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Delphi Complete Works of Elizabeth Gaskell

Page 80

by Elizabeth Gaskell


  “Dim Saesoneg.”

  So he had to repeat it in English.

  “Well now, Thurstan, here I sit as you bid me. But don’t try me too long; tell me why you sent for me.”

  Now came the difficulty, and oh! for a seraph’s tongue, and a seraph’s powers of representation! but there was no seraph at hand, only the soft running waters singing a quiet tune, and predisposing Miss Benson to listen with a soothed spirit to any tale, not immediately involving her brother’s welfare, which had been the cause of her seeing that lovely vale.

  “It is an awkward story to tell, Faith, but there is a young woman lying ill at my lodgings whom I wanted you to nurse.”

  He thought he saw a shadow on his sister’s face, and detected a slight change in her voice as she spoke.

  “Nothing very romantic, I hope, Thurstan. Remember, I cannot stand much romance; I always distrust it.”

  “I don’t know what you mean by romance. The story is real enough, and not out of the common way, I’m afraid.”

  He paused; he did not get over the difficulty.

  “Well, tell it me at once, Thurstan. I am afraid you have let some one, or perhaps only your own imagination, impose upon you; but don’t try my patience too much; you know I’ve no great stock.”

  “Then I’ll tell you. The young girl was brought to the inn here by a gentleman, who has left her; she is very ill, and has no one to see after her.”

  Miss Benson had some masculine tricks, and one was whistling a long, low whistle when surprised or displeased. She had often found it a useful vent for feelings, and she whistled now. Her brother would rather she had spoken.

  “Have you sent for her friends?” she asked at last.

  “She has none.”

  Another pause and another whistle, but rather softer and more wavering than the last.

  “How is she ill?”

  “Pretty nearly as quiet as if she were dead. She does not speak, or move, or even sigh.”

  “It would be better for her to die at once, I think.”

  “Faith!”

  That one word put them right. It was spoken in the tone which had authority over her; it was so full of grieved surprise and mournful upbraiding. She was accustomed to exercise a sway over him, owing to her greater decision of character, and, probably, if everything were traced to its cause, to her superior vigour of constitution; but at times she was humbled before his pure, childlike nature, and felt where she was inferior. She was too good and true to conceal this feeling, or to resent its being forced upon her. After a time she said,

  “Thurstan, dear, let us go to her.”

  She helped him with tender care, and gave him her arm up the long and tedious hill; but when they approached the village, without speaking a word on the subject, they changed their position, and she leant (apparently) on him. He stretched himself up into as vigorous a gait as he could, when they drew near to the abodes of men.

  On the way they had spoken but little. He had asked after various members of his congregation, for he was a Dissenting minister in a country town, and she had answered; but they neither of them spoke of Ruth, though their minds were full of her.

  Mrs Hughes had tea ready for the traveller on her arrival. Mr Benson chafed a little internally at the leisurely way in which his sister sipped and sipped, and paused to tell him some trifling particular respecting home affairs, which she had forgotten before.

  “Mr Bradshaw has refused to let the children associate with the Dixons any longer, because one evening they played at acting charades.”

  “Indeed; — a little more bread and butter, Faith?”

  “Thank you. This Welsh air does make one hungry. Mrs Bradshaw is paying poor old Maggie’s rent, to save her from being sent into the workhouse.”

  “That’s right. Won’t you have another cup of tea?”

  “I have had two. However, I think I’ll take another.”

  Mr Benson could not refrain from a little sigh as he poured it out. He thought he had never seen his sister so deliberately hungry and thirsty before. He did not guess that she was feeling the meal rather a respite from a distasteful interview, which she was aware was awaiting her at its conclusion. But all things come to an end, and so did Miss Benson’s tea.

  “Now, will you go and see her?”

  “Yes.”

  And so they went. Mrs Hughes had pinned up a piece of green calico, by way of a Venetian blind, to shut out the afternoon sun; and in the light thus shaded lay Ruth, still, and wan, and white. Even with her brother’s account of Ruth’s state, such death-like quietness startled Miss Benson — startled her into pity for the poor lovely creature who lay thus stricken and felled. When she saw her, she could no longer imagine her to be an impostor, or a hardened sinner; such prostration of woe belonged to neither. Mr Benson looked more at his sister’s face than at Ruth’s; he read her countenance as a book.

  Mrs Hughes stood by, crying.

  Mr Benson touched his sister, and they left the room together.

  “Do you think she will live?” asked he.

  “I cannot tell,” said Miss Benson, in a softened voice. “But how young she looks! Quite a child, poor creature! When will the doctor come, Thurstan? Tell me all about her; you have never told me the particulars.”

  Mr Benson might have said, she had never cared to hear them before, and had rather avoided the subject; but he was too happy to see this awakening of interest in his sister’s warm heart to say anything in the least reproachful. He told her the story as well as he could; and, as he felt it deeply, he told it with heart’s eloquence; and, as he ended and looked at her, there were tears in the eyes of both.

  “And what does the doctor say?” asked she, after a pause.

  “He insists upon quiet; he orders medicines and strong broth. I cannot tell you all; Mrs Hughes can. She has been so truly good. ‘Doing good, hoping for nothing again.’“

  “She looks very sweet and gentle. I shall sit up to-night and watch her myself; and I shall send you and Mrs Hughes early to bed, for you have both a worn look about you I don’t like. Are you sure the effect of that fall has gone off? Do you feel anything of it in your back still? After all, I owe her something for turning back to your help. Are you sure she was going to drown herself?”

  “I cannot be sure, for I have not questioned her. She has not been in a state to be questioned; but I have no doubt whatever about it. But you must not think of sitting up after your journey, Faith.”

  “Answer me, Thurstan. Do you feel any bad effect from that fall?”

  “No, hardly any. Don’t sit up, Faith, to-night!”

  “Thurstan, it’s no use talking, for I shall; and, if you go on opposing me, I dare say I shall attack your back, and put a blister on it. Do tell me what that ‘hardly any’ means. Besides, to set you quite at ease, you know I have never seen mountains before, and they fill me and oppress me so much that I could not sleep; I must keep awake this first night, and see that they don’t fall on the earth and overwhelm it. And now answer my questions about yourself.”

  Miss Benson had the power, which some people have, of carrying her wishes through to their fulfilment; her will was strong, her sense was excellent, and people yielded to her — they did not know why. Before ten o’clock she reigned sole power and potentate in Ruth’s little chamber. Nothing could have been better devised for giving her an interest in the invalid. The very dependence of one so helpless upon her care inclined her heart towards her. She thought she perceived a slight improvement in the symptoms during the night, and she was a little pleased that this progress should have been made while she reigned monarch of the sick-room. Yes, certainly there was an improvement. There was more consciousness in the look of the eyes, although the whole countenance still retained its painful traces of acute suffering, manifested in an anxious, startled, uneasy aspect. It was broad morning light, though barely five o’clock, when Miss Benson caught the sight of Ruth’s lips moving, as if in speech. Miss Benson stooped
down to listen.

  “Who are you?” asked Ruth, in the faintest of whispers.

  “Miss Benson — Mr Benson’s sister,” she replied.

  The words conveyed no knowledge to Ruth; on the contrary, weak as a babe in mind and body as she was, her lips began to quiver, and her eyes to show a terror similar to that of any little child who wakens in the presence of a stranger, and sees no dear, familiar face of mother or nurse to reassure its trembling heart.

  Miss Benson took her hand in hers, and began to stroke it caressingly.

  “Don’t be afraid, dear; I’m a friend come to take care of you. Would you like some tea now, my love?”

  The very utterance of these gentle words was unlocking Miss Benson’s heart. Her brother was surprised to see her so full of interest, when he came to inquire later on in the morning. It required Mrs Hughes’s persuasions, as well as his own, to induce her to go to bed for an hour or two after breakfast; and, before she went, she made them promise that she should be called when the doctor came. He did not come until late in the afternoon. The invalid was rallying fast, though rallying to a consciousness of sorrow, as was evinced by the tears which came slowly rolling down her pale sad cheeks — tears which she had not the power to wipe away.

  Mr Benson had remained in the house all day to hear the doctor’s opinion; and now that he was relieved from the charge of Ruth by his sister’s presence, he had the more time to dwell upon the circumstances of her case — so far as they were known to him. He remembered his first sight of her; her little figure swaying to and fro as she balanced herself on the slippery stones, half smiling at her own dilemma, with a bright, happy light in the eyes that seemed like a reflection from the glancing waters sparkling below. Then he recalled the changed, affrighted look of those eyes as they met his, after the child’s rebuff of her advances; — how that little incident filled up the tale at which Mrs Hughes had hinted, in a kind of sorrowful way, as if loath (as a Christian should be) to believe evil. Then that fearful evening, when he had only just saved her from committing suicide, and that nightmare sleep! And now, lost, forsaken, and but just delivered from the jaws of death, she lay dependent for everything on his sister and him, — utter strangers a few weeks ago. Where was her lover? Could he be easy and happy? Could he grow into perfect health, with these great sins pressing on his conscience with a strong and hard pain? Or had he a conscience?

  Into whole labyrinths of social ethics Mr Benson’s thoughts wandered, when his sister entered suddenly and abruptly.

  “What does the doctor say? Is she better?”

  “Oh, yes! she’s better,” answered Miss Benson, sharp and short. Her brother looked at her in dismay. She bumped down into a chair in a cross, disconcerted manner. They were both silent for a few minutes; only Miss Benson whistled and clucked alternately.

  “What is the matter, Faith? You say she is better.”

  “Why, Thurstan, there is something so shocking the matter, that I cannot tell you.”

  Mr Benson changed colour with affright. All things possible and impossible crossed his mind but the right one. I said, “all things possible;” I made a mistake. He never believed Ruth to be more guilty than she seemed.

  “Faith, I wish you would tell me, and not bewilder me with those noises of yours,” said he, nervously.

  “I beg your pardon; but something so shocking has just been discovered — I don’t know how to word it — She will have a child. The doctor says so.”

  She was allowed to make noises unnoticed for a few minutes. Her brother did not speak. At last she wanted his sympathy.

  “Isn’t it shocking, Thurstan? You might have knocked me down with a straw when he told me.”

  “Does she know?”

  “Yes; and I am not sure that that isn’t the worst part of all.”

  “How? — what do you mean?”

  “Oh! I was just beginning to have a good opinion of her, but I’m afraid she is very depraved. After the doctor was gone, she pulled the bed-curtain aside, and looked as if she wanted to speak to me. (I can’t think how she heard, for we were close to the window, and spoke very low.) Well, I went to her, though I really had taken quite a turn against her. And she whispered, quite eagerly, ‘Did he say I should have a baby?’ Of course, I could not keep it from her; but I thought it my duty to look as cold and severe as I could. She did not seem to understand how it ought to be viewed, but took it just as if she had a right to have a baby. She said, ‘Oh, my God, I thank Thee! Oh! I will be so good!’ I had no patience with her then, so I left the room.”

  “Who is with her?”

  “Mrs Hughes. She is not seeing the thing in a moral light, as I should have expected.”

  Mr Benson was silent again. After some time he began:

  “Faith, I don’t see this affair quite as you do. I believe I am right.”

  “You surprise me, brother! I don’t understand you.”

  “Wait awhile! I want to make my feelings very clear to you, but I don’t know where to begin, or how to express myself.”

  “It is, indeed, an extraordinary subject for us to have to talk about; but if once I get clear of this girl, I’ll wash my hands of all such cases again.”

  Her brother was not attending to her; he was reducing his own ideas to form.

  “Faith, do you know I rejoice in this child’s advent?”

  “May God forgive you, Thurstan! — if you know what you are saying. But, surely, it is a temptation, dear Thurstan.”

  “I do not think it is a delusion. The sin appears to me to be quite distinct from its consequences.”

  “Sophistry — and a temptation,” said Miss Benson, decidedly.

  “No, it is not,” said her brother, with equal decision. “In the eye of God, she is exactly the same as if the life she has led had left no trace behind. We knew her errors before, Faith.”

  “Yes, but not this disgrace — this badge of her shame!”

  “Faith, Faith! let me beg of you not to speak so of the little innocent babe, who may be God’s messenger to lead her back to Him. Think again of her first words — the burst of nature from her heart! Did she not turn to God, and enter into a covenant with Him — ’I will be so good?’ Why, it draws her out of herself! If her life has hitherto been self-seeking, and wickedly thoughtless, here is the very instrument to make her forget herself, and be thoughtful for another. Teach her (and God will teach her, if man does not come between) to reverence her child; and this reverence will shut out sin, — will be purification.”

  He was very much excited; he was even surprised at his own excitement; but his thoughts and meditations through the long afternoon had prepared his mind for this manner of viewing the subject.

  “These are quite new ideas to me,” said Miss Benson, coldly. “I think you, Thurstan, are the first person I ever heard rejoicing over the birth of an illegitimate child. It appears to me, I must own, rather questionable morality.”

  “I do not rejoice. I have been all this afternoon mourning over the sin which has blighted this young creature; I have been dreading lest, as she recovered consciousness, there should be a return of her despair. I have been thinking of every holy word, every promise to the penitent — of the tenderness which led the Magdalen aright. I have been feeling, severely and reproachfully, the timidity which has hitherto made me blink all encounter with evils of this particular kind. Oh, Faith! once for all, do not accuse me of questionable morality, when I am trying more than ever I did in my life to act as my blessed Lord would have done.”

  He was very much agitated. His sister hesitated, and then she spoke more softly than before.

  “But, Thurstan, everything might have been done to ‘lead her right’ (as you call it), without this child, this miserable offspring of sin.”

  “The world has, indeed, made such children miserable, innocent as they are; but I doubt if this be according to the will of God, unless it be His punishment for the parents’ guilt; and even then the world’s way of treatmen
t is too apt to harden the mother’s natural love into something like hatred. Shame, and the terror of friends’ displeasure, turn her mad — defile her holiest instincts; and, as for the fathers — God forgive them! I cannot — at least, not just now.”

  Miss Benson thought on what her brother said. At length she asked, “Thurstan (remember I’m not convinced), how would you have this girl treated according to your theory?”

  “It will require some time, and much Christian love, to find out the best way. I know I’m not very wise; but the way I think it would be right to act in, would be this — ” He thought for some time before he spoke, and then said:

  “She has incurred a responsibility — that we both acknowledge. She is about to become a mother, and have the direction and guidance of a little tender life. I fancy such a responsibility must be serious and solemn enough, without making it into a heavy and oppressive burden, so that human nature recoils from bearing it. While we do all we can to strengthen her sense of responsibility, I would likewise do all we can to make her feel that it is responsibility for what may become a blessing.”

  “Whether the children are legitimate or illegitimate?” asked Miss Benson, drily.

  “Yes!” said her brother, firmly. “The more I think, the more I believe I am right. No one,” said he, blushing faintly as he spoke, “can have a greater recoil from profligacy than I have. You yourself have not greater sorrow over this young creature’s sin than I have: the difference is this, you confuse the consequences with the sin.”

  “I don’t understand metaphysics.”

  “I am not aware that I am talking metaphysics. I can imagine that if the present occasion be taken rightly, and used well, all that is good in her may be raised to a height unmeasured but by God; while all that is evil and dark may, by His blessing, fade and disappear in the pure light of her child’s presence. Oh, Father! listen to my prayer, that her redemption may date from this time. Help us to speak to her in the loving spirit of thy Holy Son!”

 

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