<h2>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
<p>Feb. 18, 1822.—Early this morning Arthur mounted his
hunter and set off in high glee to meet the — hounds.
He will be away all day, and so I will amuse myself with my
neglected diary, if I can give that name to such an irregular
composition. It is exactly four months since I opened it
last.</p>
<p>I am married now, and settled down as Mrs. Huntingdon of
Grassdale Manor. I have had eight weeks’ experience
of matrimony. And do I regret the step I have taken?
No, though I must confess, in my secret heart, that Arthur is not
what I thought him at first, and if I had known him in the
beginning as thoroughly as I do now, I probably never should have
loved him, and if I loved him first, and then made the discovery,
I fear I should have thought it my duty not to have married
him. To be sure I might have known him, for every one was
willing enough to tell me about him, and he himself was no
accomplished hypocrite, but I was wilfully blind; and now,
instead of regretting that I did not discern his full character
before I was indissolubly bound to him, I am glad, for it has
saved me a great deal of battling with my conscience, and a great
deal of consequent trouble and pain; and, whatever I ought to
have done, my duty now is plainly to love him and to cleave to
him, and this just tallies with my inclination.</p>
<p>He is very fond of me, almost too fond. I could do with
less caressing and more rationality. I should like to be
less of a pet and more of a friend, if I might choose; but I
won’t complain of that: I am only afraid his affection
loses in depth where it gains in ardour. I sometimes liken
it to a fire of dry twigs and branches compared with one of solid
coal, very bright and hot; but if it should burn itself out and
leave nothing but ashes behind, what shall I do? But it
won’t, it sha’n’t, I am determined; and surely
I have power to keep it alive. So let me dismiss that
thought at once. But Arthur is selfish; I am constrained to
acknowledge that; and, indeed, the admission gives me less pain
than might be expected, for, since I love him so much, I can
easily forgive him for loving himself: he likes to be pleased,
and it is my delight to please him; and when I regret this
tendency of his, it is for his own sake, not for mine.</p>
<p>The first instance he gave was on the occasion of our bridal
tour. He wanted to hurry it over, for all the continental
scenes were already familiar to him: many had lost their interest
in his eyes, and others had never had anything to lose. The
consequence was, that after a flying transit through part of
France and part of Italy, I came back nearly as ignorant as I
went, having made no acquaintance with persons and manners, and
very little with things, my head swarming with a motley confusion
of objects and scenes; some, it is true, leaving a deeper and
more pleasing impression than others, but these embittered by the
recollection that my emotions had not been shared by my
companion, but that, on the contrary, when I had expressed a
particular interest in anything that I saw or desired to see, it
had been displeasing to him, inasmuch as it proved that I could
take delight in anything disconnected with himself.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p206b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt= "Blake Hall—The Approach (Grassdale Manor)" title= "Blake Hall—The Approach (Grassdale Manor)" src="images/p206s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>As for Paris, we only just touched at that, and he would not
give me time to see one-tenth of the beauties and interesting
objects of Rome. He wanted to get me home, he said, to have
me all to himself, and to see me safely installed as the mistress
of Grassdale Manor, just as single-minded, as naïve, and
piquante as I was; and as if I had been some frail butterfly, he
expressed himself fearful of rubbing the silver off my wings by
bringing me into contact with society, especially that of Paris
and Rome; and, more-over, he did not scruple to tell me that
there were ladies in both places that would tear his eyes out if
they happened to meet him with me.</p>
<p>Of course I was vexed at all this; but still it was less the
disappointment to myself that annoyed me, than the disappointment
in him, and the trouble I was at to frame excuses to my friends
for having seen and observed so little, without imputing one
particle of blame to my companion. But when we got
home—to my new, delightful home—I was so happy and he
was so kind that I freely forgave him all; and I was beginning to
think my lot too happy, and my husband actually too good for me,
if not too good for this world, when, on the second Sunday after
our arrival, he shocked and horrified me by another instance of
his unreasonable exaction. We were walking home from the
morning service, for it was a fine frosty day, and as we are so
near the church, I had requested the carriage should not be
used.</p>
<p>‘Helen,’ said he, with unusual gravity, ‘I
am not quite satisfied with you.’</p>
<p>I desired to know what was wrong.</p>
<p>‘But will you promise to reform if I tell
you?’</p>
<p>‘Yes, if I can, and without offending a higher
authority.’</p>
<p>‘Ah! there it is, you see: you don’t love me with
all your heart.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t understand you, Arthur (at least I hope I
don’t): pray tell me what I have done or said
amiss.’</p>
<p>‘It is nothing you have done or said; it is something
that you are—you are too religious. Now I like a
woman to be religious, and I think your piety one of your
greatest charms; but then, like all other good things, it may be
carried too far. To my thinking, a woman’s religion
ought not to lessen her devotion to her earthly lord. She
should have enough to purify and etherealise her soul, but not
enough to refine away her heart, and raise her above all human
sympathies.’</p>
<p>‘And am I above all human sympathies?’ said I.</p>
<p>‘No, darling; but you are making more progress towards
that saintly condition than I like; for all these two hours I
have been thinking of you and wanting to catch your eye, and you
were so absorbed in your devotions that you had not even a glance
to spare for me—I declare it is enough to make one jealous
of one’s Maker—which is very wrong, you know; so
don’t excite such wicked passions again, for my
soul’s sake.’</p>
<p>‘I will give my whole heart and soul to my Maker if I
can,’ I answered, ‘and not one atom more of it to you
than He allows. What are you, sir, that you should set
yourself up as a god, and presume to dispute possession of my
heart with Him to whom I owe all I have and all I am, every
blessing I ever did or ever can enjoy—and yourself among
the rest—if you are a blessing, which I am half inclined to
doubt.’</p>
<p>‘Don’t be so hard upon me, Helen; and don’t
pinch my arm so: you are squeezing your fingers into the
bone.’</p>
<p>‘Arthur,’ continued I, relaxing my hold of his
arm, ‘you don’t love me half as much as I do you; and
yet, if you loved me far less than you do, I would not complain,
provided you loved your Maker more. I should rejoice to see
you at any time so deeply absorbed in your devotions that you had
not a single thought to spare for me. But, indeed, I should
lose nothing by the change, for the more you loved your God the
more deep and pure and true would be your love to me.’</p>
<p>At this he only laughed and kissed my hand, calling me a sweet
enthusiast. Then taking off his hat, he added: ‘But
look here, Helen—what can a man do with such a head as
this?’</p>
<p>The head looked right enough, but when he placed my hand on
the top of it, it sunk in a bed of curls, rather alarmingly low,
especially in the middle.</p>
<p>‘You see I was not made to be a saint,’ said he,
laughing, ‘If God meant me to be religious, why
didn’t He give me a proper organ of veneration?’</p>
<p>‘You are like the servant,’ I replied, ‘who,
instead of employing his one talent in his master’s
service, restored it to him unimproved, alleging, as an excuse,
that he knew him “to be a hard man, reaping where he had
not sown, and gathering where he had not strawed.” Of
him to whom less is given, less will be required, but our utmost
exertions are required of us all. You are not without the
capacity of veneration, and faith and hope, and conscience and
reason, and every other requisite to a Christian’s
character, if you choose to employ them; but all our talents
increase in the using, and every faculty, both good and bad,
strengthens by exercise: therefore, if you choose to use the bad,
or those which tend to evil, till they become your masters, and
neglect the good till they dwindle away, you have only yourself
to blame. But you have talents, Arthur—natural
endowments both of heart and mind and temper, such as many a
better Christian would be glad to possess, if you would only
employ them in God’s service. I should never expect
to see you a devotee, but it is quite possible to be a good
Christian without ceasing to be a happy, merry-hearted
man.’</p>
<p>‘You speak like an oracle, Helen, and all you say is
indisputably true; but listen here: I am hungry, and I see before
me a good substantial dinner; I am told that if I abstain from
this to-day I shall have a sumptuous feast to-morrow, consisting
of all manner of dainties and delicacies. Now, in the first
place, I should be loth to wait till to-morrow when I have the
means of appeasing my hunger already before me: in the second
place, the solid viands of to-day are more to my taste than the
dainties that are promised me; in the third place, I don’t
see to-morrow’s banquet, and how can I tell that it is not
all a fable, got up by the greasy-faced fellow that is advising
me to abstain in order that he may have all the good victuals to
himself? in the fourth place, this table must be spread for
somebody, and, as Solomon says, “Who can eat, or who else
can hasten hereunto more than I?” and finally, with your
leave, I’ll sit down and satisfy my cravings of to-day, and
leave to-morrow to shift for itself—who knows but what I
may secure both this and that?’</p>
<p>‘But you are not required to abstain from the
substantial dinner of to-day: you are only advised to partake of
these coarser viands in such moderation as not to incapacitate
you from enjoying the choicer banquet of to-morrow. If,
regardless of that counsel, you choose to make a beast of
yourself now, and over-eat and over-drink yourself till you turn
the good victuals into poison, who is to blame if, hereafter,
while you are suffering the torments of yesterday’s
gluttony and drunkenness, you see more temperate men sitting down
to enjoy themselves at that splendid entertainment which you are
unable to taste?’</p>
<p>‘Most true, my patron saint; but again, our friend
Solomon says, “There is nothing better for a man than to
eat and to drink, and to be merry.”’</p>
<p>‘And again,’ returned I, ‘he says,
“Rejoice, O young man, in thy youth; and walk in the ways
of thine heart, and in the sight of thine eyes: but know thou,
that for all these things God will bring thee into
judgment.”’</p>
<p>‘Well, but, Helen, I’m sure I’ve been very
good these last few weeks. What have you seen amiss in me,
and what would you have me to do?’</p>
<p>‘Nothing more than you do, Arthur: your actions are all
right so far; but I would have your thoughts changed; I would
have you to fortify yourself against temptation, and not to call
evil good, and good evil; I should wish you to think more deeply,
to look further, and aim higher than you do.’</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />