<h2>CHAPTER V.</h2>
<p>A few days afterwards, Ellinor’s father bethought himself that
same further communication ought to take place between him and his daughter’s
lover regarding the approval of the family of the latter to the young
man’s engagement, and he accordingly wrote a very gentlemanly
letter, saying that of course he trusted that Ralph had informed his
father of his engagement; that Mr. Corbet was well known to Mr. Wilkins
by reputation, holding the position which he did in Shropshire, but
that as Mr. Wilkins did not pretend to be in the same station of life,
Mr. Corbet might possibly never even have heard of his name, although
in his own county it was well known as having been for generations that
of the principal conveyancer and land-agent of ---shire; that his wife
had been a member of the old knightly family of Holsters, and that he
himself was descended from a younger branch of the South Wales De Wintons,
or Wilkins; that Ellinor, as his only child, would naturally inherit
all his property, but that in the meantime, of course, some settlement
upon her would be made, the nature of which might be decided nearer
the time of the marriage.</p>
<p>It was a very good straightforward letter and well fitted for the
purpose to which Mr. Wilkins knew it would be applied—of being
forwarded to the young man’s father. One would have thought
that it was not an engagement so disproportionate in point of station
as to cause any great opposition on that score; but, unluckily, Captain
Corbet, the heir and eldest son, had just formed a similar engagement
with Lady Maria Brabant, the daughter of one of the proudest earls in
---shire, who had always resented Mr. Wilkins’s appearance on
the field as an insult to the county, and ignored his presence at every
dinner-table where they met. Lady Maria was visiting the Corbets
at the very time when Ralph’s letter, enclosing Mr. Wilkins’s,
reached the paternal halls, and she merely repeated her father’s
opinions when Mrs. Corbet and her daughters naturally questioned her
as to who these Wilkinses were; they remembered the name in Ralph’s
letters formerly; the father was some friend of Mr. Ness’s, the
clergyman with whom Ralph had read; they believed Ralph used to dine
with these Wilkinses sometimes, along with Mr. Ness.</p>
<p>Lady Maria was a goodnatured girl, and meant no harm in repeating
her father’s words; touched up, it is true, by some of the dislike
she herself felt to the intimate alliance proposed, which would make
her sister-in-law to the daughter of an “upstart attorney,”
“not received in the county,” “always trying to push
his way into the set above him,” “claiming connection with
the De Wintons of --- Castle, who, as she well knew, only laughed when
he was spoken of, and said they were more rich in relations than they
were aware of”—“not people papa would ever like her
to know, whatever might be the family connection.”</p>
<p>These little speeches told in a way which the girl who uttered them
did not intend they should. Mrs. Corbet and her daughters set
themselves violently against this foolish entanglement of Ralph’s;
they would not call it an engagement. They argued, and they urged,
and they pleaded, till the squire, anxious for peace at any price, and
always more under the sway of the people who were with him, however
unreasonable they might be, than of the absent, even though these had
the wisdom of Solomon or the prudence and sagacity of his son Ralph,
wrote an angry letter, saying that, as Ralph was of age, of course he
had a right to please himself, therefore all his father could say was,
that the engagement was not at all what either he or Ralph’s mother
had expected or hoped; that it was a degradation to the family just
going to ally themselves with a peer of James the First’s creation;
that of course Ralph must do what he liked, but that if he married this
girl he must never expect to have her received by the Corbets of Corbet
Hall as a daughter. The squire was rather satisfied with his production,
and took it to show it to his wife; but she did not think it was strong
enough, and added a little postscript</p>
<blockquote><p>“DEAR RALPH,</p>
<p>“Though, as second son, you are entitled to Bromley at my death,
yet I can do much to make the estate worthless. Hitherto, regard
for you has prevented my taking steps as to sale of timber, &c.,
which would materially increase your sisters’ portions; this just
measure I shall infallibly take if I find you persevere in keeping to
this silly engagement. Your father’s disapproval is always
a sufficient reason to allege.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Ralph was annoyed at the receipt of these letters, though he only
smiled as he locked them up in his desk.</p>
<p>“Dear old father! how he blusters! As to my mother, she
is reasonable when I talk to her. Once give her a definite idea
of what Ellinor’s fortune will be, and let her, if she chooses,
cut down her timber—a threat she has held over me ever since I
knew what a rocking-horse was, and which I have known to be illegal
these ten years past—and she’ll come round. I know
better than they do how Reginald has run up post-obits, and as for that
vulgar high-born Lady Maria they are all so full of, why, she is a Flanders
mare to my Ellinor, and has not a silver penny to cross herself with,
besides! I bide my time, you dear good people!”</p>
<p>He did not think it necessary to reply to these letters immediately,
nor did he even allude to their contents in his to Ellinor. Mr.
Wilkins, who had been very well satisfied with his own letter to the
young man, and had thought that it must be equally agreeable to every
one, was not at all suspicious of any disapproval, because the fact
of a distinct sanction on the part of Mr. Ralph Corbet’s friends
to his engagement was not communicated to him.</p>
<p>As for Ellinor, she trembled all over with happiness. Such
a summer for the blossoming of flowers and ripening of fruit had not
been known for years; it seemed to her as if bountiful loving Nature
wanted to fill the cup of Ellinor’s joy to overflowing, and as
if everything, animate and inanimate, sympathised with her happiness.
Her father was well, and apparently content. Miss Monro was very
kind. Dixon’s lameness was quite gone off. Only Mr.
Dunster came creeping about the house, on pretence of business, seeking
out her father, and disturbing all his leisure with his dust-coloured
parchment-skinned careworn face, and seeming to disturb the smooth current
of her daily life whenever she saw him.</p>
<p>Ellinor made her appearance at the Hamley assemblies, but with less
<i>éclat</i> than either her father or her lover expected.
Her beauty and natural grace were admired by those who could discriminate;
but to the greater number there was (what they called) “a want
of style”—want of elegance there certainly was not, for
her figure was perfect, and though she moved shyly, she moved well.
Perhaps it was not a good place for a correct appreciation of Miss Wilkins;
some of the old dowagers thought it a piece of presumption in her to
be there at all—but the Lady Holster of the day (who remembered
her husband’s quarrel with Mr. Wilkins, and looked away whenever
Ellinor came near) resented this opinion. “Miss Wilkins
is descended from Sir Frank’s family, one of the oldest in the
county; the objection might have been made years ago to the father,
but as he had been received, she did not know why Miss Wilkins was to
be alluded to as out of her place.” Ellinor’s greatest
enjoyment in the evening was to hear her father say, after all was over,
and they were driving home—</p>
<p>“Well, I thought my Nelly the prettiest girl there, and I think
I know some other people who would have said the same if they could
have spoken out.”</p>
<p>“Thank you, papa,” said Ellinor, squeezing his hand,
which she held. She thought he alluded to the absent Ralph as
the person who would have agreed with him, had he had the opportunity
of seeing her; but no, he seldom thought much of the absent; but had
been rather flattered by seeing Lord Hildebrand take up his glass for
the apparent purpose of watching Ellinor.</p>
<p>“Your pearls, too, were as handsome as any in the room, child—but
we must have them re-set; the sprays are old-fashioned now. Let
me have them to-morrow to send up to Hancock.”</p>
<p>“Papa, please, I had rather keep them as they are—as
mamma wore them.”</p>
<p>He was touched in a minute.</p>
<p>“Very well, darling. God bless you for thinking of it!”</p>
<p>But he ordered her a set of sapphires instead, for the next assembly.</p>
<p>These balls were not such as to intoxicate Ellinor with success,
and make her in love with gaiety. Large parties came from the
different country-houses in the neighbourhood, and danced with each
other. When they had exhausted the resources they brought with
them, they had generally a few dances to spare for friends of the same
standing with whom they were most intimate. Ellinor came with
her father, and joined an old card-playing dowager, by way of a chaperone—the
said dowager being under old business obligations to the firm of Wilkins
and Son, and apologizing to all her acquaintances for her own weak condescension
to Mr. Wilkins’s foible in wishing to introduce his daughter into
society above her natural sphere. It was upon this lady, after
she had uttered some such speech as the one I have just mentioned, that
Lady Holster had come down with the pedigree of Ellinor’s mother.
But though the old dowager had drawn back a little discomfited at my
lady’s reply, she was not more attentive to Ellinor in consequence.
She allowed Mr. Wilkins to bring in his daughter and place her on the
crimson sofa beside her; spoke to her occasionally in the interval that
elapsed before the rubbers could be properly arranged in the card-room;
invited the girl to accompany her to that sober amusement, and on Ellinor’s
declining, and preferring to remain with her father, the dowager left
her with a sweet smile on her plump countenance, and an approving conscience
somewhere within her portly frame, assuring her that she had done all
that could possibly have been expected from her towards “that
good Wilkins’s daughter.” Ellinor stood by her father
watching the dances, and thankful for the occasional chance of a dance.
While she had been sitting by her chaperone, Mr. Wilkins had made the
tour of the room, dropping out the little fact of his daughter’s
being present wherever he thought the seed likely to bring forth the
fruit of partners. And some came because they liked Mr. Wilkins,
and some asked Ellinor because they had done their duty dances to their
own party, and might please themselves. So that she usually had
an average of one invitation to every three dances; and this principally
towards the end of the evening.</p>
<p>But considering her real beauty, and the care which her father always
took about her appearance, she met with far less than her due of admiration.
Admiration she did not care for; partners she did; and sometimes felt
mortified when she had to sit or stand quiet during all the first part
of the evening. If it had not been for her father’s wishes
she would much rather have stayed at home; but, nevertheless, she talked
even to the irresponsive old dowager, and fairly chatted to her father
when she got beside him, because she did not like him to fancy that
she was not enjoying herself.</p>
<p>And, indeed, she had so much happiness in the daily course of this
part of her life, that, on looking back upon it afterwards, she could
not imagine anything brighter than it had been. The delight of
receiving her lover’s letters—the anxious happiness of replying
to them (always a little bit fearful lest she should not express herself
and her love in the precisely happy medium becoming a maiden)—the
father’s love and satisfaction in her—the calm prosperity
of the whole household—was delightful at the time, and, looking
back upon it, it was dreamlike.</p>
<p>Occasionally Mr. Corbet came down to see her. He always slept
on these occasions at Mr. Ness’s; but he was at Ford Bank the
greater part of the one day between two nights that he allowed himself
for the length of his visits. And even these short peeps were
not frequently taken. He was working hard at law: fagging at it
tooth and nail; arranging his whole life so as best to promote the ends
of his ambition; feeling a delight in surpassing and mastering his fellows—those
who started in the race at the same time. He read Ellinor’s
letters over and over again; nothing else beside law-books. He
perceived the repressed love hidden away in subdued expressions in her
communications, with an amused pleasure at the attempt at concealment.
He was glad that her gaieties were not more gay; he was glad that she
was not too much admired, although a little indignant at the want of
taste on the part of the ---shire gentlemen. But if other admirers
had come prominently forward, he would have had to take some more decided
steps to assert his rights than he had hitherto done; for he had caused
Ellinor to express a wish to her father that her engagement should not
be too much talked about until nearer the time when it would be prudent
for him to marry her. He thought that the knowledge of this, the
only imprudently hasty step he ever meant to take in his life, might
go against his character for wisdom, if the fact became known while
he was as yet only a student. Mr. Wilkins wondered a little; but
acceded, as he always did, to any of Ellinor’s requests.
Mr. Ness was a confidant, of course, and some of Lady Maria’s
connections heard of it, and forgot it again very soon; and, as it happened,
no one else was sufficiently interested in Ellinor to care to ascertain
the fact.</p>
<p>All this time, Mr. Ralph Corbet maintained a very quietly decided
attitude towards his own family. He was engaged to Miss Wilkins;
and all he could say was, he felt sorry that they disapproved of it.
He was not able to marry just at present, and before the time for his
marriage arrived, he trusted that his family would take a more reasonable
view of things, and be willing to receive her as his wife with all becoming
respect or affection. This was the substance of what he repeated
in different forms in reply to his father’s angry letters.
At length, his invariable determination made way with his father; the
paternal thunderings were subdued to a distant rumbling in the sky;
and presently the inquiry was broached as to how much fortune Miss Wilkins
would have; how much down on her marriage; what were the eventual probabilities.
Now this was a point which Mr. Ralph Corbet himself wished to be informed
upon. He had not thought much about it in making the engagement;
he had been too young, or too much in love. But an only child
of a wealthy attorney ought to have something considerable; and an allowance
so as to enable the young couple to start housekeeping in a moderately
good part of town, would be an advantage to him in his profession.
So he replied to his father, adroitly suggesting that a letter containing
certain modifications of the inquiry which had been rather roughly put
in Mr. Corbet’s last, should be sent to him, in order that he
might himself ascertain from Mr. Wilkins what were Ellinor’s prospects
as regarded fortune.</p>
<p>The desired letter came; but not in such a form that he could pass
it on to Mr. Wilkins; he preferred to make quotations, and even these
quotations were a little altered and dressed before he sent them on.
The gist of his letter to Mr. Wilkins was this. He stated that
he hoped soon to be in a position to offer Ellinor a home; that he anticipated
a steady progress in his profession, and consequently in his income;
but that contingencies might arise, as his father suggested, which would
deprive him of the power of earning a livelihood, perhaps when it might
be more required than it would be at first; that it was true that, after
his mother’s death a small estate in Shropshire would come to
him as second son, and of course Ellinor would receive the benefit of
this property, secured to her legally as Mr. Wilkins thought best—that
being a matter for after discussion—but that at present his father
was anxious, as might be seen from the extract to ascertain whether
Mr. Wilkins could secure him from the contingency of having his son’s
widow and possible children thrown upon his hands, by giving Ellinor
a dowry; and if so, it was gently insinuated, what would be the amount
of the same.</p>
<p>When Mr. Wilkins received this letter it startled him out of a happy
day-dream. He liked Ralph Corbet and the whole connection quite
well enough to give his consent to an engagement; and sometimes even
he was glad to think that Ellinor’s future was assured, and that
she would have a protector and friends after he was dead and gone.
But he did not want them to assume their responsibilities so soon.
He had not distinctly contemplated her marriage as an event likely to
happen before his death. He could not understand how his own life
would go on without her: or indeed why she and Ralph Corbet could not
continue just as they were at present. He came down to breakfast
with the letter in his hand. By Ellinor’s blushes, as she
glanced at the handwriting, he knew that she had heard from her lover
by the same post; by her tender caresses—caresses given as if
to make up for the pain which the prospect of her leaving him was sure
to cause him—he was certain that she was aware of the contents
of the letter. Yet he put it in his pocket, and tried to forget
it.</p>
<p>He did this not merely from his reluctance to complete any arrangements
which might facilitate Ellinor’s marriage. There was a further
annoyance connected with the affair. His money matters had been
for some time in an involved state; he had been living beyond his income,
even reckoning that, as he always did, at the highest point which it
ever touched. He kept no regular accounts, reasoning with himself—or,
perhaps, I should rather say persuading himself—that there was
no great occasion for regular accounts, when he had a steady income
arising from his profession, as well as the interest of a good sum of
money left him by his father; and when, living in his own house near
a country town where provisions were cheap, his expenditure for his
small family—only one child—could never amount to anything
like his incomings from the above-mentioned sources. But servants
and horses, and choice wines and rare fruit-trees, and a habit of purchasing
any book or engraving that may take the fancy, irrespective of the price,
run away with money, even though there be but one child. A year
or two ago, Mr. Wilkins had been startled into a system of exaggerated
retrenchment—retrenchment which only lasted about six weeks—by
the sudden bursting of a bubble speculation in which he had invested
a part of his father’s savings. But as soon as the change
in his habits, necessitated by his new economies, became irksome, he
had comforted himself for his relapse into his former easy extravagance
of living by remembering the fact that Ellinor was engaged to the son
of a man of large property: and that though Ralph was only the second
son, yet his mother’s estate must come to him, as Mr. Ness had
already mentioned, on first hearing of her engagement.</p>
<p>Mr. Wilkins did not doubt that he could easily make Ellinor a fitting
allowance, or even pay down a requisite dowry; but the doing so would
involve an examination into the real state of his affairs, and this
involved distasteful trouble. He had no idea how much more than
mere temporary annoyance would arise out of the investigation.
Until it was made, he decided in his own mind that he would not speak
to Ellinor on the subject of her lover’s letter. So for
the next few days she was kept in suspense, seeing little of her father;
and during the short times she was with him she was made aware that
he was nervously anxious to keep the conversation engaged on general
topics rather than on the one which she had at heart. As I have
already said, Mr. Corbet had written to her by the same post as that
on which he sent the letter to her father, telling her of its contents,
and begging her (in all those sweet words which lovers know how to use)
to urge her father to compliance for his sake—his, her lover’s—who
was pining and lonely in all the crowds of London, since her loved presence
was not there. He did not care for money, save as a means of hastening
their marriage; indeed, if there were only some income fixed, however
small—some time for their marriage fixed, however distant—he
could be patient. He did not want superfluity of wealth; his habits
were simple, as she well knew; and money enough would be theirs in time,
both from her share of contingencies, and the certainty of his finally
possessing Bromley.</p>
<p>Ellinor delayed replying to this letter until her father should have
spoken to her on the subject. But as she perceived that he avoided
all such conversation, the young girl’s heart failed her.
She began to blame herself for wishing to leave him, to reproach herself
for being accessory to any step which made him shun being alone with
her, and look distressed and full of care as he did now. It was
the usual struggle between father and lover for the possession of love,
instead of the natural and graceful resignation of the parent to the
prescribed course of things; and, as usual, it was the poor girl who
bore the suffering for no fault of her own: although she blamed herself
for being the cause of the disturbance in the previous order of affairs.
Ellinor had no one to speak to confidentially but her father and her
lover, and when they were at issue she could talk openly to neither,
so she brooded over Mr. Corbet’s unanswered letter, and her father’s
silence, and became pale and dispirited. Once or twice she looked
up suddenly, and caught her father’s eye gazing upon her with
a certain wistful anxiety; but the instant she saw this he pulled himself
up, as it were, and would begin talking gaily about the small topics
of the day.</p>
<p>At length Mr. Corbet grew impatient at not hearing either from Mr.
Wilkins or Ellinor, and wrote urgently to the former, making known to
him a new proposal suggested to him by his father, which was, that a
certain sum should be paid down by Mr. Wilkins to be applied, under
the management of trustees, to the improvement of the Bromley estate,
out of the profits of which, or other sources in the elder Mr. Corbet’s
hands, a heavy rate of interest should be paid on this advance, which
would secure an income to the young couple immediately, and considerably
increase the value of the estate upon which Ellinor’s settlement
was to be made. The terms offered for this laying down of ready
money were so advantageous, that Mr. Wilkins was strongly tempted to
accede to them at once; as Ellinor’s pale cheek and want of appetite
had only that very morning smote upon his conscience, and this immediate
transfer of ready money was as a sacrifice, a soothing balm to his self-reproach,
and laziness and dislike to immediate unpleasantness of action had its
counterbalancing weakness in imprudence. Mr. Wilkins made some
rough calculations on a piece of paper—deeds, and all such tests
of accuracy, being down at the office; discovered that he could pay
down the sum required; wrote a letter agreeing to the proposal, and
before he sealed it called Ellinor into his study, and bade her read
what he had been writing and tell him what she thought of it.
He watched the colour come rushing into her white face, her lips quiver
and tremble, and even before the letter was ended she was in his arms
kissing him, and thanking him with blushing caresses rather than words.</p>
<p>“There, there!” said he, smiling and sighing; “that
will do. Why, I do believe you took me for a hard-hearted father,
just like a heroine’s father in a book. You’ve looked
as woe-begone this week past as Ophelia. One can’t make
up one’s mind in a day about such sums of money as this, little
woman; and you should have let your old father have time to consider.”</p>
<p>“Oh, papa; I was only afraid you were angry.”</p>
<p>“Well, if I was a bit perplexed, seeing you look so ill and
pining was not the way to bring me round. Old Corbet, I must say,
is trying to make a good bargain for his son. It is well for me
that I have never been an extravagant man.”</p>
<p>“But, papa, we don’t want all this much.”</p>
<p>“Yes, yes! it is all right. You shall go into their family
as a well-portioned girl, if you can’t go as a Lady Maria.
Come, don’t trouble your little head any more about it.
Give me one more kiss, and then we’ll go and order the horses,
and have a ride together, by way of keeping holiday. I deserve
a holiday, don’t I, Nelly?”</p>
<p>Some country people at work at the roadside, as the father and daughter
passed along, stopped to admire their bright happy looks, and one spoke
of the hereditary handsomeness of the Wilkins family (for the old man,
the present Mr. Wilkins’s father, had been fine-looking in his
drab breeches and gaiters, and usual assumption of a yeoman’s
dress). Another said it was easy for the rich to be handsome;
they had always plenty to eat, and could ride when they were tired of
walking, and had no care for the morrow to keep them from sleeping at
nights. And, in sad acquiescence with their contrasted lot, the
men went on with their hedging and ditching in silence.</p>
<p>And yet, if they had known—if the poor did know—the troubles
and temptations of the rich; if those men had foreseen the lot darkening
over the father, and including the daughter in its cloud; if Mr. Wilkins
himself had even imagined such a future possible . . . Well, there was
truth in the old heathen saying, “Let no man be envied till his
death.”</p>
<p>Ellinor had no more rides with her father; no, not ever again; though
they had stopped that afternoon at the summit of a breezy common, and
looked at a ruined hall, not so very far off; and discussed whether
they could reach it that day, and decided that it was too far away for
anything but a hurried inspection, and that some day soon they would
make the old place into the principal object of an excursion.
But a rainy time came on, when no rides were possible; and whether it
was the influence of the weather, or some other care or trouble that
oppressed him, Mr. Wilkins seemed to lose all wish for much active exercise,
and rather sought a stimulus to his spirits and circulation in wine.
But of this Ellinor was innocently unaware. He seemed dull and
weary, and sat long, drowsing and drinking after dinner. If the
servants had not been so fond of him for much previous generosity and
kindness, they would have complained now, and with reason, of his irritability,
for all sorts of things seemed to annoy him.</p>
<p>“You should get the master to take a ride with you, miss,”
said Dixon, one day as he was putting Ellinor on her horse. “He’s
not looking well, he’s studying too much at the office.”</p>
<p>But when Ellinor named it to her father, he rather hastily replied
that it was all very well for women to ride out whenever they liked—men
had something else to do; and then, as he saw her look grave and puzzled,
he softened down his abrupt saying by adding that Dunster had been making
a fuss about his partner’s non-attendance, and altogether taking
a good deal upon himself in a very offensive way, so that he thought
it better to go pretty regularly to the office, in order to show him
who was master—senior partner, and head of the business, at any
rate.</p>
<p>Ellinor sighed a little over her disappointment at her father’s
preoccupation, and then forgot her own little regret in anger at Mr.
Dunster, who had seemed all along to be a thorn in her father’s
side, and had latterly gained some power and authority over him, the
exercise of which, Ellinor could not help thinking, was a very impertinent
line of conduct from a junior partner, so lately only a paid clerk,
to his superior. There was a sense of something wrong in the Ford
Bank household for many weeks about this time. Mr. Wilkins was
not like himself, and his cheerful ways and careless genial speeches
were missed, even on the days when he was not irritable, and evidently
uneasy with himself and all about him. The spring was late in
coming, and cold rain and sleet made any kind of out-door exercise a
trouble and discomfort rather than a bright natural event in the course
of the day. All sound of winter gaieties, of assemblies and meets,
and jovial dinners, had died away, and the summer pleasures were as
yet unthought of. Still Ellinor had a secret perennial source
of sunshine in her heart; whenever she thought of Ralph she could not
feel much oppression from the present unspoken and indistinct gloom.
He loved her; and oh, how she loved him! and perhaps this very next
autumn—but that depended on his own success in his profession.
After all, if it was not this autumn it would be the next; and with
the letters that she received weekly, and the occasional visits that
her lover ran down to Hamley to pay Mr. Ness, Ellinor felt as if she
would almost prefer the delay of the time when she must leave her father’s
for a husband’s roof.</p>
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