<h2>CHAPTER LII</h2>
<p>The tardy gig had overtaken me at last. I entered it,
and bade the man who brought it drive to Grassdale Manor—I
was too busy with my own thoughts to care to drive it
myself. I would see Mrs. Huntingdon—there could be no
impropriety in that now that her husband had been dead above a
year—and by her indifference or her joy at my unexpected
arrival I could soon tell whether her heart was truly mine.
But my companion, a loquacious, forward fellow, was not disposed
to leave me to the indulgence of my private cogitations.</p>
<p>‘There they go!’ said he, as the carriages filed
away before us. ‘There’ll be brave doings on
yonder to-day, as what come to-morra.—Know anything of that
family, sir? or you’re a stranger in these
parts?’</p>
<p>‘I know them by report.’</p>
<p>‘Humph! There’s the best of ’em gone,
anyhow. And I suppose the old missis is agoing to leave
after this stir’s gotten overed, and take herself off,
somewhere, to live on her bit of a jointure; and the young
’un—at least the new ’un (she’s none so
very young)—is coming down to live at the Grove.’</p>
<p>‘Is Mr. Hargrave married, then?’</p>
<p>‘Ay, sir, a few months since. He should a been wed
afore, to a widow lady, but they couldn’t agree over the
money: she’d a rare long purse, and Mr. Hargrave wanted it
all to hisself; but she wouldn’t let it go, and so then
they fell out. This one isn’t quite as rich, nor as
handsome either, but she hasn’t been married before.
She’s very plain, they say, and getting on to forty or
past, and so, you know, if she didn’t jump at this
hopportunity, she thought she’d never get a better. I
guess she thought such a handsome young husband was worth all
‘at ever she had, and he might take it and welcome, but I
lay she’ll rue her bargain afore long. They say she
begins already to see ‘at he isn’t not altogether
that nice, generous, perlite, delightful gentleman ‘at she
thought him afore marriage—he begins a being careless and
masterful already. Ay, and she’ll find him harder and
carelesser nor she thinks on.’</p>
<p>‘You seem to be well acquainted with him,’ I
observed.</p>
<p>‘I am, sir; I’ve known him since he was quite a
young gentleman; and a proud ’un he was, and a
wilful. I was servant yonder for several years; but I
couldn’t stand their niggardly ways—she got ever
longer and worse, did missis, with her nipping and screwing, and
watching and grudging; so I thought I’d find another
place.’</p>
<p>‘Are we not near the house?’ said I, interrupting
him.</p>
<p>‘Yes, sir; yond’s the park.’</p>
<p>My heart sank within me to behold that stately mansion in the
midst of its expansive grounds. The park as beautiful now,
in its wintry garb, as it could be in its summer glory: the
majestic sweep, the undulating swell and fall, displayed to full
advantage in that robe of dazzling purity, stainless and
printless—save one long, winding track left by the trooping
deer—the stately timber-trees with their heavy-laden
branches gleaming white against the dull, grey sky; the deep,
encircling woods; the broad expanse of water sleeping in frozen
quiet; and the weeping ash and willow drooping their snow-clad
boughs above it—all presented a picture, striking indeed,
and pleasing to an unencumbered mind, but by no means encouraging
to me. There was one comfort, however,—all this was
entailed upon little Arthur, and could not under any
circumstances, strictly speaking, be his mother’s.
But how was she situated? Overcoming with a sudden effort
my repugnance to mention her name to my garrulous companion, I
asked him if he knew whether her late husband had left a will,
and how the property had been disposed of. Oh, yes, he knew
all about it; and I was quickly informed that to her had been
left the full control and management of the estate during her
son’s minority, besides the absolute, unconditional
possession of her own fortune (but I knew that her father had not
given her much), and the small additional sum that had been
settled upon her before marriage.</p>
<p>Before the close of the explanation we drew up at the
park-gates. Now for the trial. If I should find her
within—but alas! she might be still at Staningley: her
brother had given me no intimation to the contrary. I
inquired at the porter’s lodge if Mrs. Huntingdon were at
home. No, she was with her aunt in —shire, but was
expected to return before Christmas. She usually spent most
of her time at Staningley, only coming to Grassdale occasionally,
when the management of affairs, or the interest of her tenants
and dependents, required her presence.</p>
<p>‘Near what town is Staningley situated?’ I
asked. The requisite information was soon obtained.
‘Now then, my man, give me the reins, and we’ll
return to M—. I must have some breakfast at the
“Rose and Crown,” and then away to Staningley by the
first coach for —.’</p>
<p>At M— I had time before the coach started to replenish
my forces with a hearty breakfast, and to obtain the refreshment
of my usual morning’s ablutions, and the amelioration of
some slight change in my toilet, and also to despatch a short
note to my mother (excellent son that I was), to assure her that
I was still in existence, and to excuse my non-appearance at the
expected time. It was a long journey to Staningley for
those slow-travelling days, but I did not deny myself needful
refreshment on the road, nor even a night’s rest at a
wayside inn, choosing rather to brook a little delay than to
present myself worn, wild, and weather-beaten before my mistress
and her aunt, who would be astonished enough to see me without
that. Next morning, therefore, I not only fortified myself
with as substantial a breakfast as my excited feelings would
allow me to swallow, but I bestowed a little more than usual time
and care upon my toilet; and, furnished with a change of linen
from my small carpet-bag, well-brushed clothes, well-polished
boots, and neat new gloves, I mounted ‘The
Lightning,’ and resumed my journey. I had nearly two
stages yet before me, but the coach, I was informed, passed
through the neighbourhood of Staningley, and having desired to be
set down as near the Hall as possible, I had nothing to do but to
sit with folded arms and speculate upon the coming hour.</p>
<p>It was a clear, frosty morning. The very fact of sitting
exalted aloft, surveying the snowy landscape and sweet sunny sky,
inhaling the pure, bracing air, and crunching away over the crisp
frozen snow, was exhilarating enough in itself; but add to this
the idea of to what goal I was hastening, and whom I expected to
meet, and you may have some faint conception of my frame of mind
at the time—only a faint one, though: for my heart swelled
with unspeakable delight, and my spirits rose almost to madness,
in spite of my prudent endeavours to bind them down to a
reasonable platitude by thinking of the undeniable difference
between Helen’s rank and mine; of all that she had passed
through since our parting; of her long, unbroken silence; and,
above all, of her cool, cautious aunt, whose counsels she would
doubtless be careful not to slight again. These
considerations made my heart flutter with anxiety, and my chest
heave with impatience to get the crisis over; but they could not
dim her image in my mind, or mar the vivid recollection of what
had been said and felt between us, or destroy the keen
anticipation of what was to be: in fact, I could not realise
their terrors now. Towards the close of the journey,
however, a couple of my fellow-passengers kindly came to my
assistance, and brought me low enough.</p>
<p>‘Fine land this,’ said one of them, pointing with
his umbrella to the wide fields on the right, conspicuous for
their compact hedgerows, deep, well-cut ditches, and fine
timber-trees, growing sometimes on the borders, sometimes in the
midst of the enclosure: ‘very fine land, if you saw it in
the summer or spring.’</p>
<p>‘Ay,’ responded the other, a gruff elderly man,
with a drab greatcoat buttoned up to the chin, and a cotton
umbrella between his knees. ‘It’s old
Maxwell’s, I suppose.’</p>
<p>‘It was his, sir; but he’s dead now, you’re
aware, and has left it all to his niece.’</p>
<p>‘All?’</p>
<p>‘Every rood of it, and the mansion-house and all! every
hatom of his worldly goods, except just a trifle, by way of
remembrance, to his nephew down in —shire, and an annuity
to his wife.’</p>
<p>‘It’s strange, sir!’</p>
<p>‘It is, sir; and she wasn’t his own niece
neither. But he had no near relations of his own—none
but a nephew he’d quarrelled with; and he always had a
partiality for this one. And then his wife advised him to
it, they say: she’d brought most of the property, and it
was her wish that this lady should have it.’</p>
<p>‘Humph! She’ll be a fine catch for
somebody.’</p>
<p>‘She will so. She’s a widow, but quite young
yet, and uncommon handsome: a fortune of her own, besides, and
only one child, and she’s nursing a fine estate for him in
—. There’ll be lots to speak for her!
’fraid there’s no chance for
uz’—(facetiously jogging me with his elbow, as well
as his companion)—‘ha, ha, ha! No offence, sir,
I hope?’—(to me). ‘Ahem! I should
think she’ll marry none but a nobleman myself. Look
ye, sir,’ resumed he, turning to his other neighbour, and
pointing past me with his umbrella, ‘that’s the Hall:
grand park, you see, and all them woods—plenty of timber
there, and lots of game. Hallo! what now?’</p>
<p>This exclamation was occasioned by the sudden stoppage of the
coach at the park-gates.</p>
<p>‘Gen’leman for Staningley Hall?’ cried the
coachman and I rose and threw my carpet-bag on to the ground,
preparatory to dropping myself down after it.</p>
<p>‘Sickly, sir?’ asked my talkative neighbour,
staring me in the face. I daresay it was white enough.</p>
<p>‘No. Here, coachman!’</p>
<p>‘Thank’ee, sir.—All right!’</p>
<p>The coachman pocketed his fee and drove away, leaving me, not
walking up the park, but pacing to and fro before its gates, with
folded arms, and eyes fixed upon the ground, an overwhelming
force of images, thoughts, impressions crowding on my mind, and
nothing tangibly distinct but this: My love had been cherished in
vain—my hope was gone for ever; I must tear myself away at
once, and banish or suppress all thoughts of her, like the
remembrance of a wild, mad dream. Gladly would I have
lingered round the place for hours, in the hope of catching at
least one distant glimpse of her before I went, but it must not
be—I must not suffer her to see me; for what could have
brought me hither but the hope of reviving her attachment, with a
view hereafter to obtain her hand? And could I bear that
she should think me capable of such a thing?—of presuming
upon the acquaintance—the love, if you
will—accidentally contracted, or rather forced upon her
against her will, when she was an unknown fugitive, toiling for
her own support, apparently without fortune, family, or
connections; to come upon her now, when she was reinstated in her
proper sphere, and claim a share in her prosperity, which, had it
never failed her, would most certainly have kept her unknown to
me for ever? And this, too, when we had parted sixteen
months ago, and she had expressly forbidden me to hope for a
re-union in this world, and never sent me a line or a message
from that day to this. No! The very idea was
intolerable.</p>
<p>And even if she should have a lingering affection for me
still, ought I to disturb her peace by awakening those feelings?
to subject her to the struggles of conflicting duty and
inclination—to whichsoever side the latter might allure, or
the former imperatively call her—whether she should deem it
her duty to risk the slights and censures of the world, the
sorrow and displeasure of those she loved, for a romantic idea of
truth and constancy to me, or to sacrifice her individual wishes
to the feelings of her friends and her own sense of prudence and
the fitness of things? No—and I would not! I
would go at once, and she should never know that I had approached
the place of her abode: for though I might disclaim all idea of
ever aspiring to her hand, or even of soliciting a place in her
friendly regard, her peace should not be broken by my presence,
nor her heart afflicted by the sight of my fidelity.</p>
<p>‘Adieu then, dear Helen, forever! Forever
adieu!’</p>
<p>So said I—and yet I could not tear myself away. I
moved a few paces, and then looked back, for one last view of her
stately home, that I might have its outward form, at least,
impressed upon my mind as indelibly as her own image, which,
alas! I must not see again—then walked a few steps further;
and then, lost in melancholy musings, paused again and leant my
back against a rough old tree that grew beside the road.</p>
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