<h2><SPAN name="2H_4_0057"></SPAN> BOOK VII.—THE MOTHER AND THE SON</h2><h2><SPAN name="2HCH0050"></SPAN> CHAPTER L.</h2>
<p class="poem">
“If some mortal, born too soon,<br/>
Were laid away in some great trance—the ages<br/>
Coming and going all the while—till dawned<br/>
His true time’s advent; and could then record<br/>
The words they spoke who kept watch by his bed,<br/>
Then I might tell more of the breath so light<br/>
Upon my eyelids, and the fingers warm<br/>
Among my hair. Youth is confused; yet never<br/>
So dull was I but, when that spirit passed,<br/>
I turned to him, scarce consciously, as turns<br/>
A water-snake when fairies cross his sleep.”<br/>
—B<small>ROWNING</small>: <i>Paracelsus</i>.</p>
<p>This was the letter which Sir Hugo put into Deronda’s hands:,</p>
<p class="center">
TO MY SON, DANIEL DERONDA.</p>
<p class="letter">
My good friend and yours, Sir Hugo Mallinger, will have told you that I wish to
see you. My health is shaken, and I desire there should be no time lost before
I deliver to you what I have long withheld. Let nothing hinder you from being
at the <i>Albergo dell’ Italia</i> in Genoa by the fourteenth of this
month. Wait for me there. I am uncertain when I shall be able to make the
journey from Spezia, where I shall be staying. That will depend on several
things. Wait for me—the Princess Halm-Eberstein. Bring with you the
diamond ring that Sir Hugo gave you. I shall like to see it again.—Your
unknown mother,</p>
<p class="right">
L<small>EONORA</small> H<small>ALM</small>-E<small>BERSTEIN</small>.</p>
<p>This letter with its colorless wording gave Deronda no clue to what was in
reserve for him; but he could not do otherwise than accept Sir Hugo’s
reticence, which seemed to imply some pledge not to anticipate the
mother’s disclosures; and the discovery that his life-long conjectures
had been mistaken checked further surmise. Deronda could not hinder his
imagination from taking a quick flight over what seemed possibilities, but he
refused to contemplate any of them as more likely than another, lest he should
be nursing it into a dominant desire or repugnance, instead of simply preparing
himself with resolve to meet the fact bravely, whatever it might turn out to
be.</p>
<p>In this state of mind he could not have communicated to any one the reason for
the absence which in some quarters he was obliged to mention beforehand, least
of all to Mordecai, whom it would affect as powerfully as it did himself, only
in rather a different way. If he were to say, “I am going to learn the
truth about my birth,” Mordecai’s hope would gather what might
prove a painful, dangerous excitement. To exclude suppositions, he spoke of his
journey as being undertaken by Sir Hugo’s wish, and threw as much
indifference as he could into his manner of announcing it, saying he was
uncertain of its duration, but it would perhaps be very short.</p>
<p>“I will ask to have the child Jacob to stay with me,” said
Mordecai, comforting himself in this way, after the first mournful glances.</p>
<p>“I will drive round and ask Mrs. Cohen to let him come,” said
Mirah.</p>
<p>“The grandmother will deny you nothing,” said Deronda.
“I’m glad you were a little wrong as well as I,” he added,
smiling at Mordecai. “You thought that old Mrs. Cohen would not bear to
see Mirah.”</p>
<p>“I undervalued her heart,” said Mordecai. “She is capable of
rejoicing that another’s plant blooms though her own be withered.”</p>
<p>“Oh, they are dear good people; I feel as if we all belonged to each
other,” said Mirah, with a tinge of merriment in her smile.</p>
<p>“What should you have felt if that Ezra had been your brother?”
said Deronda, mischievously—a little provoked that she had taken kindly
at once to people who had caused him so much prospective annoyance on her
account.</p>
<p>Mirah looked at him with a slight surprise for a moment, and then said,
“He is not a bad man—I think he would never forsake any one.”
But when she uttered the words she blushed deeply, and glancing timidly at
Mordecai, turned away to some occupation. Her father was in her mind, and this
was a subject on which she and her brother had a painful mutual consciousness.
“If he should come and find us!” was a thought which to Mirah
sometimes made the street daylight as shadowy as a haunted forest where each
turn screened for her an imaginary apparition.</p>
<p>Deronda felt what was her involuntary allusion, and understood the blush. How
could he be slow to understand feelings which now seemed nearer than ever to
his own? for the words of his mother’s letter implied that his filial
relation was not to be freed from painful conditions; indeed, singularly enough
that letter which had brought his mother nearer as a living reality had thrown
her into more remoteness for his affections. The tender yearning after a being
whose life might have been the worse for not having his care and love, the
image of a mother who had not had all her dues, whether of reverence or
compassion, had long been secretly present with him in his observation of all
the women he had come near. But it seemed now that this picturing of his mother
might fit the facts no better than his former conceptions about Sir Hugo. He
wondered to find that when this mother’s very handwriting had come to
him with words holding her actual feeling, his affections had suddenly shrunk
into a state of comparative neutrality toward her. A veiled figure with
enigmatic speech had thrust away that image which, in spite of uncertainty, his
clinging thought had gradually modeled and made the possessor of his tenderness
and duteous longing. When he set off to Genoa, the interest really uppermost in
his mind had hardly so much relation to his mother as to Mordecai and Mirah.</p>
<p>“God bless you, Dan!” Sir Hugo had said, when they shook hands.
“Whatever else changes for you, it can’t change my being the oldest
friend you have known, and the one who has all along felt the most for you. I
couldn’t have loved you better if you’d been my own—only I
should have been better pleased with thinking of you always as the future
master of the Abbey instead of my fine nephew; and then you would have seen it
necessary for you to take a political line. However—things must be as
they may.” It was a defensive movement of the baronet’s to mingle
purposeless remarks with the expression of serious feeling.</p>
<p>When Deronda arrived at the <i>Italia</i> in Genoa, no Princess Halm-Eberstein
was there; but on the second day there was a letter for him, saying that her
arrival might happen within a week, or might be deferred a fortnight and more;
she was under circumstances which made it impossible for her to fix her journey
more precisely, and she entreated him to wait as patiently as he could.</p>
<p>With this indefinite prospect of suspense on matters of supreme moment to him,
Deronda set about the difficult task of seeking amusement on philosophic
grounds, as a means of quieting excited feeling and giving patience a lift over
a weary road. His former visit to the superb city had been only cursory, and
left him much to learn beyond the prescribed round of sight-seeing, by spending
the cooler hours in observant wandering about the streets, the quay, and the
environs; and he often took a boat that he might enjoy the magnificent view of
the city and harbor from the sea. All sights, all subjects, even the expected
meeting with his mother, found a central union in Mordecai and Mirah, and the
ideas immediately associated with them; and among the thoughts that most filled
his mind while his boat was pushing about within view of the grand harbor was
that of the multitudinous Spanish Jews centuries ago driven destitute from
their Spanish homes, suffered to land from the crowded ships only for a brief
rest on this grand quay of Genoa, overspreading it with a pall of famine and
plague—dying mothers and dying children at their breasts—fathers
and sons a-gaze at each other’s haggardness, like groups from a hundred
Hunger-towers turned out beneath the midday sun. Inevitably dreamy
constructions of a possible ancestry for himself would weave themselves with
historic memories which had begun to have a new interest for him on his
discovery of Mirah, and now, under the influence of Mordecai, had become
irresistibly dominant. He would have sealed his mind against such constructions
if it had been possible, and he had never yet fully admitted to himself that he
wished the facts to verify Mordecai’s conviction: he inwardly repeated
that he had no choice in the matter, and that wishing was folly—nay, on
the question of parentage, wishing seemed part of that meanness which disowns
kinship: it was a disowning by anticipation. What he had to do was simply to
accept the fact; and he had really no strong presumption to go upon, now that
he was assured of his mistake about Sir Hugo. There had been a resolved
concealment which made all inference untrustworthy, and the very name he bore
might be a false one. If Mordecai was wrong—if he, the so-called Daniel
Deronda, were held by ties entirely aloof from any such course as his
friend’s pathetic hope had marked out?—he would not say “I
wish”; but he could not help feeling on which side the sacrifice lay.</p>
<p>Across these two importunate thoughts, which he resisted as much as one can
resist anything in that unstrung condition which belongs to suspense, there
came continually an anxiety which he made no effort to banish—dwelling on
it rather with a mournfulness, which often seems to us the best atonement we
can make to one whose need we have been unable to meet. The anxiety was for
Gwendolen. In the wonderful mixtures of our nature there is a feeling distinct
from that exclusive passionate love of which some men and women (by no means
all) are capable, which yet is not the same with friendship, nor with a merely
benevolent regard, whether admiring or compassionate: a man, say—for it
is a man who is here concerned—hardly represents to himself this shade of
feeling toward a woman more nearly than in words, “I should have loved
her, if——”: the “if” covering some prior growth
in the inclinations, or else some circumstances which have made an inward
prohibitory law as a stay against the emotions ready to quiver out of balance.
The “if” in Deronda’s case carried reasons of both kinds; yet
he had never throughout his relations with Gwendolen been free from the nervous
consciousness that there was something to guard against not only on her account
but on his own—some precipitancy in the manifestations of impulsive
feeling—some ruinous inroad of what is but momentary on the permanent
chosen treasure of the heart—some spoiling of her trust, which wrought
upon him now as if it had been the retreating cry of a creature snatched and
carried out of his reach by swift horsemen or swifter waves, while his own
strength was only a stronger sense of weakness. How could his feelings for
Gwendolen ever be exactly like his feelings for other women, even when there
was one by whose side he desired to stand apart from them? Strangely the figure
entered into the pictures of his present and future; strangely (and now it
seemed sadly) their two lots had come in contact, hers narrowly personal, his
charged with far-reaching sensibilities, perhaps with durable purposes, which
were hardly more present to her than the reasons why men migrate are present to
the birds that come as usual for the crumbs and find them no more. Not that
Deronda was too ready to imagine himself of supreme importance to a woman; but
her words of insistence that he must “remain near her—must not
forsake her”—continually recurred to him with the clearness and
importunity of imagined sounds, such as Dante has said pierce us like arrows
whose points carry the sharpness of pity,</p>
<p class="poem">
“Lamenti saettaron me diversi<br/>
Che di pietà ferrati avean gli strali”.</p>
<p>Day after day passed, and the very air of Italy seemed to carry the
consciousness that war had been declared against Austria, and every day was a
hurrying march of crowded Time toward the world-changing battle of Sadowa.
Meanwhile, in Genoa, the noons were getting hotter, the converging outer roads
getting deeper with white dust, the oleanders in the tubs along the wayside
gardens looking more and more like fatigued holiday-makers, and the sweet
evening changing her office—scattering abroad those whom the midday had
sent under shelter, and sowing all paths with happy social sounds, little
tinklings of mule-bells and whirrings of thrumbed strings, light footsteps and
voices, if not leisurely, then with the hurry of pleasure in them; while the
encircling heights, crowned with forts, skirted with fine dwellings and
gardens, seemed also to come forth and gaze in fullness of beauty after their
long siesta, till all strong color melted in the stream of moonlight which made
the Streets a new spectacle with shadows, both still and moving, on cathedral
steps and against the façades of massive palaces; and then slowly with the
descending moon all sank in deep night and silence, and nothing shone but the
port lights of the great Lanterna in the blackness below, and the glimmering
stars in the blackness above. Deronda, in his suspense, watched this revolving
of the days as he might have watched a wonderful clock where the striking of
the hours was made solemn with antique figures advancing and retreating in
monitory procession, while he still kept his ear open for another kind of
signal which would have its solemnity too: He was beginning to sicken of
occupation, and found himself contemplating all activity with the aloofness of
a prisoner awaiting ransom. In his letters to Mordecai and Hans, he had avoided
writing about himself, but he was really getting into that state of mind to
which all subjects become personal; and the few books he had brought to make
him a refuge in study were becoming unreadable, because the point of view that
life would make for him was in that agitating moment of uncertainty which is
close upon decision.</p>
<p>Many nights were watched through by him in gazing from the open window of his
room on the double, faintly pierced darkness of the sea and the heavens; often
in struggling under the oppressive skepticism which represented his particular
lot, with all the importance he was allowing Mordecai to give it, as of no more
lasting effect than a dream—a set of changes which made passion to him,
but beyond his consciousness were no more than an imperceptible difference of
mass and shadow; sometimes with a reaction of emotive force which gave even to
sustained disappointment, even to the fulfilled demand of sacrifice, the nature
of a satisfied energy, and spread over his young future, whatever it might be,
the attraction of devoted service; sometimes with a sweet irresistible
hopefulness that the very best of human possibilities might befall
him—the blending of a complete personal love in one current with a larger
duty; and sometimes again in a mood of rebellion (what human creature escapes
it?) against things in general because they are thus and not otherwise, a mood
in which Gwendolen and her equivocal fate moved as busy images of what was
amiss in the world along with the concealments which he had felt as a hardship
in his own life, and which were acting in him now under the form of an
afflicting doubtfulness about the mother who had announced herself coldly and
still kept away.</p>
<p>But at last she was come. One morning in his third week of waiting there was a
new kind of knock at the door. A servant in Chasseurs livery entered and
delivered in French the verbal message that, the Princess Halm-Eberstein had
arrived, that she was going to rest during the day, but would be obliged if
Monsieur would dine early, so as to be at liberty at seven, when she would be
able to receive him.</p>
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