<h2><SPAN name="2HCH0064"></SPAN> CHAPTER LXIV.</h2>
<p class="poem">
“Questa montagna è tale,<br/>
Che sempre al cominciar di sotto è grave.<br/>
E quanto uom più va su e men fa male.”<br/>
—D<small>ANTE</small>: <i>Il Purgatorio</i>.</p>
<p>It was not many days after her mother’s arrival that Gwendolen would
consent to remain at Genoa. Her desire to get away from that gem of the sea,
helped to rally her strength and courage. For what place, though it were the
flowery vale of Enna, may not the inward sense turn into a circle of punishment
where the flowers are no better than a crop of flame-tongues burning the soles
of our feet?</p>
<p>“I shall never like to see the Mediterranean again,” said
Gwendolen, to her mother, who thought that she quite understood her
child’s feeling—even in her tacit prohibition of any express
reference to her late husband.</p>
<p>Mrs. Davilow, indeed, though compelled formally to regard this time as one of
severe calamity, was virtually enjoying her life more than she had ever done
since her daughter’s marriage. It seemed that her darling was brought
back to her not merely with all the old affection, but with a conscious
cherishing of her mother’s nearness, such as we give to a possession that
we have been on the brink of losing.</p>
<p>“Are you there, mamma?” cried Gwendolen, in the middle of the night
(a bed had been made for her mother in the same room with hers), very much as
she would have done in her early girlhood, if she had felt frightened in lying
awake.</p>
<p>“Yes, dear; can I do anything for you?”</p>
<p>“No, thank you; only I like so to know you are there. Do you mind my
waking you?” (This question would hardly have been Gwendolen’s in
her early girlhood.)</p>
<p>“I was not asleep, darling.”</p>
<p>“It seemed not real that you were with me. I wanted to make it real. I
can bear things if you are with me. But you must not lie awake, anxious about
me. You must be happy now. You must let me make you happy now at
last—else what shall I do?”</p>
<p>“God bless you, dear; I have the best happiness I can have, when you make
much of me.”</p>
<p>But the next night, hearing that she was sighing and restless Mrs. Davilow
said, “Let me give you your sleeping-draught, Gwendolen.”</p>
<p>“No, mamma, thank you; I don’t want to sleep.”</p>
<p>“It would be so good for you to sleep more, my darling.”</p>
<p>“Don’t say what would be good for me, mamma,” Gwendolen
answered, impetuously. “You don’t know what would be good for me.
You and my uncle must not contradict me and tell me anything is good for me
when I feel it is not good.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Davilow was silent, not wondering that the poor child was irritable.
Presently Gwendolen said,</p>
<p>“I was always naughty to you, mamma.”</p>
<p>“No, dear, no.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I was,” said Gwendolen insistently. “It is because I
was always wicked that I am miserable now.”</p>
<p>She burst into sobs and cries. The determination to be silent about all the
facts of her married life and its close, reacted in these escapes of enigmatic
excitement.</p>
<p>But dim lights of interpretation were breaking on the mother’s mind
through the information that came from Sir Hugo to Mr. Gascoigne, and, with
some omissions, from Mr. Gascoigne to herself. The good-natured baronet, while
he was attending to all decent measures in relation to his nephew’s
death, and the possible washing ashore of the body, thought it the kindest
thing he could do to use his present friendly intercourse with the rector as an
opportunity for communicating with him, in the mildest way, the purport of
Grandcourt’s will, so as to save him the additional shock that would be
in store for him if he carried his illusions all the way home. Perhaps Sir Hugo
would have been communicable enough without that kind motive, but he really
felt the motive. He broke the unpleasant news to the rector by degrees: at
first he only implied his fear that the widow was not so splendidly provided
for as Mr. Gascoigne, nay, as the baronet himself had expected; and only at
last, after some previous vague reference to large claims on Grandcourt, he
disclosed the prior relations which, in the unfortunate absence of a legitimate
heir, had determined all the splendor in another direction.</p>
<p>The rector was deeply hurt, and remembered, more vividly than he had ever done
before, how offensively proud and repelling the manners of the deceased had
been toward him—remembered also that he himself, in that interesting
period just before the arrival of the new occupant at Diplow, had received
hints of former entangling dissipations, and an undue addiction to pleasure,
though he had not foreseen that the pleasure which had probably, so to speak,
been swept into private rubbish-heaps, would ever present itself as an array of
live caterpillars, disastrous to the green meat of respectable people. But he
did not make these retrospective thoughts audible to Sir Hugo, or lower himself
by expressing any indignation on merely personal grounds, but behaved like a
man of the world who had become a conscientious clergyman. His first remark
was,</p>
<p>“When a young man makes his will in health, he usually counts on living a
long while. Probably Mr. Grandcourt did not believe that this will would ever
have its present effect.” After a moment, he added, “The effect is
painful in more ways than one. Female morality is likely to suffer from this
marked advantage and prominence being given to illegitimate offspring.”</p>
<p>“Well, in point of fact,” said Sir Hugo, in his comfortable way,
“since the boy is there, this was really the best alternative for the
disposal of the estates. Grandcourt had nobody nearer than his cousin. And
it’s a chilling thought that you go out of this life only for the benefit
of a cousin. A man gets a little pleasure in making his will, if it’s for
the good of his own curly heads; but it’s a nuisance when you’re
giving the bequeathing to a used-up fellow like yourself, and one you
don’t care two straws for. It’s the next worse thing to having only
a life interest in your estates. No; I forgive Grandcourt for that part of his
will. But, between ourselves, what I don’t forgive him for, is the shabby
way he has provided for your niece—<i>our</i> niece, I will say—no
better a position than if she had been a doctor’s widow. Nothing grates
on me more than that posthumous grudgingness toward a wife. A man ought to have
some pride and fondness for his widow. <i>I</i> should, I know. I take it as a
test of a man, that he feels the easier about his death when he can think of
his wife and daughters being comfortable after it. I like that story of the
fellows in the Crimean war, who were ready to go to the bottom of the sea if
their widows were provided for.”</p>
<p>“It has certainly taken me by surprise,” said Mr. Gascoigne,
“all the more because, as the one who stood in the place of father to my
niece, I had shown my reliance on Mr. Grandcourt’s apparent liberality in
money matters by making no claims for her beforehand. That seemed to me due to
him under the circumstances. Probably you think me blamable.”</p>
<p>“Not blamable exactly. I respect a man for trusting another. But take my
advice. If you marry another niece, though it may be to the Archbishop of
Canterbury, bind him down. Your niece can’t be married for the first time
twice over. And if he’s a good fellow, he’ll wish to be bound. But
as to Mrs. Grandcourt, I can only say that I feel my relation to her all the
nearer because I think that she has not been well treated. And I hope you will
urge her to rely on me as a friend.”</p>
<p>Thus spake the chivalrous Sir Hugo, in his disgust at the young and beautiful
widow of a Mallinger Grandcourt being left with only two thousand a year and a
house in a coal-mining district. To the rector that income naturally appeared
less shabby and less accompanied with mortifying privations; but in this
conversation he had devoured a much keener sense than the baronet’s of
the humiliation cast over his niece, and also over her nearest friends, by the
conspicuous publishing of her husband’s relation to Mrs. Glasher. And
like all men who are good husbands and fathers, he felt the humiliation through
the minds of the women who would be chiefly affected by it; so that the
annoyance of first hearing the facts was far slighter than what he felt in
communicating them to Mrs. Davilow, and in anticipating Gwendolen’s
feeling whenever her mother saw fit to tell her of them. For the good rector
had an innocent conviction that his niece was unaware of Mrs. Glasher’s
existence, arguing with masculine soundness from what maidens and wives were
likely to know, do, and suffer, and having had a most imperfect observation of
the particular maiden and wife in question. Not so Gwendolen’s mother,
who now thought that she saw an explanation of much that had been enigmatic in
her child’s conduct and words before and after her engagement, concluding
that in some inconceivable way Gwendolen had been informed of this left-handed
marriage and the existence of the children. She trusted to opportunities that
would arise in moments of affectionate confidence before and during their
journey to England, when she might gradually learn how far the actual state of
things was clear to Gwendolen, and prepare her for anything that might be a
disappointment. But she was spared from devices on the subject.</p>
<p>“I hope you don’t expect that I am going to be rich and grand,
mamma,” said Gwendolen, not long after the rector’s communication;
“perhaps I shall have nothing at all.”</p>
<p>She was dressed, and had been sitting long in quiet meditation. Mrs. Davilow
was startled, but said, after a moment’s reflection,</p>
<p>“Oh yes, dear, you will have something. Sir Hugo knows all about the
will.”</p>
<p>“That will not decide,” said Gwendolen, abruptly.</p>
<p>“Surely, dear: Sir Hugo says you are to have two thousand a year and the
house at Gadsmere.”</p>
<p>“What I have will depend on what I accept,” said Gwendolen.
“You and my uncle must not attempt to cross me and persuade me about
this. I will do everything I can do to make you happy, but in anything about my
husband I must not be interfered with. Is eight hundred a year enough for you,
mamma?”</p>
<p>“More than enough, dear. You must not think of giving me so much.”
Mrs. Davilow paused a little, and then said, “Do you know who is to have
the estates and the rest of the money?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Gwendolen, waving her hand in dismissal of the subject.
“I know everything. It is all perfectly right, and I wish never to have
it mentioned.”</p>
<p>The mother was silent, looked away, and rose to fetch a fan-screen, with a
slight flush on her delicate cheeks. Wondering, imagining, she did not like to
meet her daughter’s eyes, and sat down again under a sad constraint. What
wretchedness her child had perhaps gone through, which yet must remain as it
always had been, locked away from their mutual speech. But Gwendolen was
watching her mother with that new divination which experience had given her;
and in tender relenting at her own peremptoriness, said, “Come and sit
nearer to me, mamma, and don’t be unhappy.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Davilow did as she was told, but bit her lips in the vain attempt to
hinder smarting tears. Gwendolen leaned toward her caressingly and said,
“I mean to be very wise; I do, really. And good—oh, so good to you,
dear, old, sweet mamma, you won’t know me. Only you must not cry.”</p>
<p>The resolve that Gwendolen had in her mind was that she would ask Deronda
whether she ought to accept any of her husband’s money—whether she
might accept what would enable her to provide for her mother. The poor thing
felt strong enough to do anything that would give her a higher place in
Deronda’s mind.</p>
<p>An invitation that Sir Hugo pressed on her with kind urgency was that she and
Mrs. Davilow should go straight with him to Park Lane, and make his house their
abode as long as mourning and other details needed attending to in London.
Town, he insisted, was just then the most retired of places; and he proposed to
exert himself at once in getting all articles belonging to Gwendolen away from
the house in Grosvenor Square. No proposal could have suited her better than
this of staying a little while in Park Lane. It would be easy for her there to
have an interview with Deronda, if she only knew how to get a letter into his
hands, asking him to come to her. During the journey, Sir Hugo, having
understood that she was acquainted with the purport of her husband’s
will, ventured to talk before her and to her about her future arrangements,
referring here and there to mildly agreeable prospects as matters of course,
and otherwise shedding a decorous cheerfulness over her widowed position. It
seemed to him really the more graceful course for a widow to recover her
spirits on finding that her husband had not dealt as handsomely by her as he
might have done; it was the testator’s fault if he compromised all her
grief at his departure by giving a testamentary reason for it, so that she
might be supposed to look sad, not because he had left her, but because he had
left her poor. The baronet, having his kindliness doubly fanned by the
favorable wind on his fortunes and by compassion for Gwendolen, had become
quite fatherly in his behavior to her, called her “my dear,” and in
mentioning Gadsmere to Mr. Gascoigne, with its various advantages and
disadvantages, spoke of what “we” might do to make the best of that
property. Gwendolen sat by in pale silence while Sir Hugo, with his face turned
toward Mrs. Davilow or Mr. Gascoigne, conjectured that Mrs. Grandcourt might
perhaps prefer letting Gadsmere to residing there during any part of the year,
in which case he thought that it might be leased on capital terms to one of the
fellows engaged with the coal: Sir Hugo had seen enough of the place to know
that it was as comfortable and picturesque a box as any man need desire,
providing his desires were circumscribed within a coal area.</p>
<p>“<i>I</i> shouldn’t mind about the soot myself,” said the
baronet, with that dispassionateness which belongs to the potential mood.
“Nothing is more healthy. And if one’s business lay there, Gadsmere
would be a paradise. It makes quite a feature in Scrogg’s history of the
county, with the little tower and the fine piece of water—the prettiest
print in the book.”</p>
<p>“A more important place than Offendene, I suppose?” said Mr.
Gascoigne.</p>
<p>“Much,” said the baronet, decisively. “I was there with my
poor brother—it is more than a quarter of a century ago, but I remember
it very well. The rooms may not be larger, but the grounds are on a different
scale.”</p>
<p>“Our poor dear Offendene is empty after all,” said Mrs. Davilow.
“When it came to the point, Mr. Haynes declared off, and there has been
no one to take it since. I might as well have accepted Lord Brackenshaw’s
kind offer that I should remain in it another year rent-free: for I should have
kept the place aired and warmed.”</p>
<p>“I hope you’ve something snug instead,” said Sir Hugo.</p>
<p>“A little too snug,” said Mr. Gascoigne, smiling at his
sister-in-law. “You are rather thick upon the ground.”</p>
<p>Gwendolen had turned with a changed glance when her mother spoke of Offendene
being empty. This conversation passed during one of the long unaccountable
pauses often experienced in foreign trains at some country station. There was a
dreamy, sunny stillness over the hedgeless fields stretching to the boundary of
poplars; and to Gwendolen the talk within the carriage seemed only to make the
dreamland larger with an indistinct region of coal-pits, and a purgatorial
Gadsmere which she would never visit; till at her mother’s words, this
mingled, dozing view seemed to dissolve and give way to a more wakeful vision
of Offendene and Pennicote under their cooler lights. She saw the gray
shoulders of the downs, the cattle-specked fields, the shadowy plantations with
rutted lanes where the barked timber lay for a wayside seat, the neatly-clipped
hedges on the road from the parsonage to Offendene, the avenue where she was
gradually discerned from the window, the hall-door opening, and her mother or
one of the troublesome sisters coming out to meet her. All that brief
experience of a quiet home which had once seemed a dullness to be fled from,
now came back to her as a restful escape, a station where she found the breath
of morning and the unreproaching voice of birds after following a lure through
a long Satanic masquerade, which she had entered on with an intoxicated belief
in its disguises, and had seen the end of in shrieking fear lest she herself
had become one of the evil spirits who were dropping their human mummery and
hissing around her with serpent tongues.</p>
<p>In this way Gwendolen’s mind paused over Offendene and made it the scene
of many thoughts; but she gave no further outward sign of interest in this
conversation, any more than in Sir Hugo’s opinion on the telegraphic
cable or her uncle’s views of the Church Rate Abolition Bill. What
subjects will not our talk embrace in leisurely day-journeying from Genoa to
London? Even strangers, after glancing from China to Peru and opening their
mental stores with a liberality threatening a mutual impression of poverty on
any future meeting, are liable to become excessively confidential. But the
baronet and the rector were under a still stronger pressure toward cheerful
communication: they were like acquaintances compelled to a long drive in a
mourning-coach who having first remarked that the occasion is a melancholy one,
naturally proceed to enliven it by the most miscellaneous discourse. “I
don’t mind telling <i>you</i>,” said Sir Hugo to the rector, in
mentioning some private details; while the rector, without saying so, did not
mind telling the baronet about his sons, and the difficulty of placing them in
the world. By the dint of discussing all persons and things within
driving-reach of Diplow, Sir Hugo got himself wrought to a pitch of interest in
that former home, and of conviction that it was his pleasant duty to regain and
strengthen his personal influence in the neighborhood, that made him declare
his intention of taking his family to the place for a month or two before the
autumn was over; and Mr. Gascoigne cordially rejoiced in that prospect.
Altogether, the journey was continued and ended with mutual liking between the
male fellow-travellers.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Gwendolen sat by like one who had visited the spirit-world and was
full to the lips of an unutterable experience that threw a strange unreality
over all the talk she was hearing of her own and the world’s business;
and Mrs. Davilow was chiefly occupied in imagining what her daughter was
feeling, and in wondering what was signified by her hinted doubt whether she
would accept her husband’s bequest. Gwendolen in fact had before her the
unsealed wall of an immediate purpose shutting off every other resolution. How
to scale the wall? She wanted again to see and consult Deronda, that she might
secure herself against any act he would disapprove. Would her remorse have
maintained its power within her, or would she have felt absolved by secrecy, if
it had not been for that outer conscience which was made for her by Deronda? It
is hard to say how much we could forgive ourselves if we were secure from
judgment by another whose opinion is the breathing-medium of all our
joy—who brings to us with close pressure and immediate sequence that
judgment of the Invisible and Universal which self-flattery and the
world’s tolerance would easily melt and disperse. In this way our brother
may be in the stead of God to us, and his opinion which has pierced even to the
joints and marrow, may be our virtue in the making. That mission of Deronda to
Gwendolen had begun with what she had felt to be his judgment of her at the
gaming-table. He might easily have spoiled it:—much of our lives is spent
in marring our own influence and turning others’ belief in us into a
widely concluding unbelief which they call knowledge of the world, while it is
really disappointment in you or me. Deronda had not spoiled his mission.</p>
<p>But Gwendolen had forgotten to ask him for his address in case she wanted to
write, and her only way of reaching him was through Sir Hugo. She was not in
the least blind to the construction that all witnesses might put on her giving
signs of dependence on Deronda, and her seeking him more than he sought her:
Grandcourt’s rebukes had sufficiently enlightened her pride. But the
force, the tenacity of her nature had thrown itself into that dependence, and
she would no more let go her hold on Deronda’s help, or deny herself the
interview her soul needed, because of witnesses, than if she had been in prison
in danger of being condemned to death. When she was in Park Lane and knew that
the baronet would be going down to the Abbey immediately (just to see his
family for a couple of days and then return to transact needful business for
Gwendolen), she said to him without any air of hesitation, while her mother was
present,</p>
<p>“Sir Hugo, I wish to see Mr. Deronda again as soon as possible. I
don’t know his address. Will you tell it me, or let him know that I want
to see him?”</p>
<p>A quick thought passed across Sir Hugo’s face, but made no difference to
the ease with which he said, “Upon my word, I don’t know whether
he’s at his chambers or the Abbey at this moment. But I’ll make
sure of him. I’ll send a note now to his chambers telling him to come,
and if he’s at the Abbey I can give him your message and send him up at
once. I am sure he will want to obey your wish,” the baronet ended, with
grave kindness, as if nothing could seem to him more in the appropriate course
of things than that she should send such a message.</p>
<p>But he was convinced that Gwendolen had a passionate attachment to Deronda, the
seeds of which had been laid long ago, and his former suspicion now recurred to
him with more strength than ever, that her feeling was likely to lead her into
imprudences—in which kind-hearted Sir Hugo was determined to screen and
defend her as far as lay in his power. To him it was as pretty a story as need
be that this fine creature and his favorite Dan should have turned out to be
formed for each other, and that the unsuitable husband should have made his
exit in such excellent time. Sir Hugo liked that a charming woman should be
made as happy as possible. In truth, what most vexed his mind in this matter at
present was a doubt whether the too lofty and inscrutable Dan had not got some
scheme or other in his head, which would prove to be dearer to him than the
lovely Mrs. Grandcourt, and put that neatly-prepared marriage with her out of
the question. It was among the usual paradoxes of feeling that Sir Hugo, who
had given his fatherly cautions to Deronda against too much tenderness in his
relations with the bride, should now feel rather irritated against him by the
suspicion that he had not fallen in love as he ought to have done. Of course
all this thinking on Sir Hugo’s part was eminently premature, only a
fortnight or so after Grandcourt’s death. But it is the trick of thinking
to be either premature or behind-hand.</p>
<p>However, he sent the note to Deronda’s chambers, and it found him there.</p>
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