<h2><SPAN name="2H_4_0066"></SPAN> BOOK VIII.—FRUIT AND SEED.</h2><h2><SPAN name="2HCH0058"></SPAN> CHAPTER LVIII.</h2>
<p class="poem">
“Much adoe there was, God wot;<br/>
He wold love and she wold not.”<br/>
—N<small>ICHOLAS</small> B<small>RETON</small>.</p>
<p>Extension, we know, is a very imperfect measure of things; and the length of
the sun’s journeying can no more tell us how life has advanced than the
acreage of a field can tell us what growths may be active within it. A man may
go south, and, stumbling over a bone, may meditate upon it till he has found a
new starting-point for anatomy; or eastward, and discover a new key to language
telling a new story of races; or he may head an expedition that opens new
continental pathways, get himself maimed in body, and go through a whole heroic
poem of resolve and endurance; and at the end of a few months he may come back
to find his neighbors grumbling at the same parish grievance as before, or to
see the same elderly gentleman treading the pavement in discourse with himself,
shaking his head after the same percussive butcher’s boy, and pausing at
the same shop-window to look at the same prints. If the swiftest thinking has
about the pace of a greyhound, the slowest must be supposed to move, like the
limpet, by an apparent sticking, which after a good while is discerned to be a
slight progression. Such differences are manifest in the variable intensity
which we call human experience, from the revolutionary rush of change which
makes a new inner and outer life, to that quiet recurrence of the familiar,
which has no other epochs than those of hunger and the heavens.</p>
<p>Something of this contrast was seen in the year’s experience which had
turned the brilliant, self-confident Gwendolen Harleth of the Archery Meeting
into the crushed penitent impelled to confess her unworthiness where it would
have been her happiness to be held worthy; while it had left her family in
Pennicote without deeper change than that of some outward habits, and some
adjustment of prospects and intentions to reduced income, fewer visits, and
fainter compliments. The rectory was as pleasant a home as before: and the red
and pink peonies on the lawn, the rows of hollyhocks by the hedges, had bloomed
as well this year as last: the rector maintained his cheerful confidence in the
good will of patrons and his resolution to deserve it by diligence in the
fulfillment of his duties, whether patrons were likely to hear of it or not;
doing nothing solely with an eye to promotion except, perhaps, the writing of
two ecclesiastical articles, which having no signature, were attributed to some
one else, except by the patrons who had a special copy sent them, and these
certainly knew the author but did not read the articles. The rector, however,
chewed no poisonous cud of suspicion on this point: he made marginal notes on
his own copies to render them a more interesting loan, and was gratified that
the Archdeacon and other authorities had nothing to say against the general
tenor of his argument. Peaceful authorship!—living in the air of the
fields and downs, and not in the thrice-breathed breath of
criticism—bringing no Dantesque leanness; rather, assisting nutrition by
complacency, and perhaps giving a more suffusive sense of achievement than the
production of a whole <i>Divina Commedia</i>. Then there was the father’s
recovered delight in his favorite son, which was a happiness outweighing the
loss of eighteen hundred a year. Of whatever nature might be the hidden change
wrought in Rex by the disappointment of his first love, it was apparently quite
secondary to that evidence of more serious ambition which dated from the family
misfortune; indeed, Mr. Gascoigne was inclined to regard the little affair
which had caused him so much anxiety the year before as an evaporation of
superfluous moisture, a kind of finish to the baking process which the human
dough demands. Rex had lately come down for a summer visit to the rectory,
bringing Anna home, and while he showed nearly the old liveliness with his
brothers and sisters, he continued in his holiday the habits of the eager
student, rising early in the morning and shutting himself up early in the
evenings to carry on a fixed course of study.</p>
<p>“You don’t repent the choice of the law as a profession,
Rex?” said his father.</p>
<p>“There is no profession I would choose before it,” said Rex.
“I should like to end my life as a first-rate judge, and help to draw up
a code. I reverse the famous dictum. I should say, ‘Give me something to
do with making the laws, and let who will make the songs.’”</p>
<p>“You will have to stow in an immense amount of rubbish, I
suppose—that’s the worst of it,” said the rector.</p>
<p>“I don’t see that law-rubbish is worse than any other sort. It is
not so bad as the rubbishy literature that people choke their minds with. It
doesn’t make one so dull. Our wittiest men have often been lawyers. Any
orderly way of looking at things as cases and evidence seems to me better than
a perpetual wash of odds and ends bearing on nothing in particular. And then,
from a higher point of view, the foundations and the growth of law make the
most interesting aspects of philosophy and history. Of course there will be a
good deal that is troublesome, drudging, perhaps exasperating. But the great
prizes in life can’t be won easily—I see that.”</p>
<p>“Well, my boy, the best augury of a man’s success in his profession
is that he thinks it the finest in the world. But I fancy it so with most work
when a man goes into it with a will. Brewitt, the blacksmith, said to me the
other day that his ’prentice had no mind to his trade; ‘and yet,
sir,’ said Brewitt, ‘what would a young fellow have if he
doesn’t like the blacksmithing?”</p>
<p>The rector cherished a fatherly delight, which he allowed to escape him only in
moderation. Warham, who had gone to India, he had easily borne parting with,
but Rex was that romance of later life which a man sometimes finds in a son
whom he recognizes as superior to himself, picturing a future eminence for him
according to a variety of famous examples. It was only to his wife that he said
with decision: “Rex will be a distinguished man, Nancy, I am sure of
it—as sure as Paley’s father was about his son.”</p>
<p>“Was Paley an old bachelor?” said Mrs. Gascoigne.</p>
<p>“That is hardly to the point, my dear,” said the rector, who did
not remember that irrelevant detail. And Mrs. Gascoigne felt that she had
spoken rather weakly.</p>
<p>This quiet trotting of time at the rectory was shared by the group who had
exchanged the faded dignity of Offendene for the low white house not a mile
off, well enclosed with evergreens, and known to the villagers, as
“Jodson’s.” Mrs. Davilow’s delicate face showed only a
slight deepening of its mild melancholy, her hair only a few more silver lines,
in consequence of the last year’s trials; the four girls had bloomed out
a little from being less in the shade; and the good Jocosa preserved her
serviceable neutrality toward the pleasures and glories of the world as things
made for those who were not “in a situation.”</p>
<p>The low narrow drawing-room, enlarged by two quaint projecting windows, with
lattices wide open on a July afternoon to the scent of monthly roses, the faint
murmurs of the garden, and the occasional rare sound of hoofs and wheels
seeming to clarify the succeeding silence, made rather a crowded, lively scene,
Rex and Anna being added to the usual group of six. Anna, always a favorite
with her younger cousins, had much to tell of her new experience, and the
acquaintances she had made in London, and when on her first visit she came
alone, many questions were asked her about Gwendolen’s house in Grosvenor
Square, what Gwendolen herself had said, and what any one else had said about
Gwendolen. Had Anna been to see Gwendolen after she had known about the yacht?
No:—an answer which left speculation free concerning everything connected
with that interesting unknown vessel beyond the fact that Gwendolen had written
just before she set out to say that Mr. Grandcourt and she were going yachting
on the Mediterranean, and again from Marseilles to say that she was sure to
like the yachting, the cabins were very elegant, and she would probably not
send another letter till she had written quite a long diary filled with
<i>dittos</i>. Also, this movement of Mr. and Mrs. Grandcourt had been
mentioned in “the newspaper;” so that altogether this new phase of
Gwendolen’s exalted life made a striking part of the sisters’
romance, the book-devouring Isabel throwing in a corsair or two to make an
adventure that might end well.</p>
<p>But when Rex was present, the girls, according to instructions, never started
this fascinating topic, and to-day there had only been animated descriptions of
the Meyricks and their extraordinary Jewish friends, which caused some
astonished questioning from minds to which the idea of live Jews, out of a
book, suggested a difference deep enough to be almost zoological, as of a
strange race in Pliny’s Natural History that might sleep under the shade
of its own ears. Bertha could not imagine what Jews believed now; and she had a
dim idea that they rejected the Old Testament since it proved the New; Miss
Merry thought that Mirah and her brother could “never have been properly
argued with,” and the amiable Alice did not mind what the Jews believed,
she was sure she “couldn’t bear them.” Mrs. Davilow corrected
her by saying that the great Jewish families who were in society were quite
what they ought to be both in London and Paris, but admitted that the commoner
unconverted Jews were objectionable; and Isabel asked whether Mirah talked just
as they did, or whether you might be with her and not find out that she was a
Jewess.</p>
<p>Rex, who had no partisanship with the Israelites, having made a troublesome
acquaintance with the minutiae of their ancient history in the form of
“cram,” was amusing himself by playfully exaggerating the notion of
each speaker, while Anna begged them all to understand that he was only joking,
when the laughter was interrupted by the bringing in of a letter for Mrs.
Davilow. A messenger had run with it in great haste from the rectory. It
enclosed a telegram, and as Mrs. Davilow read and re-read it in silence and
agitation, all eyes were turned on her with anxiety, but no one dared to speak.
Looking up at last and seeing the young faces “painted with fear,”
she remembered that they might be imagining something worse than the truth,
something like her own first dread which made her unable to understand what was
written, and she said, with a sob which was half relief,</p>
<p>“My dears, Mr. Grandcourt—” She paused an instant, and then
began again, “Mr. Grandcourt is drowned.”</p>
<p>Rex started up as if a missile had been suddenly thrown into the room. He could
not help himself, and Anna’s first look was at him. But then, gathering
some self-command while Mrs. Davilow was reading what the rector had written on
the enclosing paper, he said,</p>
<p>“Can I do anything, aunt? Can I carry any word to my father from
you?”</p>
<p>“Yes, dear. Tell him I will be ready—he is very good. He says he
will go with me to Genoa—he will be here at half-past six. Jocosa and
Alice, help me to get ready. She is safe—Gwendolen is safe—but she
must be ill. I am sure she must be very ill. Rex, dear—Rex and
Anna—go and and tell your father I will be quite ready. I would not for
the world lose another night. And bless him for being ready so soon. I can
travel night and day till we get there.”</p>
<p>Rex and Anna hurried away through the sunshine which was suddenly solemn to
them, without uttering a word to each other: she chiefly possessed by
solicitude about any reopening of his wound, he struggling with a tumultuary
crowd of thoughts that were an offence against his better will. The tumult
being undiminished when they were at the rectory gate, he said,</p>
<p>“Nannie, I will leave you to say everything to my father. If he wants me
immediately, let me know. I shall stay in the shrubbery for ten
minutes—only ten minutes.”</p>
<p>Who has been quite free from egoistic escapes of the imagination, picturing
desirable consequences on his own future in the presence of another’s
misfortune, sorrow, or death? The expected promotion or legacy is the common
type of a temptation which makes speech and even prayer a severe avoidance of
the most insistent thoughts, and sometimes raises an inward shame, a
self-distaste that is worse than any other form of unpleasant companionship. In
Rex’s nature the shame was immediate, and overspread like an ugly light
all the hurrying images of what might come, which thrust themselves in with the
idea that Gwendolen was again free—overspread them, perhaps, the more
persistently because every phantasm of a hope was quickly nullified by a more
substantial obstacle. Before the vision of “Gwendolen free” rose
the impassable vision of “Gwendolen rich, exalted, courted;” and if
in the former time, when both their lives were fresh, she had turned from his
love with repugnance, what ground was there for supposing that her heart would
be more open to him in the future?</p>
<p>These thoughts, which he wanted to master and suspend, were like a tumultuary
ringing of opposing chimes that he could not escape from by running. During the
last year he had brought himself into a state of calm resolve, and now it
seemed that three words had been enough to undo all that difficult work, and
cast him back into the wretched fluctuations of a longing which he recognized
as simply perturbing and hopeless. And at this moment the activity of such
longing had an untimeliness that made it repulsive to his better self. Excuse
poor Rex; it was not much more than eighteen months since he had been laid low
by an archer who sometimes touches his arrow with a subtle, lingering poison.
The disappointment of a youthful passion has effects as incalculable as those
of small-pox which may make one person plain and a genius, another less plain
and more foolish, another plain without detriment to his folly, and leave
perhaps the majority without obvious change. Everything depends—not on
the mere fact of disappointment, but—on the nature affected and the force
that stirs it. In Rex’s well-endowed nature, brief as the hope had been,
the passionate stirring had gone deep, and the effect of disappointment was
revolutionary, though fraught with a beneficent new order which retained most
of the old virtues; in certain respects he believed that it had finally
determined the bias and color of his life. Now, however, it seemed that his
inward peace was hardly more than that of republican Florence, and his heart no
better than the alarm-bell that made work slack and tumult busy.</p>
<p>Rex’s love had been of that sudden, penetrating, clinging sort which the
ancients knew and sung, and in singing made a fashion of talk for many moderns
whose experience has by no means a fiery, demonic character. To have the
consciousness suddenly steeped with another’s personality, to have the
strongest inclinations possessed by an image which retains its dominance in
spite of change and apart from worthiness—nay, to feel a passion which
clings faster for the tragic pangs inflicted by a cruel, reorganized
unworthiness—is a phase of love which in the feeble and common-minded has
a repulsive likeness to his blind animalism insensible to the higher sway of
moral affinity or heaven-lit admiration. But when this attaching force is
present in a nature not of brutish unmodifiableness, but of a human dignity
that can risk itself safely, it may even result in a devotedness not unfit to
be called divine in a higher sense than the ancient. Phlegmatic rationality
stares and shakes its head at these unaccountable prepossessions, but they
exist as undeniably as the winds and waves, determining here a wreck and there
a triumphant voyage.</p>
<p>This sort of passion had nested in the sweet-natured, strong Rex, and he had
made up his mind to its companionship, as if it had been an object supremely
dear, stricken dumb and helpless, and turning all the future of tenderness into
a shadow of the past. But he had also made up his mind that his life was not to
be pauperized because he had had to renounce one sort of joy; rather, he had
begun life again with a new counting-up of the treasures that remained to him,
and he had even felt a release of power such as may come from ceasing to be
afraid of your own neck.</p>
<p>And now, here he was pacing the shrubbery, angry with himself that the sense of
irrevocableness in his lot, which ought in reason to have been as strong as
ever, had been shaken by a change of circumstances that could make no change in
relation to him. He told himself the truth quite roughly,</p>
<p>“She would never love me; and that is not the question—I could
never approach her as a lover in her present position. I am exactly of no
consequence at all, and am not likely to be of much consequence till my head is
turning gray. But what has that to do with it? She would not have me on any
terms, and I would not ask her. It is a meanness to be thinking about it
now—no better than lurking about the battle-field to strip the dead; but
there never was more gratuitous sinning. I have nothing to gain
there—absolutely nothing. Then why can’t I face the facts, and
behave as they demand, instead of leaving my father to suppose that there are
matters he can’t speak to me about, though I might be useful in
them?”</p>
<p>The last thought made one wave with the impulse that sent Rex walking firmly
into the house and through the open door of the study, where he saw his father
packing a traveling-desk.</p>
<p>“Can I be of any use, sir?” said Rex, with rallied courage, as his
father looked up at him.</p>
<p>“Yes, my boy; when I’m gone, just see to my letters, and answer
where necessary, and send me word of everything. Dymock will manage the parish
very well, and you will stay with your mother, or, at least, go up and down
again, till I come back, whenever that may be.”</p>
<p>“You will hardly be very long, sir, I suppose,” said Rex, beginning
to strap a railway rug. “You will perhaps bring my cousin back to
England?” He forced himself to speak of Gwendolen for the first time, and
the rector noticed the epoch with satisfaction.</p>
<p>“That depends,” he answered, taking the subject as a
matter-of-course between them. “Perhaps her mother may stay there with
her, and I may come back very soon. This telegram leaves us in ignorance which
is rather anxious. But no doubt the arrangements of the will lately made are
satisfactory, and there may possibly be an heir yet to be born. In any case, I
feel confident that Gwendolen will be liberally—I should expect,
splendidly—provided for.”</p>
<p>“It must have been a great shock for her,” said Rex, getting more
resolute after the first twinge had been borne. “I suppose he was a
devoted husband.”</p>
<p>“No doubt of it,” said the rector, in his most decided manner.
“Few men of his position would have come forward as he did under the
circumstances.”</p>
<p>Rex had never seen Grandcourt, had never been spoken to about him by any one of
the family, and knew nothing of Gwendolen’s flight from her suitor to
Leubronn. He only knew that Grandcourt, being very much in love with her, had
made her an offer in the first weeks of her sudden poverty, and had behaved
very handsomely in providing for her mother and sisters. That was all very
natural and what Rex himself would have liked to do. Grandcourt had been a
lucky fellow, and had had some happiness before he got drowned. Yet Rex
wondered much whether Gwendolen had been in love with the successful suitor, or
had only forborne to tell him that she hated being made love to.</p>
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