this inconvenience, spoke apologetically of it to Gwendolen. If, when
they were under the stress of traveling, she did not appear at the breakfast
table till every one else had finished, the only question was, how
Gwendolen’s coffee and toast should still be of the hottest and crispest;
and when she appeared with her freshly-brushed light-brown hair streaming
backward and awaiting her mamma’s hand to coil it up, her large brown
eyes glancing bright as a wave-washed onyx from under their long lashes, it was
always she herself who had to be tolerant—to beg that Alice who sat
waiting on her would not stick up her shoulders in that frightful manner, and
that Isabel, instead of pushing up to her and asking questions, would go away
to Miss Merry.</p>
<p>Always she was the princess in exile, who in time of famine was to have her
breakfast-roll made of the finest-bolted flour from the seven thin ears of
wheat, and in a general decampment was to have her silver fork kept out of the
baggage. How was this to be accounted for? The answer may seem to lie quite on
the surface:—in her beauty, a certain unusualness about her, a decision
of will which made itself felt in her graceful movements and clear unhesitating
tones, so that if she came into the room on a rainy day when everybody else was
flaccid and the use of things in general was not apparent to them, there seemed
to be a sudden, sufficient reason for keeping up the forms of life; and even
the waiters at hotels showed the more alacrity in doing away with crumbs and
creases and dregs with struggling flies in them. This potent charm, added to
the fact that she was the eldest daughter, toward whom her mamma had always
been in an apologetic state of mind for the evils brought on her by a
step-father, may seem so full a reason for Gwendolen’s domestic empire,
that to look for any other would be to ask the reason of daylight when the sun
is shining. But beware of arriving at conclusions without comparison. I
remember having seen the same assiduous, apologetic attention awarded to
persons who were not at all beautiful or unusual, whose firmness showed itself
in no very graceful or euphonious way, and who were not eldest daughters with a
tender, timid mother, compunctious at having subjected them to inconveniences.
Some of them were a very common sort of men. And the only point of resemblance
among them all was a strong determination to have what was pleasant, with a
total fearlessness in making themselves disagreeable or dangerous when they did
not get it. Who is so much cajoled and served with trembling by the weak
females of a household as the unscrupulous male—capable, if he has not
free way at home, of going and doing worse elsewhere? Hence I am forced to
doubt whether even without her potent charm and peculiar filial position
Gwendolen might not still have played the queen in exile, if only she had kept
her inborn energy of egoistic desire, and her power of inspiring fear as to
what she might say or do. However, she had the charm, and those who feared her
were also fond of her; the fear and the fondness being perhaps both heightened
by what may be called the iridescence of her character—the play of
various, nay, contrary tendencies. For Macbeth’s rhetoric about the
impossibility of being many opposite things in the same moment, referred to the
clumsy necessities of action and not to the subtler possibilities of feeling.
We cannot speak a loyal word and be meanly silent; we cannot kill and not kill
in the same moment; but a moment is wide enough for the loyal and mean desire,
for the outlash of a murderous thought and the sharp backward stroke of
repentance.</p>
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