<h2><SPAN name="chap16"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVI.<br/> AULD LANG SYNE.</h2>
<p>Where my soul went during that swoon I cannot tell. Whatever she saw, or
wherever she travelled in her trance on that strange night she kept her own
secret; never whispering a word to Memory, and baffling imagination by an
indissoluble silence. She may have gone upward, and come in sight of her
eternal home, hoping for leave to rest now, and deeming that her painful union
with matter was at last dissolved. While she so deemed, an angel may have
warned her away from heaven’s threshold, and, guiding her weeping down,
have bound her, once more, all shuddering and unwilling, to that poor frame,
cold and wasted, of whose companionship she was grown more than weary.</p>
<p>I know she re-entered her prison with pain, with reluctance, with a moan and a
long shiver. The divorced mates, Spirit and Substance, were hard to re-unite:
they greeted each other, not in an embrace, but a racking sort of struggle. The
returning sense of sight came upon me, red, as if it swam in blood; suspended
hearing rushed back loud, like thunder; consciousness revived in fear: I sat up
appalled, wondering into what region, amongst what strange beings I was waking.
At first I knew nothing I looked on: a wall was not a wall—a lamp not a
lamp. I should have understood what we call a ghost, as well as I did the
commonest object: which is another way of intimating that all my eye rested on
struck it as spectral. But the faculties soon settled each in his place; the
life-machine presently resumed its wonted and regular working.</p>
<p>Still, I knew not where I was; only in time I saw I had been removed from the
spot where I fell: I lay on no portico-step; night and tempest were excluded by
walls, windows, and ceiling. Into some house I had been carried—but what
house?</p>
<p>I could only think of the pensionnat in the Rue Fossette. Still half-dreaming,
I tried hard to discover in what room they had put me; whether the great
dormitory, or one of the little dormitories. I was puzzled, because I could not
make the glimpses of furniture I saw accord with my knowledge of any of these
apartments. The empty white beds were wanting, and the long line of large
windows. “Surely,” thought I, “it is not to Madame
Beck’s own chamber they have carried me!” And here my eye fell on
an easy-chair covered with blue damask. Other seats, cushioned to match, dawned
on me by degrees; and at last I took in the complete fact of a pleasant
parlour, with a wood fire on a clear-shining hearth, a carpet where arabesques
of bright blue relieved a ground of shaded fawn; pale walls over which a slight
but endless garland of azure forget-me-nots ran mazed and bewildered amongst
myriad gold leaves and tendrils. A gilded mirror filled up the space between
two windows, curtained amply with blue damask. In this mirror I saw myself
laid, not in bed, but on a sofa. I looked spectral; my eyes larger and more
hollow, my hair darker than was natural, by contrast with my thin and ashen
face. It was obvious, not only from the furniture, but from the position of
windows, doors, and fireplace, that this was an unknown room in an unknown
house.</p>
<p>Hardly less plain was it that my brain was not yet settled; for, as I gazed at
the blue arm-chair, it appeared to grow familiar; so did a certain
scroll-couch, and not less so the round centre-table, with a blue-covering,
bordered with autumn-tinted foliage; and, above all, two little footstools with
worked covers, and a small ebony-framed chair, of which the seat and back were
also worked with groups of brilliant flowers on a dark ground.</p>
<p>Struck with these things, I explored further. Strange to say, old acquaintance
were all about me, and “auld lang syne” smiled out of every nook.
There were two oval miniatures over the mantel-piece, of which I knew by heart
the pearls about the high and powdered “heads;” the velvets
circling the white throats; the swell of the full muslin kerchiefs: the pattern
of the lace sleeve-ruffles. Upon the mantel-shelf there were two china vases,
some relics of a diminutive tea-service, as smooth as enamel and as thin as
egg-shell, and a white centre ornament, a classic group in alabaster, preserved
under glass. Of all these things I could have told the peculiarities, numbered
the flaws or cracks, like any <i>clairvoyante</i>. Above all, there was a pair
of handscreens, with elaborate pencil-drawings finished like line engravings;
these, my very eyes ached at beholding again, recalling hours when they had
followed, stroke by stroke and touch by touch, a tedious, feeble, finical,
school-girl pencil held in these fingers, now so skeleton-like.</p>
<p>Where was I? Not only in what spot of the world, but in what year of our Lord?
For all these objects were of past days, and of a distant country. Ten years
ago I bade them good-by; since my fourteenth year they and I had never met. I
gasped audibly, “Where am I?”</p>
<p>A shape hitherto unnoticed, stirred, rose, came forward: a shape inharmonious
with the environment, serving only to complicate the riddle further. This was
no more than a sort of native bonne, in a common-place bonne’s cap and
print-dress. She spoke neither French nor English, and I could get no
intelligence from her, not understanding her phrases of dialect. But she bathed
my temples and forehead with some cool and perfumed water, and then she
heightened the cushion on which I reclined, made signs that I was not to speak,
and resumed her post at the foot of the sofa.</p>
<p>She was busy knitting; her eyes thus drawn from me, I could gaze on her without
interruption. I did mightily wonder how she came there, or what she could have
to do among the scenes, or with the days of my girlhood. Still more I marvelled
what those scenes and days could now have to do with me.</p>
<p>Too weak to scrutinize thoroughly the mystery, I tried to settle it by saying
it was a mistake, a dream, a fever-fit; and yet I knew there could be no
mistake, and that I was not sleeping, and I believed I was sane. I wished the
room had not been so well lighted, that I might not so clearly have seen the
little pictures, the ornaments, the screens, the worked chair. All these
objects, as well as the blue-damask furniture, were, in fact, precisely the
same, in every minutest detail, with those I so well remembered, and with which
I had been so thoroughly intimate, in the drawing-room of my godmother’s
house at Bretton. Methought the apartment only was changed, being of different
proportions and dimensions.</p>
<p>I thought of Bedreddin Hassan, transported in his sleep from Cairo to the gates
of Damascus. Had a Genius stooped his dark wing down the storm to whose stress
I had succumbed, and gathering me from the church-steps, and “rising high
into the air,” as the eastern tale said, had he borne me over land and
ocean, and laid me quietly down beside a hearth of Old England? But no; I knew
the fire of that hearth burned before its Lares no more—it went out long
ago, and the household gods had been carried elsewhere.</p>
<p>The bonne turned again to survey me, and seeing my eyes wide open, and, I
suppose, deeming their expression perturbed and excited, she put down her
knitting. I saw her busied for a moment at a little stand; she poured out
water, and measured drops from a phial: glass in hand, she approached me. What
dark-tinged draught might she now be offering? what Genii-elixir or
Magi-distillation?</p>
<p>It was too late to inquire—I had swallowed it passively, and at once. A
tide of quiet thought now came gently caressing my brain; softer and softer
rose the flow, with tepid undulations smoother than balm. The pain of weakness
left my limbs, my muscles slept. I lost power to move; but, losing at the same
time wish, it was no privation. That kind bonne placed a screen between me and
the lamp; I saw her rise to do this, but do not remember seeing her resume her
place: in the interval between the two acts, I “fell on sleep.”</p>
<p class="p2">
At waking, lo! all was again changed. The light of high day surrounded me; not,
indeed, a warm, summer light, but the leaden gloom of raw and blustering
autumn. I felt sure now that I was in the pensionnat—sure by the beating
rain on the casement; sure by the “wuther” of wind amongst trees,
denoting a garden outside; sure by the chill, the whiteness, the solitude,
amidst which I lay. I say <i>whiteness</i>—for the dimity curtains,
dropped before a French bed, bounded my view.</p>
<p>I lifted them; I looked out. My eye, prepared to take in the range of a long,
large, and whitewashed chamber, blinked baffled, on encountering the limited
area of a small cabinet—a cabinet with seagreen walls; also, instead of
five wide and naked windows, there was one high lattice, shaded with muslin
festoons: instead of two dozen little stands of painted wood, each holding a
basin and an ewer, there was a toilette-table dressed, like a lady for a ball,
in a white robe over a pink skirt; a polished and large glass crowned, and a
pretty pin-cushion frilled with lace, adorned it. This toilette, together with
a small, low, green and white chintz arm-chair, a washstand topped with a
marble slab, and supplied with utensils of pale greenware, sufficiently
furnished the tiny chamber.</p>
<p>Reader; I felt alarmed! Why? you will ask. What was there in this simple and
somewhat pretty sleeping-closet to startle the most timid? Merely
this—These articles of furniture could not be real, solid arm-chairs,
looking-glasses, and washstands—they must be the ghosts of such articles;
or, if this were denied as too wild an hypothesis—and, confounded as I
was, I <i>did</i> deny it—there remained but to conclude that I had
myself passed into an abnormal state of mind; in short, that I was very ill and
delirious: and even then, mine was the strangest figment with which delirium
had ever harassed a victim.</p>
<p>I knew—I was obliged to know—the green chintz of that little chair;
the little snug chair itself, the carved, shining-black, foliated frame of that
glass; the smooth, milky-green of the china vessels on the stand; the very
stand too, with its top of grey marble, splintered at one corner;—all
these I was compelled to recognise and to hail, as last night I had, perforce,
recognised and hailed the rosewood, the drapery, the porcelain, of the
drawing-room.</p>
<p>Bretton! Bretton! and ten years ago shone reflected in that mirror. And why did
Bretton and my fourteenth year haunt me thus? Why, if they came at all, did
they not return complete? Why hovered before my distempered vision the mere
furniture, while the rooms and the locality were gone? As to that pincushion
made of crimson satin, ornamented with gold beads and frilled with thread-lace,
I had the same right to know it as to know the screens—I had made it
myself. Rising with a start from the bed, I took the cushion in my hand and
examined it. There was the cipher “L. L. B.” formed in gold beds,
and surrounded with an oval wreath embroidered in white silk. These were the
initials of my godmother’s name—Lonisa Lucy Bretton.</p>
<p>“Am I in England? Am I at Bretton?” I muttered; and hastily pulling
up the blind with which the lattice was shrouded, I looked out to try and
discover <i>where</i> I was; half-prepared to meet the calm, old, handsome
buildings and clean grey pavement of St. Ann’s Street, and to see at the
end the towers of the minster: or, if otherwise, fully expectant of a town view
somewhere, a rue in Villette, if not a street in a pleasant and ancient English
city.</p>
<p>I looked, on the contrary, through a frame of leafage, clustering round the
high lattice, and forth thence to a grassy mead-like level, a lawn-terrace with
trees rising from the lower ground beyond—high forest-trees, such as I
had not seen for many a day. They were now groaning under the gale of October,
and between their trunks I traced the line of an avenue, where yellow leaves
lay in heaps and drifts, or were whirled singly before the sweeping west wind.
Whatever landscape might lie further must have been flat, and these tall
beeches shut it out. The place seemed secluded, and was to me quite strange: I
did not know it at all.</p>
<p>Once more I lay down. My bed stood in a little alcove; on turning my face to
the wall, the room with its bewildering accompaniments became excluded.
Excluded? No! For as I arranged my position in this hope, behold, on the green
space between the divided and looped-up curtains, hung a broad, gilded
picture-frame enclosing a portrait. It was drawn—well drawn, though but a
sketch—in water-colours; a head, a boy’s head, fresh, life-like,
speaking, and animated. It seemed a youth of sixteen, fair-complexioned, with
sanguine health in his cheek; hair long, not dark, and with a sunny sheen;
penetrating eyes, an arch mouth, and a gay smile. On the whole a most pleasant
face to look at, especially for, those claiming a right to that youth’s
affections—parents, for instance, or sisters. Any romantic little
school-girl might almost have loved it in its frame. Those eyes looked as if
when somewhat older they would flash a lightning-response to love: I cannot
tell whether they kept in store the steady-beaming shine of faith. For whatever
sentiment met him in form too facile, his lips menaced, beautifully but surely,
caprice and light esteem.</p>
<p>Striving to take each new discovery as quietly as I could, I whispered to
myself—</p>
<p>“Ah! that portrait used to hang in the breakfast-room, over the
mantel-piece: somewhat too high, as I thought. I well remember how I used to
mount a music-stool for the purpose of unhooking it, holding it in my hand, and
searching into those bonny wells of eyes, whose glance under their hazel lashes
seemed like a pencilled laugh; and well I liked to note the colouring of the
cheek, and the expression of the mouth.” I hardly believed fancy could
improve on the curve of that mouth, or of the chin; even <i>my</i> ignorance
knew that both were beautiful, and pondered perplexed over this doubt:
“How it was that what charmed so much, could at the same time so keenly
pain?” Once, by way of test, I took little Missy Home, and, lifting her
in my arms, told her to look at the picture.</p>
<p>“Do you like it, Polly?” I asked. She never answered, but gazed
long, and at last a darkness went trembling through her sensitive eye, as she
said, “Put me down.” So I put her down, saying to myself:
“The child feels it too.”</p>
<p>All these things do I now think over, adding, “He had his faults, yet
scarce ever was a finer nature; liberal, suave, impressible.” My
reflections closed in an audibly pronounced word, “Graham!”</p>
<p>“Graham!” echoed a sudden voice at the bedside. “Do you want
Graham?”</p>
<p>I looked. The plot was but thickening; the wonder but culminating. If it was
strange to see that well-remembered pictured form on the wall, still stranger
was it to turn and behold the equally well-remembered living form
opposite—a woman, a lady, most real and substantial, tall, well-attired,
wearing widow’s silk, and such a cap as best became her matron and
motherly braids of hair. Hers, too, was a good face; too marked, perhaps, now
for beauty, but not for sense or character. She was little changed; something
sterner, something more robust—but she was my godmother: still the
distinct vision of Mrs. Bretton.</p>
<p>I kept quiet, yet internally <i>I</i> was much agitated: my pulse fluttered,
and the blood left my cheek, which turned cold.</p>
<p>“Madam, where am I?” I inquired.</p>
<p>“In a very safe asylum; well protected for the present; make your mind
quite easy till you get a little better; you look ill this morning.”</p>
<p>“I am so entirely bewildered, I do not know whether I can trust my senses
at all, or whether they are misleading me in every particular: but you speak
English, do you not, madam?”</p>
<p>“I should think you might hear that: it would puzzle me to hold a long
discourse in French.”</p>
<p>“You do not come from England?”</p>
<p>“I am lately arrived thence. Have you been long in this country? You seem
to know my son?”</p>
<p>“Do, I, madam? Perhaps I do. Your son—the picture there?”</p>
<p>“That is his portrait as a youth. While looking at it, you pronounced his
name.”</p>
<p>“Graham Bretton?”</p>
<p>She nodded.</p>
<p>“I speak to Mrs. Bretton, formerly of Bretton,
——shire?”</p>
<p>“Quite right; and you, I am told, are an English teacher in a foreign
school here: my son recognised you as such.”</p>
<p>“How was I found, madam, and by whom?”</p>
<p>“My son shall tell you that by-and-by,” said she; “but at
present you are too confused and weak for conversation: try to eat some
breakfast, and then sleep.”</p>
<p>Notwithstanding all I had undergone—the bodily fatigue, the perturbation
of spirits, the exposure to weather—it seemed that I was better: the
fever, the real malady which had oppressed my frame, was abating; for, whereas
during the last nine days I had taken no solid food, and suffered from
continual thirst, this morning, on breakfast being offered, I experienced a
craving for nourishment: an inward faintness which caused me eagerly to taste
the tea this lady offered, and to eat the morsel of dry toast she allowed in
accompaniment. It was only a morsel, but it sufficed; keeping up my strength
till some two or three hours afterwards, when the bonne brought me a little cup
of broth and a biscuit.</p>
<p>As evening began to darken, and the ceaseless blast still blew wild and cold,
and the rain streamed on, deluge-like, I grew weary—very weary of my bed.
The room, though pretty, was small: I felt it confining: I longed for a change.
The increasing chill and gathering gloom, too, depressed me; I wanted to
see—to feel firelight. Besides, I kept thinking of the son of that tall
matron: when should I see him? Certainly not till I left my room.</p>
<p>At last the bonne came to make my bed for the night. She prepared to wrap me in
a blanket and place me in the little chintz chair; but, declining these
attentions, I proceeded to dress myself:</p>
<p>The business was just achieved, and I was sitting down to take breath, when
Mrs. Bretton once more appeared.</p>
<p>“Dressed!” she exclaimed, smiling with that smile I so well
knew—a pleasant smile, though not soft. “You are quite better then?
Quite strong—eh?”</p>
<p>She spoke to me so much as of old she used to speak that I almost fancied she
was beginning to know me. There was the same sort of patronage in her voice and
manner that, as a girl, I had always experienced from her—a patronage I
yielded to and even liked; it was not founded on conventional grounds of
superior wealth or station (in the last particular there had never been any
inequality; her degree was mine); but on natural reasons of physical advantage:
it was the shelter the tree gives the herb. I put a request without further
ceremony.</p>
<p>“Do let me go down-stairs, madam; I am so cold and dull here.”</p>
<p>“I desire nothing better, if you are strong enough to bear the
change,” was her reply. “Come then; here is an arm.” And she
offered me hers: I took it, and we descended one flight of carpeted steps to a
landing where a tall door, standing open, gave admission into the blue-damask
room. How pleasant it was in its air of perfect domestic comfort! How warm in
its amber lamp-light and vermilion fire-flush! To render the picture perfect,
tea stood ready on the table—an English tea, whereof the whole shining
service glanced at me familiarly; from the solid silver urn, of antique
pattern, and the massive pot of the same metal, to the thin porcelain cups,
dark with purple and gilding. I knew the very seed-cake of peculiar form, baked
in a peculiar mould, which always had a place on the tea-table at Bretton.
Graham liked it, and there it was as of yore—set before Graham’s
plate with the silver knife and fork beside it. Graham was then expected to
tea: Graham was now, perhaps, in the house; ere many minutes I might see him.</p>
<p>“Sit down—sit down,” said my conductress, as my step faltered
a little in passing to the hearth. She seated me on the sofa, but I soon passed
behind it, saying the fire was too hot; in its shade I found another seat which
suited me better. Mrs. Bretton was never wont to make a fuss about any person
or anything; without remonstrance she suffered me to have my own way. She made
the tea, and she took up the newspaper. I liked to watch every action of my
godmother; all her movements were so young: she must have been now above fifty,
yet neither her sinews nor her spirit seemed yet touched by the rust of age.
Though portly, she was alert, and though serene, she was at times
impetuous—good health and an excellent temperament kept her green as in
her spring.</p>
<p>While she read, I perceived she listened—listened for her son. She was
not the woman ever to confess herself uneasy, but there was yet no lull in the
weather, and if Graham were out in that hoarse wind—roaring still
unsatisfied—I well knew his mother’s heart would be out with him.</p>
<p>“Ten minutes behind his time,” said she, looking at her watch;
then, in another minute, a lifting of her eyes from the page, and a slight
inclination of her head towards the door, denoted that she heard some sound.
Presently her brow cleared; and then even my ear, less practised, caught the
iron clash of a gate swung to, steps on gravel, lastly the door-bell. He was
come. His mother filled the teapot from the urn, she drew nearer the hearth the
stuffed and cushioned blue chair—her own chair by right, but I saw there
was one who might with impunity usurp it. And when that <i>one</i> came up the
stairs—which he soon did, after, I suppose, some such attention to the
toilet as the wild and wet night rendered necessary, and strode straight
in—</p>
<p>“Is it you, Graham?” said his mother, hiding a glad smile and
speaking curtly.</p>
<p>“Who else should it be, mamma?” demanded the Unpunctual, possessing
himself irreverently of the abdicated throne.</p>
<p>“Don’t you deserve cold tea, for being late?”</p>
<p>“I shall not get my deserts, for the urn sings cheerily.”</p>
<p>“Wheel yourself to the table, lazy boy: no seat will serve you but mine;
if you had one spark of a sense of propriety, you would always leave that chair
for the Old Lady.”</p>
<p>“So I should; only the dear Old Lady persists in leaving it for me. How
is your patient, mamma?”</p>
<p>“Will she come forward and speak for herself?” said Mrs. Bretton,
turning to my corner; and at this invitation, forward I came. Graham
courteously rose up to greet me. He stood tall on the hearth, a figure
justifying his mother’s unconcealed pride.</p>
<p>“So you are come down,” said he; “you must be better
then—much better. I scarcely expected we should meet thus, or here. I was
alarmed last night, and if I had not been forced to hurry away to a dying
patient, I certainly would not have left you; but my mother herself is
something of a doctress, and Martha an excellent nurse. I saw the case was a
fainting-fit, not necessarily dangerous. What brought it on, I have yet to
learn, and all particulars; meantime, I trust you really do feel better?”</p>
<p>“Much better,” I said calmly. “Much better, I thank you, Dr.
John.”</p>
<p>For, reader, this tall young man—this darling son—this host of
mine—this Graham Bretton, <i>was</i> Dr. John: he, and no other; and,
what is more, I ascertained this identity scarcely with surprise. What is more,
when I heard Graham’s step on the stairs, I knew what manner of figure
would enter, and for whose aspect to prepare my eyes. The discovery was not of
to-day, its dawn had penetrated my perceptions long since. Of course I
remembered young Bretton well; and though ten years (from sixteen to
twenty-six) may greatly change the boy as they mature him to the man, yet they
could bring no such utter difference as would suffice wholly to blind my eyes,
or baffle my memory. Dr. John Graham Bretton retained still an affinity to the
youth of sixteen: he had his eyes; he had some of his features; to wit, all the
excellently-moulded lower half of the face; I found him out soon. I first
recognised him on that occasion, noted several chapters back, when my
unguardedly-fixed attention had drawn on me the mortification of an implied
rebuke. Subsequent observation confirmed, in every point, that early surmise. I
traced in the gesture, the port, and the habits of his manhood, all his
boy’s promise. I heard in his now deep tones the accent of former days.
Certain turns of phrase, peculiar to him of old, were peculiar to him still;
and so was many a trick of eye and lip, many a smile, many a sudden ray
levelled from the irid, under his well-charactered brow.</p>
<p>To <i>say</i> anything on the subject, to <i>hint</i> at my discovery, had not
suited my habits of thought, or assimilated with my system of feeling. On the
contrary, I had preferred to keep the matter to myself. I liked entering his
presence covered with a cloud he had not seen through, while he stood before me
under a ray of special illumination which shone all partial over his head,
trembled about his feet, and cast light no farther.</p>
<p>Well I knew that to him it could make little difference, were I to come forward
and announce, “This is Lucy Snowe!” So I kept back in my
teacher’s place; and as he never asked my name, so I never gave it. He
heard me called “Miss,” and “Miss Lucy;” he never heard
the surname, “Snowe.” As to spontaneous recognition—though I,
perhaps, was still less changed than he—the idea never approached his
mind, and why should I suggest it?</p>
<p>During tea, Dr. John was kind, as it was his nature to be; that meal over, and
the tray carried out, he made a cosy arrangement of the cushions in a corner of
the sofa, and obliged me to settle amongst them. He and his mother also drew to
the fire, and ere we had sat ten minutes, I caught the eye of the latter
fastened steadily upon me. Women are certainly quicker in some things than men.</p>
<p>“Well,” she exclaimed, presently, “I have seldom seen a
stronger likeness! Graham, have you observed it?”</p>
<p>“Observed what? What ails the Old Lady now? How you stare, mamma! One
would think you had an attack of second sight.”</p>
<p>“Tell me, Graham, of whom does that young lady remind you?”
pointing to me.</p>
<p>“Mamma, you put her out of countenance. I often tell you abruptness is
your fault; remember, too, that to you she is a stranger, and does not know
your ways.”</p>
<p>“Now, when she looks down; now, when she turns sideways, who is she like,
Graham?”</p>
<p>“Indeed, mamma, since you propound the riddle, I think you ought to solve
it!”</p>
<p>“And you have known her some time, you say—ever since you first
began to attend the school in the Rue Fossette:—yet you never mentioned
to me that singular resemblance!”</p>
<p>“I could not mention a thing of which I never thought, and which I do not
now acknowledge. What <i>can</i> you mean?”</p>
<p>“Stupid boy! look at her.”</p>
<p>Graham did look: but this was not to be endured; I saw how it must end, so I
thought it best to anticipate.</p>
<p>“Dr. John,” I said, “has had so much to do and think of,
since he and I shook hands at our last parting in St. Ann’s Street, that,
while I readily found out Mr. Graham Bretton, some months ago, it never
occurred to me as possible that he should recognise Lucy Snowe.”</p>
<p>“Lucy Snowe! I thought so! I knew it!” cried Mrs. Bretton. And she
at once stepped across the hearth and kissed me. Some ladies would, perhaps,
have made a great bustle upon such a discovery without being particularly glad
of it; but it was not my godmother’s habit to make a bustle, and she
preferred all sentimental demonstrations in bas-relief. So she and I got over
the surprise with few words and a single salute; yet I daresay she was pleased,
and I know I was. While we renewed old acquaintance, Graham, sitting opposite,
silently disposed of his paroxysm of astonishment.</p>
<p>“Mamma calls me a stupid boy, and I think I am so,” at length he
said; “for, upon my honour, often as I have seen you, I never once
suspected this fact: and yet I perceive it all now. Lucy Snowe! To be sure! I
recollect her perfectly, and there she sits; not a doubt of it. But,” he
added, “you surely have not known me as an old acquaintance all this
time, and never mentioned it.”</p>
<p>“That I have,” was my answer.</p>
<p>Dr. John commented not. I supposed he regarded my silence as eccentric, but he
was indulgent in refraining from censure. I daresay, too, he would have deemed
it impertinent to have interrogated me very closely, to have asked me the why
and wherefore of my reserve; and, though he might feel a little curious, the
importance of the case was by no means such as to tempt curiosity to infringe
on discretion.</p>
<p>For my part, I just ventured to inquire whether he remembered the circumstance
of my once looking at him very fixedly; for the slight annoyance he had
betrayed on that occasion still lingered sore on my mind.</p>
<p>“I think I do!” said he: “I think I was even cross with
you.”</p>
<p>“You considered me a little bold; perhaps?” I inquired.</p>
<p>“Not at all. Only, shy and retiring as your general manner was, I
wondered what personal or facial enormity in me proved so magnetic to your
usually averted eyes.”</p>
<p>“You see how it was now?”</p>
<p>“Perfectly.”</p>
<p>And here Mrs. Bretton broke in with many, many questions about past times; and
for her satisfaction I had to recur to gone-by troubles, to explain causes of
seeming estrangement, to touch on single-handed conflict with Life, with Death,
with Grief, with Fate. Dr. John listened, saying little. He and she then told
me of changes they had known: even with them all had not gone smoothly, and
fortune had retrenched her once abundant gifts. But so courageous a mother,
with such a champion in her son, was well fitted to fight a good fight with the
world, and to prevail ultimately. Dr. John himself was one of those on whose
birth benign planets have certainly smiled. Adversity might set against him her
most sullen front: he was the man to beat her down with smiles. Strong and
cheerful, and firm and courteous; not rash, yet valiant; he was the aspirant to
woo Destiny herself, and to win from her stone eyeballs a beam almost loving.</p>
<p>In the profession he had adopted, his success was now quite decided. Within the
last three months he had taken this house (a small château, they told me, about
half a league without the Porte de Crécy); this country site being chosen for
the sake of his mother’s health, with which town air did not now agree.
Hither he had invited Mrs. Bretton, and she, on leaving England, had brought
with her such residue furniture of the former St. Ann’s Street mansion as
she had thought fit to keep unsold. Hence my bewilderment at the phantoms of
chairs, and the wraiths of looking-glasses, tea-urns, and teacups.</p>
<p>As the clock struck eleven, Dr. John stopped his mother.</p>
<p>“Miss Snowe must retire now,” he said; “she is beginning to
look very pale. To-morrow I will venture to put some questions respecting the
cause of her loss of health. She is much changed, indeed, since last July, when
I saw her enact with no little spirit the part of a very killing fine
gentleman. As to last night’s catastrophe, I am sure thereby hangs a
tale, but we will inquire no further this evening. Good-night, Miss
Lucy.”</p>
<p>And so he kindly led me to the door, and holding a wax-candle, lighted me up
the one flight of stairs.</p>
<p>When I had said my prayers, and when I was undressed and laid down, I felt that
I still had friends. Friends, not professing vehement attachment, not offering
the tender solace of well-matched and congenial relationship; on whom,
therefore, but moderate demand of affection was to be made, of whom but
moderate expectation formed; but towards whom my heart softened instinctively,
and yearned with an importunate gratitude, which I entreated Reason betimes to
check.</p>
<p>“Do not let me think of them too often, too much, too fondly,” I
implored: “let me be content with a temperate draught of this living
stream: let me not run athirst, and apply passionately to its welcome waters:
let me not imagine in them a sweeter taste than earth’s fountains know.
Oh! would to God I may be enabled to feel enough sustained by an occasional,
amicable intercourse, rare, brief, unengrossing and tranquil: quite
tranquil!”</p>
<p>Still repeating this word, I turned to my pillow; and <i>still</i> repeating
it, I steeped that pillow with tears.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />