<h2>CHAPTER XLIX</h2>
<p>Though Mr. Lawrence’s health was now quite
re-established, my visits to Woodford were as unremitting as
ever; though often less protracted than before. We seldom
talked about Mrs. Huntingdon; but yet we never met without
mentioning her, for I never sought his company but with the hope
of hearing something about her, and he never sought mine at all,
because he saw me often enough without. But I always began
to talk of other things, and waited first to see if he would
introduce the subject. If he did not, I would casually ask,
‘Have you heard from your sister lately?’ If he
said ‘No,’ the matter was dropped: if he said
‘Yes,’ I would venture to inquire, ‘How is
she?’ but never ‘How is her husband?’ though I
might be burning to know; because I had not the hypocrisy to
profess any anxiety for his recovery, and I had not the face to
express any desire for a contrary result. Had I any such
desire?—I fear I must plead guilty; but since you have
heard my confession, you must hear my justification as well
—a few of the excuses, at least, wherewith I sought to
pacify my own accusing conscience.</p>
<p>In the first place, you see, his life did harm to others, and
evidently no good to himself; and though I wished it to
terminate, I would not have hastened its close if, by the lifting
of a finger, I could have done so, or if a spirit had whispered
in my ear that a single effort of the will would be
enough,—unless, indeed, I had the power to exchange him for
some other victim of the grave, whose life might be of service to
his race, and whose death would be lamented by his friends.
But was there any harm in wishing that, among the many thousands
whose souls would certainly be required of them before the year
was over, this wretched mortal might be one? I thought not;
and therefore I wished with all my heart that it might please
heaven to remove him to a better world, or if that might not be,
still to take him out of this; for if he were unfit to answer the
summons now, after a warning sickness, and with such an angel by
his side, it seemed but too certain that he never would
be—that, on the contrary, returning health would bring
returning lust and villainy, and as he grew more certain of
recovery, more accustomed to her generous goodness, his feelings
would become more callous, his heart more flinty and impervious
to her persuasive arguments—but God knew best.
Meantime, however, I could not but be anxious for the result of
His decrees; knowing, as I did, that (leaving myself entirely out
of the question), however Helen might feel interested in her
husband’s welfare, however she might deplore his fate,
still while he lived she must be miserable.</p>
<p>A fortnight passed away, and my inquiries were always answered
in the negative. At length a welcome ‘yes’ drew
from me the second question. Lawrence divined my anxious
thoughts, and appreciated my reserve. I feared, at first,
he was going to torture me by unsatisfactory replies, and either
leave me quite in the dark concerning what I wanted to know, or
force me to drag the information out of him, morsel by morsel, by
direct inquiries. ‘And serve you right,’ you
will say; but he was more merciful; and in a little while he put
his sister’s letter into my hand. I silently read it,
and restored it to him without comment or remark. This mode
of procedure suited him so well, that thereafter he always
pursued the plan of showing me her letters at once, when
‘inquired’ after her, if there were any to
show—it was so much less trouble than to tell me their
contents; and I received such confidences so quietly and
discreetly that he was never induced to discontinue them.</p>
<p>But I devoured those precious letters with my eyes, and never
let them go till their contents were stamped upon my mind; and
when I got home, the most important passages were entered in my
diary among the remarkable events of the day.</p>
<p>The first of these communications brought intelligence of a
serious relapse in Mr. Huntingdon’s illness, entirely the
result of his own infatuation in persisting in the indulgence of
his appetite for stimulating drink. In vain had she
remonstrated, in vain she had mingled his wine with water: her
arguments and entreaties were a nuisance, her interference was an
insult so intolerable that, at length, on finding she had
covertly diluted the pale port that was brought him, he threw the
bottle out of the window, swearing he would not be cheated like a
baby, ordered the butler, on pain of instant dismissal, to bring
a bottle of the strongest wine in the cellar, and affirming that
he should have been well long ago if he had been let to have his
own way, but she wanted to keep him weak in order that she might
have him under her thumb—but, by the Lord Harry, he would
have no more humbug—seized a glass in one hand and the
bottle in the other, and never rested till he had drunk it
dry. Alarming symptoms were the immediate result of this
‘imprudence,’ as she mildly termed it—symptoms
which had rather increased than diminished since; and this was
the cause of her delay in writing to her brother. Every
former feature of his malady had returned with augmented
virulence: the slight external wound, half healed, had broken out
afresh; internal inflammation had taken place, which might
terminate fatally if not soon removed. Of course, the
wretched sufferer’s temper was not improved by this
calamity—in fact, I suspect it was well nigh insupportable,
though his kind nurse did not complain; but she said she had been
obliged at last to give her son in charge to Esther Hargrave, as
her presence was so constantly required in the sick-room that she
could not possibly attend to him herself; and though the child
had begged to be allowed to continue with her there, and to help
her to nurse his papa, and though she had no doubt he would have
been very good and quiet, she could not think of subjecting his
young and tender feelings to the sight of so much suffering, or
of allowing him to witness his father’s impatience, or hear
the dreadful language he was wont to use in his paroxysms of pain
or irritation.</p>
<p>The latter (continued she) most deeply regrets the step that
has occasioned his relapse; but, as usual, he throws the blame
upon me. If I had reasoned with him like a rational
creature, he says, it never would have happened; but to be
treated like a baby or a fool was enough to put any man past his
patience, and drive him to assert his independence even at the
sacrifice of his own interest. He forgets how often I had
reasoned him ‘past his patience’ before. He
appears to be sensible of his danger; but nothing can induce him
to behold it in the proper light. The other night, while I
was waiting on him, and just as I had brought him a draught to
assuage his burning thirst, he observed, with a return of his
former sarcastic bitterness, ‘Yes, you’re mighty
attentive now! I suppose there’s nothing you
wouldn’t do for me now?’</p>
<p>‘You know,’ said I, a little surprised at his
manner, ‘that I am willing to do anything I can to relieve
you.’</p>
<p>‘Yes, now, my immaculate angel; but when once you have
secured your reward, and find yourself safe in heaven, and me
howling in hell-fire, catch you lifting a finger to serve me
then! No, you’ll look complacently on, and not so
much as dip the tip of your finger in water to cool my
tongue!’</p>
<p>‘If so, it will be because of the great gulf over which
I cannot pass; and if I could look complacently on in such a
case, it would be only from the assurance that you were being
purified from your sins, and fitted to enjoy the happiness I
felt.—But are you determined, Arthur, that I shall not meet
you in heaven?’</p>
<p>‘Humph! What should I do there, I should like to
know?’</p>
<p>‘Indeed, I cannot tell; and I fear it is too certain
that your tastes and feelings must be widely altered before you
can have any enjoyment there. But do you prefer sinking,
without an effort, into the state of torment you picture to
yourself?’</p>
<p>‘Oh, it’s all a fable,’ said he,
contemptuously.</p>
<p>‘Are you sure, Arthur? are you quite sure?
Because, if there is any doubt, and if you should find yourself
mistaken after all, when it is too late to turn—’</p>
<p>‘It would be rather awkward, to be sure,’ said he;
‘but don’t bother me now—I’m not going to
die yet. I can’t and won’t,’ he added
vehemently, as if suddenly struck with the appalling aspect of
that terrible event. ‘Helen, you must save
me!’ And he earnestly seized my hand, and looked into
my face with such imploring eagerness that my heart bled for him,
and I could not speak for tears.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
<p>The next letter brought intelligence that the malady was fast
increasing; and the poor sufferer’s horror of death was
still more distressing than his impatience of bodily pain.
All his friends had not forsaken him; for Mr. Hattersley, hearing
of his danger, had come to see him from his distant home in the
north. His wife had accompanied him, as much for the
pleasure of seeing her dear friend, from whom she had been parted
so long, as to visit her mother and sister.</p>
<p>Mrs. Huntingdon expressed herself glad to see Milicent once
more, and pleased to behold her so happy and well. She is
now at the Grove, continued the letter, but she often calls to
see me. Mr. Hattersley spends much of his time at
Arthur’s bed-side. With more good feeling than I gave
him credit for, he evinces considerable sympathy for his unhappy
friend, and is far more willing than able to comfort him.
Sometimes he tries to joke and laugh with him, but that will not
do; sometimes he endeavours to cheer him with talk about old
times, and this at one time may serve to divert the sufferer from
his own sad thoughts; at another, it will only plunge him into
deeper melancholy than before; and then Hattersley is confounded,
and knows not what to say, unless it be a timid suggestion that
the clergyman might be sent for. But Arthur will never
consent to that: he knows he has rejected the clergyman’s
well-meant admonitions with scoffing levity at other times, and
cannot dream of turning to him for consolation now.</p>
<p>Mr. Hattersley sometimes offers his services instead of mine,
but Arthur will not let me go: that strange whim still increases,
as his strength declines—the fancy to have me always by his
side. I hardly ever leave him, except to go into the next
room, where I sometimes snatch an hour or so of sleep when he is
quiet; but even then the door is left ajar, that he may know me
to be within call. I am with him now, while I write, and I
fear my occupation annoys him; though I frequently break off to
attend to him, and though Mr. Hattersley is also by his
side. That gentleman came, as he said, to beg a holiday for
me, that I might have a run in the park, this fine frosty
morning, with Milicent and Esther and little Arthur, whom he had
driven over to see me. Our poor invalid evidently felt it a
heartless proposition, and would have felt it still more
heartless in me to accede to it. I therefore said I would
only go and speak to them a minute, and then come back. I
did but exchange a few words with them, just outside the portico,
inhaling the fresh, bracing air as I stood, and then, resisting
the earnest and eloquent entreaties of all three to stay a little
longer, and join them in a walk round the garden, I tore myself
away and returned to my patient. I had not been absent five
minutes, but he reproached me bitterly for my levity and
neglect. His friend espoused my cause.</p>
<p>‘Nay, nay, Huntingdon,’ said he,
‘you’re too hard upon her; she must have food and
sleep, and a mouthful of fresh air now and then, or she
can’t stand it, I tell you. Look at her, man!
she’s worn to a shadow already.’</p>
<p>‘What are her sufferings to mine?’ said the poor
invalid. ‘You don’t grudge me these attentions,
do you, Helen?’</p>
<p>‘No, Arthur, if I could really serve you by them.
I would give my life to save you, if I might.’</p>
<p>‘Would you, indeed? No!’</p>
<p>‘Most willingly I would.’</p>
<p>‘Ah! that’s because you think yourself more fit to
die!’</p>
<p>There was a painful pause. He was evidently plunged in
gloomy reflections; but while I pondered for something to say
that might benefit without alarming him, Hattersley, whose mind
had been pursuing almost the same course, broke silence with,
‘I say, Huntingdon, I would send for a parson of some sort:
if you didn’t like the vicar, you know, you could have his
curate, or somebody else.’</p>
<p>‘No; none of them can benefit me if she
can’t,’ was the answer. And the tears gushed
from his eyes as he earnestly exclaimed, ‘Oh, Helen, if I
had listened to you, it never would have come to this! and if I
had heard you long ago—oh, God! how different it would have
been!’</p>
<p>‘Hear me now, then, Arthur,’ said I, gently
pressing his hand.</p>
<p>‘It’s too late now,’ said he
despondingly. And after that another paroxysm of pain came
on; and then his mind began to wander, and we feared his death
was approaching: but an opiate was administered: his sufferings
began to abate, he gradually became more composed, and at length
sank into a kind of slumber. He has been quieter since; and
now Hattersley has left him, expressing a hope that he shall find
him better when he calls to-morrow.</p>
<p>‘Perhaps I may recover,’ he replied; ‘who
knows? This may have been the crisis. What do you
think, Helen?’ Unwilling to depress him, I gave the
most cheering answer I could, but still recommended him to
prepare for the possibility of what I inly feared was but too
certain. But he was determined to hope. Shortly after
he relapsed into a kind of doze, but now he groans again.</p>
<p>There is a change. Suddenly he called me to his side,
with such a strange, excited manner, that I feared he was
delirious, but he was not. ‘That was the crisis,
Helen!’ said he, delightedly. ‘I had an
infernal pain here—it is quite gone now. I never was
so easy since the fall—quite gone, by heaven!’ and he
clasped and kissed my hand in the very fulness of his heart; but
finding I did not participate in his joy, he quickly flung it
from him, and bitterly cursed my coldness and
insensibility. How could I reply? Kneeling beside
him, I took his hand and fondly pressed it to my lips—for
the first time since our separation—and told him, as well
as tears would let me speak, that it was not that that kept me
silent: it was the fear that this sudden cessation of pain was
not so favourable a symptom as he supposed. I immediately
sent for the doctor: we are now anxiously awaiting him. I
will tell you what he says. There is still the same freedom
from pain, the same deadness to all sensation where the suffering
was most acute.</p>
<p>My worst fears are realised: mortification has
commenced. The doctor has told him there is no hope.
No words can describe his anguish. I can write no more.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
<p>The next was still more distressing in the tenor of its
contents. The sufferer was fast approaching
dissolution—dragged almost to the verge of that awful chasm
he trembled to contemplate, from which no agony of prayers or
tears could save him. Nothing could comfort him now;
Hattersley’s rough attempts at consolation were utterly in
vain. The world was nothing to him: life and all its
interests, its petty cares and transient pleasures, were a cruel
mockery. To talk of the past was to torture him with vain
remorse; to refer to the future was to increase his anguish; and
yet to be silent was to leave him a prey to his own regrets and
apprehensions. Often he dwelt with shuddering minuteness on
the fate of his perishing clay—the slow, piecemeal
dissolution already invading his frame: the shroud, the coffin,
the dark, lonely grave, and all the horrors of corruption.</p>
<p>‘If I try,’ said his afflicted wife, ‘to
divert him from these things—to raise his thoughts to
higher themes, it is no better:—“Worse and
worse!” he groans. “If there be really life
beyond the tomb, and judgment after death, how can I face
it?”—I cannot do him any good; he will neither be
enlightened, nor roused, nor comforted by anything I say; and yet
he clings to me with unrelenting pertinacity—with a kind of
childish desperation, as if I could save him from the fate he
dreads. He keeps me night and day beside him. He is
holding my left hand now, while I write; he has held it thus for
hours: sometimes quietly, with his pale face upturned to mine:
sometimes clutching my arm with violence—the big drops
starting from his forehead at the thoughts of what he sees, or
thinks he sees, before him. If I withdraw my hand for a
moment it distresses him.</p>
<p>‘“Stay with me, Helen,” he says; “let
me hold you so: it seems as if harm could not reach me while you
are here. But death will come—it is coming
now—fast, fast!—and—oh, if I could believe
there was nothing after!”</p>
<p>‘“Don’t try to believe it, Arthur; there is
joy and glory after, if you will but try to reach it!”</p>
<p>‘“What, for me?” he said, with something
like a laugh. “Are we not to be judged according to
the deeds done in the body? Where’s the use of a
probationary existence, if a man may spend it as he pleases, just
contrary to God’s decrees, and then go to heaven with the
best—if the vilest sinner may win the reward of the holiest
saint, by merely saying, “I
repent!””’</p>
<p>‘“But if you sincerely repent—”</p>
<p>‘“I can’t repent; I only fear.”</p>
<p>‘“You only regret the past for its consequences to
yourself?”</p>
<p>‘“Just so—except that I’m sorry to
have wronged you, Nell, because you’re so good to
me.”</p>
<p>‘“Think of the goodness of God, and you cannot but
be grieved to have offended Him.”</p>
<p>‘“What is God?—I cannot see Him or hear
Him.—God is only an idea.”</p>
<p>‘“God is Infinite Wisdom, and Power, and
Goodness—and <span class="smcap">Love</span>; but if this
idea is too vast for your human faculties—if your mind
loses itself in its overwhelming infinitude, fix it on Him who
condescended to take our nature upon Him, who was raised to
heaven even in His glorified human body, in whom the fulness of
the Godhead shines.”</p>
<p>‘But he only shook his head and sighed. Then, in
another paroxysm of shuddering horror, he tightened his grasp on
my hand and arm, and, groaning and lamenting, still clung to me
with that wild, desperate earnestness so harrowing to my soul,
because I know I cannot help him. I did my best to soothe
and comfort him.</p>
<p>‘“Death is so terrible,” he cried, “I
cannot bear it! You don’t know, Helen—you
can’t imagine what it is, because you haven’t it
before you! and when I’m buried, you’ll return to
your old ways and be as happy as ever, and all the world will go
on just as busy and merry as if I had never been; while
I—” He burst into tears.</p>
<p>‘“You needn’t let that distress you,”
I said; “we shall all follow you soon enough.”</p>
<p>‘“I wish to God I could take you with me
now!” he exclaimed: “you should plead for
me.”</p>
<p>‘“No man can deliver his brother, nor make
agreement unto God for him,” I replied: “it cost more
to redeem their souls—it cost the blood of an incarnate
God, perfect and sinless in Himself, to redeem us from the
bondage of the evil one:—let Him plead for you.”</p>
<p>‘But I seem to speak in vain. He does not now, as
formerly, laugh these blessed truths to scorn: but still he
cannot trust, or will not comprehend them. He cannot linger
long. He suffers dreadfully, and so do those that wait upon
him. But I will not harass you with further details: I have
said enough, I think, to convince you that I did well to go to
him.’</p>
<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
<p>Poor, poor Helen! dreadful indeed her trials must have
been! And I could do nothing to lessen them—nay, it
almost seemed as if I had brought them upon her myself by my own
secret desires; and whether I looked at her husband’s
sufferings or her own, it seemed almost like a judgment upon
myself for having cherished such a wish.</p>
<p>The next day but one there came another letter. That too
was put into my hands without a remark, and these are its
contents:—</p>
<p style="text-align: right">Dec. 5th.</p>
<p>He is gone at last. I sat beside him all night, with my
hand fast looked in his, watching the changes of his features and
listening to his failing breath. He had been silent a long
time, and I thought he would never speak again, when he murmured,
faintly but distinctly,—‘Pray for me,
Helen!’</p>
<p>‘I do pray for you, every hour and every minute, Arthur;
but you must pray for yourself.’</p>
<p>His lips moved, but emitted no sound;—then his looks
became unsettled; and, from the incoherent, half-uttered words
that escaped him from time to time, supposing him to be now
unconscious, I gently disengaged my hand from his, intending to
steal away for a breath of air, for I was almost ready to faint;
but a convulsive movement of the fingers, and a faintly whispered
‘Don’t leave me!’ immediately recalled me: I
took his hand again, and held it till he was no more—and
then I fainted. It was not grief; it was exhaustion, that,
till then, I had been enabled successfully to combat. Oh,
Frederick! none can imagine the miseries, bodily and mental, of
that death-bed! How could I endure to think that that poor
trembling soul was hurried away to everlasting torment? it would
drive me mad. But, thank God, I have hope—not only
from a vague dependence on the possibility that penitence and
pardon might have reached him at the last, but from the blessed
confidence that, through whatever purging fires the erring spirit
may be doomed to pass—whatever fate awaits it—still
it is not lost, and God, who hateth nothing that He hath made,
will bless it in the end!</p>
<p>His body will be consigned on Thursday to that dark grave he
so much dreaded; but the coffin must be closed as soon as
possible. If you will attend the funeral, come quickly, for
I need help.</p>
<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Helen
Huntingdon</span>.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />