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Barchester Towers

Page 59

by Anthony Trollope


  ‘Oh, let me go,’ said she; ‘let me go now. I am too happy to remain – let me go, that I may be alone.’ He did not try to hinder her; he did not repeat the kiss; he did not press another on her lips. He might have done so had he been so minded. She was now all his own. He took his arm from round her waist, his arm that was trembling with a new delight, and let her go. She fled like a roe to her own chamber, and then, having turned the bolt, she enjoyed the full luxury of her love. She idolized, almost worshipped this man who had so meekly begged her pardon. And he was now her own. Oh. how she wept and cried and laughed, as the hopes and fears and miseries of the last few weeks passed in remembrance through her mind.

  Mr Slope! That anyone should have dared to think that she who had been chosen by him could possibly have mated herself with Mr Slope! That they should have dared to tell him, also, and subject her bright happiness to such needless risk! And then she smiled with joy as she thought of all the comforts that she could give him; not that he cared for comforts, but that it would be so delicious for her to give.

  She got up and rang for her maid that she might tell her little boy of his new father; and in her own way she did tell him. She desired her maid to leave her, in order that she might be alone with her child; and then, while he lay sprawling on the bed, she poured forth the praises, all unmeaning to him, of the man she had selected to guard his infancy.

  She could not be happy, however, till she had made Mr Arabin take the child to himself, and thus, as it were, adopt him as his own. The moment the idea struck her she took the baby up in her arms, and, opening her door, ran quickly down to the drawing-room. She at once found, by his step still pacing on the floor, that he was there; and a glance within the room told her that he was alone. She hesitated a moment, and then hurried in with her precious charge.

  Mr Arabin met her in the middle of the room. ‘There,’ said she, breathless with her haste; ‘there, take him – take him, and love him.’

  Mr Arabin took the little fellow from her, and kissing him again and again, prayed God to bless him. ‘He shall be all as my own – all as my own,’ said he. Eleanor, as she stooped to take back her child, kissed the hand that held him, and then rushed back with her treasure to her chamber.

  It was thus that Mr Harding’s younger daughter was won for the second time. At dinner neither she nor Mr Arabin were very bright, but their silence occasioned no remark. In the drawing-room, as we have before said, she told Miss Thorne what had occurred. The next morning she returned to Barchester, and Mr Arabin went over with his budget of news to the archdeacon. As Doctor Grantly was not there, he could only satisfy himself by telling Mrs Grantly how that he intended himself the honour of becoming her brother-in-law. In the ecstasy of her joy at hearing such tidings, Mrs Grantly vouchsafed him a warmer welcome han any he had yet received from Eleanor.

  ‘Good heavens!’ she exclaimed – it was the general exclamation of the rectory. ‘Poor Eleanor! Dear Eleanor! What a monstrous injustice has been done her! – Well, it shall all be made up now.’ And then she thought of the signora. ‘What lies people tell,’ she said to herself.

  But people in this matter had told no lies at all.

  CHAPTER 15

  The Belzebub Colt

  WHEN Miss Thorne left the dining-room, Eleanor had formed no intention of revealing to her what had occurred; but when she was seated beside her hostess on the sofa the secret dropped from her almost unawares. Eleanor was but a bad hypocrite, and she found herself quite unable to continue talking about Mr Arabin as though he were a stranger, while her heart was full of him. When Miss Thorne, pursuing her own scheme with discreet zeal, asked the young widow whether, in her opinion, it would not be a good thing for Mr Arabin to get married, she had nothing for it but to confess the truth. ‘I suppose it would,’ said Eleanor, rather sheepishly. Whereupon Miss Thorne amplified on the idea. ‘Oh, Miss Thorne,’ said Eleanor, ‘he is going to be married: I am engaged to him.’

  Now Miss Thorne knew very well that there had been no such engagement when she had been walking with Mrs Bold in the morning. She had also heard enough to be tolerably sure that there had been no preliminaries to such an engagement. She was, therefore, as we have before described, taken a little by surprise. But, nevertheless, she embraced her guest, and cordially congratulated her.

  Eleanor had no opportunity of speaking another word to Mr Arabin that evening, except such words as all the world might hear; and these, as may be supposed, were few enough. Miss Thorne did her best to leave them in privacy; but Mr Thorne, who knew nothing of what had occurred, and another guest, a friend of his, entirely interfered with her good intentions. So poor Eleanor had to go to bed without one sign of affection. Her state, nevertheless, was not to be pitied.

  The next morning she was up early. It was probable, she thought, that by going down a little before the usual hour of breakfast, she might find Mr Arabin alone in the dining-room. Might it not be that he also would calculate that an interview would thus be possible? Thus thinking, Eleanor was dressed a full hour before the time fixed in the Ullathorne household for morning prayers. She did not at once go down. She was afraid to seem to be too anxious to meet her lover; though, heaven knows, her anxiety was intense enough. She therefore sat herself down at her window, and repeatedly looking at her watch, nursed her child till she thought she might venture forth.

  When she found herself at the dining-room door, she stood a moment, hesitating to turn the handle; but when she heard Mr Thorne’s voice inside she hesitated no longer. Her object was defeated, and she might now go in as soon as she liked without the slightest imputation on her delicacy. Mr Thorne and Mr Arabin were standing on the hearthrug, discussing the merits of the Belzebub colt; or rather, Mr Thorne was discussing, and Mr Arabin was listening. That interesting animal had rubbed the stump of his tail against the wall of his stable, and occasioned much uneasiness to the Ullathorne master of the horse. Had Eleanor but waited another minute, Mr Thorne would have been in the stables.

  Mr Thorne, when he saw his lady guest, repressed his anxiety. The Belzebub colt must do without him. And so the three stood, saying little or nothing to each other, till at last the master of the house, finding that he could no longer bear his present state of suspense respecting his favourite young steed, made an elaborate apology to Mrs Bold, and escaped. As he shut the door behind him, Eleanor almost wished that he had remained. It was not that she was afraid of Mr Arabin, but she hardly yet knew how to address him.

  He, however, soon relieved her from her embarrassment. He came up to her, and taking both her hands in his, he said: ‘So, Eleanor, you and I are to be man and wife. Is it so?’

  She looked up into his face, and her lips formed themselves into a single syllable. She uttered no sound, but he could read the affirmative plainly in her face.

  ‘It is a great trust,’ said he; ‘a very great trust.’

  ‘It is – it is,’ said Eleanor, not exactly taking what he had said in the sense that he had meant. ‘It is a very, very great trust, and I will do my utmost to deserve it.’

  ‘And I also will do my utmost to deserve it,’ said Mr Arabin, very solemnly. And then, winding his arm round her waist, he stood there gazing at the fire, and she, with her head leaning on his shoulder, stood by him, well satisfied with her position. They neither of them spoke, or found any want of speaking. All that was needful for them to say had been said. The yea, yea, had been spoken by Eleanor in her own way – and that way had been perfectly satisfactory to Mr Arabin.

  And now it remained to them each to enjoy the assurance of the other’s love. And how great that luxury is! How far it surpasses any other pleasure which God has allowed to his creatures! And to a woman’s heart how doubly delightful!

  When the ivy has found its tower, when the delicate creeper has found its strong wall, we know how the parasite plants grow and prosper.1 They were not created to stretch forth their branches alone, and endure without protection the summer’s sun and the winter
’s storm. Alone they but spread themselves on the ground, and cower unseen in the dingy shade. But when they have found their firm supporters, how wonderful is their beauty; how all-pervading and victorious! What is the turret without its ivy, or the high garden wall without the jasmine which gives it its beauty and fragrance? The hedge without the honeysuckle is but a hedge.

  There is a feeling still half existing, but now half conquered by the force of human nature, that a woman should be ashamed of her love till the husband’s right to her compels her to acknowledge it. We would fain preach a different doctrine. A woman should glory in her love; but on that account let her take the more care that it be such as to justify her glory.

  Eleanor did glory in hers, and she felt, and had cause to feel, that it deserved to be held as glorious. She could have stood there for hours with his arm round her, had fate and Mr Thorne permitted it. Each moment she crept nearer to his bosom, and felt more and more certain that there was her home. What now to her was the archdeacon’s arrogance, her sister’s coldness, or her dear father’s weakness? What need she care for the duplicity of such friends as Charlotte Stanhope? She had found the strong shield that should guard her from all Wrongs, the trusty pilot that should hence-forward guide her through the shoals and rocks. She would give up the heavy burden of her independence, and once more assume the position of a woman, and the duties of a trusting and loving wife.

  And he, too, stood there fully satisfied with his place. They were both looking intently on the fire, as though they could read there their future fate, till at last Eleanor turned her face towards his. ‘How sad you are,’ she said, smiling; and indeed his face was, if not sad, at least serious. ‘How sad you are, love!’

  ‘Sad,’ said he, looking down at her; ‘no, certainly not sad.’ Her sweet, loving eyes were turned towards him, and she smiled softly as he answered her. The temptation was too strong even for the demure propriety of Mr Arabin, and, bending over her, he pressed his lips to hers.

  Immediately after this Mr Thorne appeared, and they were both delighted to hear that the tail of the Belzebub colt was not materially injured.

  It had been Mr Harding’s intention to hurry over to Ullathorne as soon as possible after his return to Barchester, in order to secure the support of his daughter in his meditated revolt against the archdeacon as touching the deanery; but he was spared the additional journey by hearing that Mrs Bold had returned un-expectedly home. As soon as he had read her note he started off, and found her waiting for him in her own house.

  How much each of them had to tell the other, and how certain each was that the story which he or she had to tell would astonish the other!

  ‘My dear, I am so anxious to see you,’ said Mr Harding, kissing his daughter.

  ‘Oh, papa, I have so much to tell you!’ said the daughter, returning the embrace.

  ‘My dear, they have offered me the deanery!’ said Mr Harding, anticipating by the suddenness of the revelation the tidings which Eleanor had to give him.

  ‘Oh, papa,’ said she, forgetting her own love and happiness in her joy at the surprising news; ‘oh, papa, can it be possible? Dear papa, how thoroughly, thoroughly happy that makes me!’

  ‘But, my dear, I think it best to refuse it.’

  ‘Oh, papa!’

  ‘I am sure you will agree with me, Eleanor, when I explain it to you. You know, my dear, how old I am. If I live I –’

  ‘But, papa, I must tell you about myself.’

  ‘Well, my dear.’

  ‘I do so wonder how you’ll take it.’

  ‘Take what?’

  ‘If you don’t rejoice at it, if it doesn’t make you happy, if you don’t encourage me, I shall break my heart.’

  ‘If that be the case, Nelly, I certainly will encourage you.’

  ‘But I fear you won’t. I do so fear you won’t. And yet you can’t but think I am the most fortunate woman living on God’s earth.’

  ‘Are you, dearest? Then I certainly will rejoice with you. Come, Nelly, come to me, and tell me what it is.’

  ‘I am going –’

  He led her to the sofa, and seating himself beside her, took both her hands in his. ‘You are going to be married, Nelly. Is not that it?’

  ‘Yes,’ she said, faintly. ‘That is if you will approve’; and then she blushed as she remembered the promise which she had so lately volunteered to him, and which she had so utterly forgotten in making her engagement with Mr Arabin.

  Mr Harding thought for a moment who the man could be whom he was to be called upon to welcome as his son-in-law. A week since he would have had no doubt whom to name. In that case he would have been prepared to give his sanction, although he would have done so with a heavy heart. Now he knew that at any rate it would not be Mr Slope, though he was perfectly at a loss to guess who could possibly have filled the place. For a moment he thought that the man might be Bertie Stanhope, and his very soul sank within him.

  ‘Well, Nelly?’

  ‘Oh, papa, promise to me that, for my sake, you will love him.’

  ‘Come, Nelly, come; tell me who it is.’

  ‘But will you love him, papa?’

  ‘Dearest, I must love anyone that you love.’ Then she turned her face to his, and whispered into his ear the name of Mr Arabin.

  No man that she could have named could have more surprised or more delighted him. Had he looked round the world for a son-in-law to his taste, he could have selected no one whom he would have preferred to Mr Arabin. He was a clergyman; he held a living in the neighbourhood; he was of a set to which all Mr Harding’s own partialities most closely adhered; he was the great friend of Dr Grantly; and he was, moreover, a man of whom Mr Harding knew nothing but what he approved. Nevertheless, his surprise was so great as to prevent the immediate expression of his joy. He had never thought of Mr Arabin in connection with his daughter; he had never imagined that they had any feeling in common. He had feared that his daughter had been made hostile to clergymen of Mr Arabin’s stamp by her intolerance of the archdeacon’s pretensions. Had he been put to wish, he might have wished for Mr Arabin for a son-in-law; but had he been put to guess, the name would never have occurred to him.

  ‘Mr Arabin!’ he exclaimed; ‘impossible!’

  Oh, papa, for heaven’s sake don’t say anything against him! If you love me don’t say anything against him. Oh, papa, it’s done, and mustn’t be undone – oh, papa!’

  Fickle Eleanor! where was the promise that she would make no choice for herself without her father’s approval? She had chosen, and now demanded his acquiescence. ‘Oh, papa, isn’t he good? isn’t he noble? isn’t he religious, high minded, everything that a good man possibly can be?’ and she clung to her father, beseeching him for his consent.

  ‘My Nelly, my child, my own daughter! He is; he is noble and good and high-minded; he is all that a woman can love and a man admire. He shall be my son, my own son. He shall be as close to my heart as you are. My Nelly, my child, my happy, happy child!’

  We need not pursue the interview any further. By degrees they returned to the subject of the new promotion. Eleanor tried to prove to him, as the Grantlys had done, that his age could be no bar to his being a very excellent dean; but those arguments had now even less weight on him than before. He said little or nothing, but sat meditative. Every now and then he would kiss his daughter, and say ‘yes’, or ‘no’, or ‘very true’, or ‘well, my dear, I can’t quite agree with you there’, but he could not be got to enter sharply into the question of ‘to be or not to be’ Dean of Barchester. Of her, and her happiness, of Mr Arabin and his virtues, he would talk as much as Eleanor desired; and to tell the truth, that was not a little; but about the deanery he would now say nothing further. He had got a new idea into his head – Why should not Mr Arabin be the new dean?

  CHAPTER 16

  The Archdeacon is Satisfied with the State of Affairs

  THE archdeacon, in his journey into Barchester, had been assured by Mr Harding that all th
eir prognostications about Mr Slope and Eleanor were groundless. Mr Harding, however, had found it very difficult to shake his son-in-law’s faith in his own acuteness. The matter had, to Dr Grantly, been so plainly corroborated by such patent evidence, borne out by such endless circumstances, that he at first refused to take as true the positive statement which Mr Harding made to him of Eleanor’s own disavowal of the impeachment. But at last he yielded in a qualified way. He brought himself to admit that he would at the present regard his past convictions as a mistake; but in doing this he so guarded himself, that if, at any future time, Eleanor should come forth to the world as Mrs Slope, he might still be able to say: ‘There, I told you so. Remember what you said and what I said; and remember also for coming years, that I was right in this matter – as in all others.’

  He carried, however, his concession so far as to bring himself to undertake to call at Eleanor’s house, and he did call accordingly, while the father and daughter were yet in the middle of their conference. Mr Harding had had so much to hear and to say that he had forgotten to advertise Eleanor of the honour that awaited her, and she heard her brother-in-law’s voice in the hall, while she was quite unprepared to see him.

  ‘There’s the archdeacon,’ she said, springing up.

  ‘Yes, my dear. He told me to tell you that he would come and see you; but, to tell the truth, I had forgotten all about it.’

  Eleanor fled away, regardless of all her father’s entreaties. She could not now, in the first hours of her joy, bring herself to bear all the archdeacon’s retractations, apologies, and congratulations. He would have so much to say, and would be so tedious in saying it; consequently, the archdeacon, when he was shown into the drawing-room, found no one there but Mr Harding.

  ‘You must excuse Eleanor,’ said Mr Harding.

 

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