<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
<p>I perceive, with joy, my most valued friend, that the cloud of
your displeasure has passed away; the light of your countenance
blesses me once more, and you desire the continuation of my
story: therefore, without more ado, you shall have it.</p>
<p>I think the day I last mentioned was a certain Sunday, the
latest in the October of 1827. On the following Tuesday I
was out with my dog and gun, in pursuit of such game as I could
find within the territory of Linden-Car; but finding none at all,
I turned my arms against the hawks and carrion crows, whose
depredations, as I suspected, had deprived me of better
prey. To this end I left the more frequented regions, the
wooded valleys, the corn-fields, and the meadow-lands, and
proceeded to mount the steep acclivity of Wildfell, the wildest
and the loftiest eminence in our neighbourhood, where, as you
ascend, the hedges, as well as the trees, become scanty and
stunted, the former, at length, giving place to rough stone
fences, partly greened over with ivy and moss, the latter to
larches and Scotch fir-trees, or isolated blackthorns. The
fields, being rough and stony, and wholly unfit for the plough,
were mostly devoted to the posturing of sheep and cattle; the
soil was thin and poor: bits of grey rock here and there peeped
out from the grassy hillocks; bilberry-plants and
heather—relics of more savage wildness—grew under the
walls; and in many of the enclosures, ragweeds and rushes usurped
supremacy over the scanty herbage; but these were not my
property.</p>
<p>Near the top of this hill, about two miles from Linden-Car,
stood Wildfell Hall, a superannuated mansion of the Elizabethan
era, built of dark grey stone, venerable and picturesque to look
at, but doubtless, cold and gloomy enough to inhabit, with its
thick stone mullions and little latticed panes, its time-eaten
air-holes, and its too lonely, too unsheltered
situation,—only shielded from the war of wind and weather
by a group of Scotch firs, themselves half blighted with storms,
and looking as stern and gloomy as the Hall itself. Behind
it lay a few desolate fields, and then the brown heath-clad
summit of the hill; before it (enclosed by stone walls, and
entered by an iron gate, with large balls of grey
granite—similar to those which decorated the roof and
gables—surmounting the gate-posts) was a garden,—once
stocked with such hard plants and flowers as could best brook the
soil and climate, and such trees and shrubs as could best endure
the gardener’s torturing shears, and most readily assume
the shapes he chose to give them,—now, having been left so
many years untilled and untrimmed, abandoned to the weeds and the
grass, to the frost and the wind, the rain and the drought, it
presented a very singular appearance indeed. The close
green walls of privet, that had bordered the principal walk, were
two-thirds withered away, and the rest grown beyond all
reasonable bounds; the old boxwood swan, that sat beside the
scraper, had lost its neck and half its body: the castellated
towers of laurel in the middle of the garden, the gigantic
warrior that stood on one side of the gateway, and the lion that
guarded the other, were sprouted into such fantastic shapes as
resembled nothing either in heaven or earth, or in the waters
under the earth; but, to my young imagination, they presented all
of them a goblinish appearance, that harmonised well with the
ghostly legions and dark traditions our old nurse had told us
respecting the haunted hall and its departed occupants.</p>
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<ANTIMG alt= "Moorland Scene, Haworth" title= "Moorland Scene, Haworth" src="images/p14s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>I had succeeded in killing a hawk and two crows when I came
within sight of the mansion; and then, relinquishing further
depredations, I sauntered on, to have a look at the old place,
and see what changes had been wrought in it by its new
inhabitant. I did not like to go quite to the front and
stare in at the gate; but I paused beside the garden wall, and
looked, and saw no change—except in one wing, where the
broken windows and dilapidated roof had evidently been repaired,
and where a thin wreath of smoke was curling up from the stack of
chimneys.</p>
<p>While I thus stood, leaning on my gun, and looking up at the
dark gables, sunk in an idle reverie, weaving a tissue of wayward
fancies, in which old associations and the fair young hermit, now
within those walls, bore a nearly equal part, I heard a slight
rustling and scrambling just within the garden; and, glancing in
the direction whence the sound proceeded, I beheld a tiny hand
elevated above the wall: it clung to the topmost stone, and then
another little hand was raised to take a firmer hold, and then
appeared a small white forehead, surmounted with wreaths of light
brown hair, with a pair of deep blue eyes beneath, and the upper
portion of a diminutive ivory nose.</p>
<p>The eyes did not notice me, but sparkled with glee on
beholding Sancho, my beautiful black and white setter, that was
coursing about the field with its muzzle to the ground. The
little creature raised its face and called aloud to the
dog. The good-natured animal paused, looked up, and wagged
his tail, but made no further advances. The child (a little
boy, apparently about five years old) scrambled up to the top of
the wall, and called again and again; but finding this of no
avail, apparently made up his mind, like Mahomet, to go to the
mountain, since the mountain would not come to him, and attempted
to get over; but a crabbed old cherry-tree, that grew hard by,
caught him by the frock in one of its crooked scraggy arms that
stretched over the wall. In attempting to disengage himself
his foot slipped, and down he tumbled—but not to the
earth;—the tree still kept him suspended. There was a
silent struggle, and then a piercing shriek;—but, in an
instant, I had dropped my gun on the grass, and caught the little
fellow in my arms.</p>
<p>I wiped his eyes with his frock, told him he was all right and
called Sancho to pacify him. He was just putting little
hand on the dog’s neck and beginning to smile through his
tears, when I heard behind me a click of the iron gate, and a
rustle of female garments, and lo! Mrs. Graham darted upon
me—her neck uncovered, her black locks streaming in the
wind.</p>
<p>‘Give me the child!’ she said, in a voice scarce
louder than a whisper, but with a tone of startling vehemence,
and, seizing the boy, she snatched him from me, as if some dire
contamination were in my touch, and then stood with one hand
firmly clasping his, the other on his shoulder, fixing upon me
her large, luminous dark eyes—pale, breathless, quivering
with agitation.</p>
<p>‘I was not harming the child, madam,’ said I,
scarce knowing whether to be most astonished or displeased;
‘he was tumbling off the wall there; and I was so fortunate
as to catch him, while he hung suspended headlong from that tree,
and prevent I know not what catastrophe.’</p>
<p>‘I beg your pardon, sir,’ stammered
she;—suddenly calming down,—the light of reason
seeming to break upon her beclouded spirit, and a faint blush
mantling on her cheek—‘I did not know you;—and
I thought—’</p>
<p>She stooped to kiss the child, and fondly clasped her arm
round his neck.</p>
<p>‘You thought I was going to kidnap your son, I
suppose?’</p>
<p>She stroked his head with a half-embarrassed laugh, and
replied,—‘I did not know he had attempted to climb
the wall.—I have the pleasure of addressing Mr. Markham, I
believe?’ she added, somewhat abruptly.</p>
<p>I bowed, but ventured to ask how she knew me.</p>
<p>‘Your sister called here, a few days ago, with Mrs.
Markham.’</p>
<p>‘Is the resemblance so strong then?’ I asked, in
some surprise, and not so greatly flattered at the idea as I
ought to have been.</p>
<p>‘There is a likeness about the eyes and complexion I
think,’ replied she, somewhat dubiously surveying my
face;—‘and I think I saw you at church on
Sunday.’</p>
<p>I smiled.—There was something either in that smile or
the recollections it awakened that was particularly displeasing
to her, for she suddenly assumed again that proud, chilly look
that had so unspeakably roused my aversion at church—a look
of repellent scorn, so easily assumed, and so entirely without
the least distortion of a single feature, that, while there, it
seemed like the natural expression of the face, and was the more
provoking to me, because I could not think it affected.</p>
<p>‘Good-morning, Mr. Markham,’ said she; and without
another word or glance, she withdrew, with her child, into the
garden; and I returned home, angry and dissatisfied—I could
scarcely tell you why, and therefore will not attempt it.</p>
<p>I only stayed to put away my gun and powder-horn, and give
some requisite directions to one of the farming-men, and then
repaired to the vicarage, to solace my spirit and soothe my
ruffled temper with the company and conversation of Eliza
Millward.</p>
<p>I found her, as usual, busy with some piece of soft embroidery
(the mania for Berlin wools had not yet commenced), while her
sister was seated at the chimney-corner, with the cat on her
knee, mending a heap of stockings.</p>
<p>‘Mary—Mary! put them away!’ Eliza was
hastily saying, just as I entered the room.</p>
<p>‘Not I, indeed!’ was the phlegmatic reply; and my
appearance prevented further discussion.</p>
<p>‘You’re so unfortunate, Mr. Markham!’
observed the younger sister, with one of her arch, sidelong
glances. ‘Papa’s just gone out into the parish,
and not likely to be back for an hour!’</p>
<p>‘Never mind; I can manage to spend a few minutes with
his daughters, if they’ll allow me,’ said I, bringing
a chair to the fire, and seating myself therein, without waiting
to be asked.</p>
<p>‘Well, if you’ll be very good and amusing, we
shall not object.’</p>
<p>‘Let your permission be unconditional, pray; for I came
not to give pleasure, but to seek it,’ I answered.</p>
<p>However, I thought it but reasonable to make some slight
exertion to render my company agreeable; and what little effort I
made, was apparently pretty successful, for Miss Eliza was never
in a better humour. We seemed, indeed, to be mutually
pleased with each other, and managed to maintain between us a
cheerful and animated though not very profound
conversation. It was little better than a
<i>tête-à-tête</i>, for Miss Millward never
opened her lips, except occasionally to correct some random
assertion or exaggerated expression of her sister’s, and
once to ask her to pick up the ball of cotton that had rolled
under the table. I did this myself, however, as in duty
bound.</p>
<p>‘Thank you, Mr. Markham,’ said she, as I presented
it to her. ‘I would have picked it up myself; only I
did not want to disturb the cat.’</p>
<p>‘Mary, dear, that won’t excuse you in Mr.
Markham’s eyes,’ said Eliza; ‘he hates cats, I
daresay, as cordially as he does old maids—like all other
gentlemen. Don’t you, Mr. Markham?’</p>
<p>‘I believe it is natural for our unamiable sex to
dislike the creatures,’ replied I; ‘for you ladies
lavish so many caresses upon them.’</p>
<p>‘Bless them—little darlings!’ cried she, in
a sudden burst of enthusiasm, turning round and overwhelming her
sister’s pet with a shower of kisses.</p>
<p>‘Don’t, Eliza!’ said Miss Millward, somewhat
gruffly, as she impatiently pushed her away.</p>
<p>But it was time for me to be going: make what haste I would, I
should still be too late for tea; and my mother was the soul of
order and punctuality.</p>
<p>My fair friend was evidently unwilling to bid me adieu.
I tenderly squeezed her little hand at parting; and she repaid me
with one of her softest smiles and most bewitching glances.
I went home very happy, with a heart brimful of complacency for
myself, and overflowing with love for Eliza.</p>
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