by George Eliot
active interest was a natural consequence of bodily feebleness, and the prospect
of her becoming a mother was a new ground for hoping the best.
But the delicate plant had been too deeply bruised, and in the struggle to put
forth a blossom it died.
Tina died, and Maynard Gilfil's love went with her into deep silence for
evermore.
EPILOGUE
THIS was Mr Gilfil's love-story, which lay far back from the time when he sat,
worn and grey, by his lonely fireside in Shepperton Vicarage. Rich brown locks,
passionate love, and deep early sorrow, strangely different as they seem from
the scanty white hairs, the apathetic content, and the unexpectant quiescence of
old age, are but part of the same life's journey; as the bright Italian plains,
with the sweet Addio of their beckoning maidens, are part of the same day's
travel that brings us to the other side of the mountain, between the sombre
rocky walls and among the guttural voices of the Valais.
To those who were familiar only with the grey-haired Vicar, jogging leisurely
along on his old chestnut cob, it would perhaps have been hard to believe that
he had ever been the Maynard Gilfil who, with a heart full of passion and
tenderness, had urged his black Kitty to her swiftest gallop on the way to
Callam, or that the old gentleman of caustic tongue, and bucolic tastes, and
sparing habits, had known all the deep secrets of devoted love, had struggled
through its days and nights of anguish, and trembled under its unspeakable joys.
And indeed the Mr Gilfil of those late Shepperton days had more of the knots and
ruggedness of poor human nature than there lay any clear hint of in the
open-eyed loving Maynard. But it is with men as with trees: if you lop off their
finest branches, into which they were pouring their young life-juice, the wounds
will be healed over with some rough boss, some odd excrescence; and what might
have been a grand tree expanding into liberal shade, is but a whimsical
misshapen trunk. Many an irritating fault, many an unlovely oddity, has come of
a hard sorrow, which has crushed and maimed the nature just when it was
expanding into plenteous beauty; and the trivial erring life which we visit with
our harsh blame, may be but as the unsteady motion of a man whose best limb is
withered.
And so the dear old Vicar, though he had something of the knotted whimsical
character of the poor lopped oak, had yet been sketched out by nature as a noble
tree. The heart of him was sound, the grain was of the finest; and in the
grey-haired man who filled his pocket with sugar-plums for the little children,
whose most biting words were directed against the evil doing of the rich man,
and who, with all his social pipes and slipshod talk, never sank below the
highest level of his parishioners' respect, there was the main trunk of the same
brave, faithful, tender nature that had poured out the finest, freshest forces
of its life-current in a first and only love�the love of Tina.