There was something in her humble, blind aspect, as she stood waiting to have something done to her - what her poor troubled mind hardly knew - that touched all who saw her, inexpressibly. Again the counsel apologised, but the judge could not reply in words; his face was quivering all over, and the jury looked uneasily at the prisoner’s counsel. That gentleman saw that he might go too far, and send their sympathies off on the other side; but one or two questions he must ask. So, hastily recapitulating much that he had learned from Nathan, he said, ‘You believed it was your son’s voice asking to be let in?’
‘Ay! Our Benjamin came home, I’m sure; choose where he is gone.’
She turned her head about, as if listening for the voice of her child, in the hushed silence of the court.
‘Yes; he came home that night - and your husband went down to let him in?’
‘Well! I believe he did. There was a great noise of folk downstair.’
‘And you heard your son Benjamin’s voice among the others?’
‘Is it to do him harm, sir?’ asked she, her face growing more intelligent and intent on the business in hand.
‘That is not my object in questioning you. I believe he has left England; so nothing you can say will do him any harm. You heard your son’s voice, I say?’
‘Yes, sir. For sure I did.’
‘And some men came upstairs into your room? What did they say?’
‘They axed where Nathan kept his stocking.’
‘And you - did you tell them?’
‘No, sir, for I knew Nathan would not like me to.’
‘What did you do then?’
A shade of reluctance came over her face, as if she began to perceive causes and consequences.
‘I just screamed on Bessy - that’s my niece, sir.’
‘And you heard someone shout out from the bottom of the stairs?’
She looked piteously at him, but did not answer.
‘Gentlemen of the jury, I wish to call your particular attention to this fact; she acknowledges she heard someone shout - some third person, you observe - shout out to the two above. What did he say? That is the last question I shall trouble you with. What did the third person, left behind, downstairs, say?’
Her face worked - her mouth opened two or three times as if to speak - she stretched out her arms imploringly; but no word came, and she fell back into the arms of those nearest to her. Nathan forced himself forward into the witness-box -
‘My Lord judge, a woman bore ye, as I reckon; it’, a cruel shame to serve a mother so. It wur my son, my only child, as called out for us t’ open door, and who shouted out for to hold th’ oud woman’s throat if she did na stop her noise, when hoo’d fain ha’ cried for her niece to help. And now yo’ve truth, and a’ th’ truth, and I’ll leave yo’ to th’ judgement o’ God for th’ way yo’ve getten at it.’
Before night the mother was stricken with paralysis, and lay on her death-bed. But the broken-hearted go Home, to be comforted of God.
(1859)
CROWLEY CASTLE
Sir Mark Crowley was the last baronet of his name, and it is now nearly a century since he died. Last year I visited the ruins of his great old Norman castle; and loitered in the village near, where I heard some of the particulars of the following tale from old inhabitants, who had heard them from their fathers; no further back.
We drove from our little sea-bathing place, in Sussex, to see the massive ruins of Crowley Castle, which is the show-excursion of Merton. We had to alight at a field gate: the road further on being too bad for the slightly-built carriage, or the poor tired Merton horse: and we walked for about a quarter of a mile through uneven ground, which had once been an Italian garden; and then we came to a bridge over a dry moat, and went over the groove of a portcullis that had once closed the massive entrance, into an empty space surrounded by thick walls, draperied with ivy, unroofed, and open to the sky. We could judge of the beautiful tracery that had been in the windows, by the remains of the stonework here and there; and an old man - ‘ever so old,’ he called himself when we inquired his exact age - who scrambled and stumbled out of some lair in the least devastated part of the ruins at our approach, and who established himself as our guide, showed us a scrap of glass yet lingering in what was the window of the great drawing-room not above seventy years ago. After he had done his duty, he hobbled with us to the neighbouring church, where the knightly Crowleys lie buried: some commemorated by ancient brasses, some by altar-tombs, some by fine Latin epitaphs, bestowing upon them every virtue under the sun. He had to take the church-key back to the adjoining parsonage at the entrance of the long straggling street which forms the village of Crowley. The castle and the church were on the summit of a hill, from which we could see the distant line of sea beyond the misty marshes. The village fell away from the church and parsonage, down the hill. The aspect of the place was little, if at all, changed, from its aspect in the year 1772.
But I must begin a little earlier. From one of the Latin epitaphs I learnt that Amelia Lady Crowley died in 1756, deeply regretted by her loving husband, Sir Mark. He never married again, though his wife had left him no heir to his name or his estate - only a little tiny girl - Theresa Crowley. This child would inherit her mother’s fortune, and all that Sir Mark was free to leave; but this little was not much; the castle and all the lands going to his sister’s son, Marmaduke, or as he was usually called Duke, Brownlow. Duke’s parents were dead, and his uncle was his guardian, and his guardian’s house was his home. The lad was some seven or eight years older than his cousin; and probably Sir Mark thought it not unlikely that his daughter and his heir might make a match. Theresa’s mother had had some foreign blood in her, and had been brought up in France - not so far away but that its shores might be seen by any one who chose to take an easy day’s ride from Crowley Castle for the purpose.
Lady Crowley had been a delicate elegant creature, but no great beauty, judging from all accounts; Sir Mark’s family were famous for their good looks; Theresa, an unusually lucky child, inherited the outward graces of both her parents. A portrait which I saw of her, degraded to a station over the parlour chimney-piece in the village inn, showed me black hair, soft yet arch grey eyes with brows and lashes of the same tint as her hair, a full pretty pouting passionate mouth, and a round slender throat. She was a wilful little creature, and her father’s indulgence made her more wayward. She had a nurse, too, a French bonne, whose mother had been about my lady from her youth, who had followed my lady to England, and who had died there. Victorine had been in attendance on the young Theresa from her earliest infancy, and almost took the place of a parent in power and affection - in power, as to ordering and arranging almost what she liked, concerning the child’s management - in love, because they speak to this day of the black year when virulent smallpox was rife in Crowley, and when, Sir Mark being far away on some diplomatic mission - in Vienna, I fancy - Victorine shut herself up with Miss Theresa when the child was taken ill with the disease, and nursed her night and day. She only succumbed to the dreadful illness when all danger to the child was over. Theresa came out of it with unblemished beauty; Victorine barely escaped with life, and was disfigured for life.
This disfigurement put a stop to much unfounded scandal which had been afloat respecting the French servant’s great influence over Sir Mark. He was, in fact, an easy and indolent man, rarely excited to any vehemence of emotion, and who felt it to be a point of honour to carry out his dead wife’s wish that Victorine should never leave Theresa, and that the management of the child should be confided to her. Only once had there been a struggle for power between Sir Mark and the bonne, and then she had won the victory. And no wonder, if the old butler’s account were true; for he had gone into the room unawares, and had found Sir Mark and Victorine at high words; and he said that Victorine was white with rage, that her eyes were blazing with passionate fire, that her voice was low, and her words were few, but that, although she spoke in French, and he the butler onl
y knew his native English, he would rather have been sworn at by a drunken grenadier with a sword in his hand, than have had those words of Victorine’s addressed to him.
Even the choice of Theresa’s masters was left to Victorine. A little reference was occasionally made to Madam Hawtrey, the parson’s wife and a distant relation of Sir Mark’s, but, seeing that, if Victorine chose so to order it, Madam Hawtrey’s own little daughter Bessy would have been deprived of the advantages resulting from gratuitous companionship in all Theresa’s lessons, she was careful how she opposed or made an enemy of Mademoiselle Victorine. Bessy was a gentle quiet child, and grew up to be a sensible sweet-tempered girl, with a very fair share of English beauty; fresh-complexion, brown-eyed round-faced, with a stiff though well-made figure, as different as possible from Theresa’s slight lithe graceful form. Duke was a young man to these two maidens, while they to him were little more than children. Of course he admired his cousin Theresa the most - who would not? - but he was establishing his first principles of morality for himself, and her conduct towards Bessy sometimes jarred against his ideas of right. One day, after she had been tyrannizing over the self-contained and patient Bessy so as to make the latter cry - and both the amount of the tyranny and the crying were unusual circumstances, for Theresa was of a generous nature when not put out of the way - Duke spoke to his cousin:
‘Theresa! You had no right to blame Bessy as you did. It was as much your fault as hers. You were as much bound to remember Mr Dawson’s directions about the sums you were to do for him, as she was.’
The girl opened her great grey eyes in surprise. She to blame!
‘What does Bessy come to the castle for, I wonder? They pay nothing - we pay all. The least she can do, is to remember for me what we are told. I shan’t trouble myself with attending to Mr Dawson’s directions; and if Bessy does not like to do so, she can stay away. She already knows enough to earn her bread as a maid: which I suppose is what she’ll have to come to.’
The moment Theresa had said this, she could have bitten her tongue out for the meanness and rancour of the speech. She saw pain and disappointment clearly expressed on Duke’s face; and, in another moment, her impulses would have carried her to the opposite extreme, and she would have spoken out her self-reproach. But Duke thought it his duty to remonstrate with her, and to read her a homily, which, however true and just, weakened the effect of the look of distress on his face. Her wits were called into play to refute his arguments; her head rather than her heart took the prominent part in the controversy; and it ended unsatisfactorily to both; he, going away with dismal though unspoken prognostics touching what she would become as a woman if she were so supercilious and unfeeling as a girl; she, the moment his back was turned, throwing herself on the floor and sobbing as if her heart would break. Victorine heard her darling’s passionate sobs, and came in.
‘What hast thou, my angel! Who has been vexing thee, - tell me, my cherished?’
She tried to raise the girl, but Theresa would not be raised; neither would she speak till she chose, in spite of Victorine’s entreaties. When she chose, she lifted herself up, still sitting on the floor, and putting her tangled hair off her flushed tear-stained face, said:
‘Never mind, it was only something Duke said; I don’t care for it now.’ And refusing Victorine’s aid, she got up, and stood thoughtfully looking out of the window.
‘That Duke!’ exclaimed Victorine. ‘What business has that Mr Duke to go vex my darling? He is not your husband yet, that he should scold you, or that you should mind what he says.’
Theresa listened and gained a new idea; but she gave no outward sign of attention, or of her now hearing for the first time how that she was supposed to be intended for her cousin’s wife. She made no reply to Victorine’s caresses and speeches; one might almost say she shook her off. As soon as she was left to herself, she took her hat, and going out alone, as she was wont, in the pleasure-grounds, she went down the terrace steps, crossed the bowling-green, and opened a little wicket-gate which led into the garden of the parsonage. There, were Bessy and her mother, gathering fruit. It was Bessy whom Theresa sought; for there was something in Madam Hawtrey’s silky manner that was always rather repugnant to her. However, she was not going to shrink from her resolution because Madam Hawtrey was there. So she went up to the startled Bessy, and said to her, as if she were reciting a prepared speech: ‘Bessy, I behaved very crossly to you; I had no business to have spoken to you as I did.’ - ‘Will you forgive me?’ was the predetermined end of this confession; but somehow, when it came to that, she could not say it with Madam Hawtrey standing by, ready to smile and to curtsey as soon as she could catch Theresa’s eye. There was no need to ask forgiveness though; for Bessy had put down her half filled basket, and came softly up to Theresa, stealing her brown soil-stained little hand into the young lady’s soft white one, and looking up at her with loving brown eyes.
‘I am so sorry, but I think it was the sums on page 108. I have been looking and looking, and I am almost sure.’
Her exculpatory tone caught her mother’s ear, although her words did not.
‘I am sure, Miss Theresa, Bessy is so grateful for the privileges of learning with you! It is such an advantage to her! I often tell her, “Take pattern by Miss Theresa, and do as she does, and try and speak as she does, and there’ll not be a parson’s daughter in all Sussex to compare with you.” Don’t I, Bessy?’
Theresa shrugged her shoulders - a trick she had caught from Victorine - and, turning to Bessy, asked her what she was going to do with those gooseberries she was gathering? And as Theresa spoke, she lazily picked the ripest out of the basket, and ate them.
‘They are for a pudding,’ said Bessy. ‘As soon as we have gathered enough, I am going in to make it.’
‘I’ll come and help you,’ said Theresa, eagerly. ‘I should so like to make a pudding. Our Monsieur Antoine never makes gooseberry puddings.’
Duke came past the parsonage an hour or so afterwards: and, looking in by chance through the open casement windows of the kitchen, saw Theresa pinned up in a bib and apron, her arms all over flour, flourishing a rolling-pin, and laughing and chattering with Bessy similarly attired. Duke had spent his morning ostensibly in fishing; but in reality in weighing in his own mind what he could do or say to soften the obdurate heart of his cousin. And here it was, all inexplicably right, as if by some enchanter’s wand!
The only conclusion Duke could come to was the same that many a wise (and foolish) man had come to before his day:
‘Well! Women are past my comprehension, that’s all!’
When all this took place, Theresa was about fifteen; Bessy was perhaps six months older; Duke was just leaving Oxford. His uncle, Sir Mark, was excessively fond of him; yes! and proud, too, for he had distinguished himself at college, and every one spoke well of him. And he, for his part, loved Sir Mark, and, unspoiled by the fame and reputation he had gained at Christ Church, paid respectful deference to Sir Mark’s opinions.
As Theresa grew older, her father supposed that he played his cards well in singing Duke’s praises on every possible occasion. She tossed her head, and said nothing. Thanks to Victorine’s revelations, she understood the tendency of her father’s speeches. She intended to make her own choice of a husband when the time came; and it might be Duke, or it might be some one else. When Duke did not lecture or prose, but was sitting his horse so splendidly at the meet, before the huntsman gave the blast, ‘Found;’ when Duke was holding his own in discourse with other men; when Duke gave her a short sharp word of command on any occasion; then she decided that she would marry him, and no one else. But when he found fault, or stumbled about awkwardly in a minuet, or talked moralities against duelling, then she was sure that Duke should never be her husband. She wondered if he knew about it; if any one had told him, as Victorine had told her; if her father had revealed his thoughts and wishes to his nephew, as plainly as he had done to his daughter? This last query made her cheeks bur
n; and, on days when the suspicion had been brought by any chance prominently before her mind, she was especially rude and disagreeable to Duke.
He was to go abroad on the grand tour of Europe, to which young men of fortune usually devoted three years. He was to have a tutor, because all young men of his rank had tutors; else he was quite wise enough, and steady enough, to have done without one, and probably knew a good deal more about what was best to be observed in the countries they were going to visit, than Mr Roberts, his appointed bear-leader. He was to come back full of historical and political knowledge, speaking French and Italian like a native, and having a smattering of barbarous German, and he was to enter the House as a county member, if possible - as a borough member at the worst; and was to make a great success; and then, as every one understood, he was to marry his cousin Theresa.
He spoke to her father about it, before starting on his travels. It was after dinner in Crowley Castle. Sir Mark and Duke sat alone, each pensive at the thought of the coming parting.
‘Theresa is but young,’ said Duke, breaking into speech after a long silence, ‘but if you have no objection, uncle, I should like to speak to her before I leave England, about my - my hopes.’
Sir Mark played with his glass, poured out some more wine, drank it off at a draught, and then replied:
‘No, Duke, no. Leave her in peace with me. I have looked forward to having her for my companion through these three years; they’ll soon pass away’ (to age, but not to youth), ‘and I should like to have her undivided heart till you come back. No, Duke! Three years will soon pass away, and then we’ll have a royal wedding.’
Delphi Complete Works of Elizabeth Gaskell Page 419