<h2><SPAN name="chap21"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXI.<br/> REACTION.</h2>
<p>Yet three days, and then I must go back to the <i>pensionnat</i>. I almost
numbered the moments of these days upon the clock; fain would I have retarded
their flight; but they glided by while I watched them: they were already gone
while I yet feared their departure.</p>
<p>“Lucy will not leave us to-day,” said Mrs. Bretton, coaxingly at
breakfast; “she knows we can procure a second respite.”</p>
<p>“I would not ask for one if I might have it for a word,” said I.
“I long to get the good-by over, and to be settled in the Rue Fossette
again. I must go this morning: I must go directly; my trunk is packed and
corded.”</p>
<p>It appeared; however, that my going depended upon Graham; he had said he would
accompany, me, and it so fell out that he was engaged all day, and only
returned home at dusk. Then ensued a little combat of words. Mrs. Bretton and
her son pressed me to remain one night more. I could have cried, so irritated
and eager was I to be gone. I longed to leave them as the criminal on the
scaffold longs for the axe to descend: that is, I wished the pang over. How
much I wished it, they could not tell. On these points, mine was a state of
mind out of their experience.</p>
<p>It was dark when Dr. John handed me from the carriage at Madame Beck’s
door. The lamp above was lit; it rained a November drizzle, as it had rained
all day: the lamplight gleamed on the wet pavement. Just such a night was it as
that on which, not a year ago, I had first stopped at this very threshold; just
similar was the scene. I remembered the very shapes of the paving-stones which
I had noted with idle eye, while, with a thick-beating heart, I waited the
unclosing of that door at which I stood—a solitary and a suppliant. On
that night, too, I had briefly met him who now stood with me. Had I ever
reminded him of that rencontre, or explained it? I had not, nor ever felt the
inclination to do so: it was a pleasant thought, laid by in my own mind, and
best kept there.</p>
<p>Graham rung the bell. The door was instantly opened, for it was just that
period of the evening when the half-boarders took their
departure—consequently, Rosine was on the alert.</p>
<p>“Don’t come in,” said I to him; but he stepped a moment into
the well-lighted vestibule. I had not wished him to see that “the water
stood in my eyes,” for his was too kind a nature ever to be needlessly
shown such signs of sorrow. He always wished to heal—to
relieve—when, physician as he was, neither cure nor alleviation were,
perhaps, in his power.</p>
<p>“Keep up your courage, Lucy. Think of my mother and myself as true
friends. We will not forget you.”</p>
<p>“Nor will I forget you, Dr. John.”</p>
<p>My trunk was now brought in. We had shaken hands; he had turned to go, but he
was not satisfied: he had not done or said enough to content his generous
impulses.</p>
<p>“Lucy,”—stepping after me—“shall you feel very
solitary here?”</p>
<p>“At first I shall.”</p>
<p>“Well, my mother will soon call to see you; and, meantime, I’ll
tell you what I’ll do. I’ll write—just any cheerful nonsense
that comes into my head—shall I?”</p>
<p>“Good, gallant heart!” thought I to myself; but I shook my head,
smiling, and said, “Never think of it: impose on yourself no such task.
<i>You</i> write to <i>me</i>!—you’ll not have time.”</p>
<p>“Oh! I will find or make time. Good-by!”</p>
<p>He was gone. The heavy door crashed to: the axe had fallen—the pang was
experienced.</p>
<p>Allowing myself no time to think or feel—swallowing tears as if they had
been wine—I passed to Madame’s sitting-room to pay the necessary
visit of ceremony and respect. She received me with perfectly well-acted
cordiality—was even demonstrative, though brief, in her welcome. In ten
minutes I was dismissed. From the salle-à-manger I proceeded to the refectory,
where pupils and teachers were now assembled for evening study: again I had a
welcome, and one not, I think, quite hollow. That over, I was free to repair to
the dormitory.</p>
<p>“And will Graham really write?” I questioned, as I sank tired on
the edge of the bed.</p>
<p>Reason, coming stealthily up to me through the twilight of that long, dim
chamber, whispered sedately—“He may write once. So kind is his
nature, it may stimulate him for once to make the effort. But it <i>cannot</i>
be continued—it <i>may</i> not be repeated. Great were that folly which
should build on such a promise—insane that credulity which should mistake
the transitory rain-pool, holding in its hollow one draught, for the perennial
spring yielding the supply of seasons.”</p>
<p>I bent my head: I sat thinking an hour longer. Reason still whispered me,
laying on my shoulder a withered hand, and frostily touching my ear with the
chill blue lips of eld.</p>
<p>“If,” muttered she, “if he <i>should</i> write, what then? Do
you meditate pleasure in replying? Ah, fool! I warn you! Brief be your answer.
Hope no delight of heart—no indulgence of intellect: grant no expansion
to feeling—give holiday to no single faculty: dally with no friendly
exchange: foster no genial intercommunion….”</p>
<p>“But I have talked to Graham and you did not chide,” I pleaded.</p>
<p>“No,” said she, “I needed not. Talk for you is good
discipline. You converse imperfectly. While you speak, there can be no oblivion
of inferiority—no encouragement to delusion: pain, privation, penury
stamp your language….”</p>
<p>“But,” I again broke in, “where the bodily presence is weak
and the speech contemptible, surely there cannot be error in making written
language the medium of better utterance than faltering lips can achieve?”</p>
<p>Reason only answered, “At your peril you cherish that idea, or suffer its
influence to animate any writing of yours!”</p>
<p>“But if I feel, may I <i>never</i> express?”</p>
<p>“<i>Never!</i>” declared Reason.</p>
<p>I groaned under her bitter sternness. Never—never—oh, hard word!
This hag, this Reason, would not let me look up, or smile, or hope: she could
not rest unless I were altogether crushed, cowed, broken-in, and broken-down.
According to her, I was born only to work for a piece of bread, to await the
pains of death, and steadily through all life to despond. Reason might be
right; yet no wonder we are glad at times to defy her, to rush from under her
rod and give a truant hour to Imagination—<i>her</i> soft, bright foe,
<i>our</i> sweet Help, our divine Hope. We shall and must break bounds at
intervals, despite the terrible revenge that awaits our return. Reason is
vindictive as a devil: for me she was always envenomed as a step-mother. If I
have obeyed her it has chiefly been with the obedience of fear, not of love.
Long ago I should have died of her ill-usage her stint, her chill, her barren
board, her icy bed, her savage, ceaseless blows; but for that kinder Power who
holds my secret and sworn allegiance. Often has Reason turned me out by night,
in mid-winter, on cold snow, flinging for sustenance the gnawed bone dogs had
forsaken: sternly has she vowed her stores held nothing more for
me—harshly denied my right to ask better things…. Then, looking up, have
I seen in the sky a head amidst circling stars, of which the midmost and the
brightest lent a ray sympathetic and attent. A spirit, softer and better than
Human Reason, has descended with quiet flight to the waste—bringing all
round her a sphere of air borrowed of eternal summer; bringing perfume of
flowers which cannot fade—fragrance of trees whose fruit is life;
bringing breezes pure from a world whose day needs no sun to lighten it. My
hunger has this good angel appeased with food, sweet and strange, gathered
amongst gleaning angels, garnering their dew-white harvest in the first fresh
hour of a heavenly day; tenderly has she assuaged the insufferable fears which
weep away life itself—kindly given rest to deadly
weariness—generously lent hope and impulse to paralyzed despair. Divine,
compassionate, succourable influence! When I bend the knee to other than God,
it shall be at thy white and winged feet, beautiful on mountain or on plain.
Temples have been reared to the Sun—altars dedicated to the Moon. Oh,
greater glory! To thee neither hands build, nor lips consecrate: but hearts,
through ages, are faithful to thy worship. A dwelling thou hast, too wide for
walls, too high for dome—a temple whose floors are space—rites
whose mysteries transpire in presence, to the kindling, the harmony of worlds!</p>
<p>Sovereign complete! thou hadst, for endurance, thy great army of martyrs; for
achievement, thy chosen band of worthies. Deity unquestioned, thine essence
foils decay!</p>
<p>This daughter of Heaven remembered me to-night; she saw me weep, and she came
with comfort: “Sleep,” she said. “Sleep, sweetly—I gild
thy dreams!”</p>
<p>She kept her word, and watched me through a night’s rest; but at dawn
Reason relieved the guard. I awoke with a sort of start; the rain was dashing
against the panes, and the wind uttering a peevish cry at intervals; the
night-lamp was dying on the black circular stand in the middle of the
dormitory: day had already broken. How I pity those whom mental pain stuns
instead of rousing! This morning the pang of waking snatched me out of bed like
a hand with a giant’s gripe. How quickly I dressed in the cold of the raw
dawn! How deeply I drank of the ice-cold water in my carafe! This was always my
cordial, to which, like other dram-drinkers, I had eager recourse when
unsettled by chagrin.</p>
<p>Ere long the bell rang its <i>réveillée</i> to the whole school. Being dressed,
I descended alone to the refectory, where the stove was lit and the air was
warm; through the rest of the house it was cold, with the nipping severity of a
continental winter: though now but the beginning of November, a north wind had
thus early brought a wintry blight over Europe: I remember the black stoves
pleased me little when I first came; but now I began to associate with them a
sense of comfort, and liked them, as in England we like a fireside.</p>
<p>Sitting down before this dark comforter, I presently fell into a deep argument
with myself on life and its chances, on destiny and her decrees. My mind,
calmer and stronger now than last night, made for itself some imperious rules,
prohibiting under deadly penalties all weak retrospect of happiness past;
commanding a patient journeying through the wilderness of the present,
enjoining a reliance on faith—a watching of the cloud and pillar which
subdue while they guide, and awe while they illumine—hushing the impulse
to fond idolatry, checking the longing out-look for a far-off promised land
whose rivers are, perhaps, never to be, reached save in dying dreams, whose
sweet pastures are to be viewed but from the desolate and sepulchral summit of
a Nebo.</p>
<p>By degrees, a composite feeling of blended strength and pain wound itself
wirily round my heart, sustained, or at least restrained, its throbbings, and
made me fit for the day’s work. I lifted my head.</p>
<p>As I said before, I was sitting near the stove, let into the wall beneath the
refectory and the carré, and thus sufficing to heat both apartments. Piercing
the same wall, and close beside the stove, was a window, looking also into the
carré; as I looked up a cap-tassel, a brow, two eyes, filled a pane of that
window; the fixed gaze of those two eyes hit right against my own glance: they
were watching me. I had not till that moment known that tears were on my cheek,
but I felt them now.</p>
<p>This was a strange house, where no corner was sacred from intrusion, where not
a tear could be shed, nor a thought pondered, but a spy was at hand to note and
to divine. And this new, this out-door, this male spy, what business had
brought him to the premises at this unwonted hour? What possible right had he
to intrude on me thus? No other professor would have dared to cross the carré
before the class-bell rang. M. Emanuel took no account of hours nor of claims:
there was some book of reference in the first-class library which he had
occasion to consult; he had come to seek it: on his way he passed the
refectory. It was very much his habit to wear eyes before, behind, and on each
side of him: he had seen me through the little window—he now opened the
refectory door, and there he stood.</p>
<p>“Mademoiselle, vous êtes triste.”</p>
<p>“Monsieur, j’en ai bien le droit.”</p>
<p>“Vous êtes malade de coeur et d’humeur,” he pursued.
“You are at once mournful and mutinous. I see on your cheek two tears
which I know are hot as two sparks, and salt as two crystals of the sea. While
I speak you eye me strangely. Shall I tell you of what I am reminded while
watching you?”</p>
<p>“Monsieur, I shall be called away to prayers shortly; my time for
conversation is very scant and brief at this
hour—excuse——”</p>
<p>“I excuse everything,” he interrupted; “my mood is so meek,
neither rebuff nor, perhaps, insult could ruffle it. You remind me, then, of a
young she wild creature, new caught, untamed, viewing with a mixture of fire
and fear the first entrance of the breaker-in.”</p>
<p>Unwarrantable accost!—rash and rude if addressed to a pupil; to a teacher
inadmissible. He thought to provoke a warm reply; I had seen him vex the
passionate to explosion before now. In me his malice should find no
gratification; I sat silent.</p>
<p>“You look,” said he, “like one who would snatch at a draught
of sweet poison, and spurn wholesome bitters with disgust.”</p>
<p>“Indeed, I never liked bitters; nor do I believe them wholesome. And to
whatever is sweet, be it poison or food, you cannot, at least, deny its own
delicious quality—sweetness. Better, perhaps, to die quickly a pleasant
death, than drag on long a charmless life.”</p>
<p>“Yet,” said he, “you should take your bitter dose duly and
daily, if I had the power to administer it; and, as to the well-beloved poison,
I would, perhaps, break the very cup which held it.”</p>
<p>I sharply turned my head away, partly because his presence utterly displeased
me, and partly because I wished to shun questions: lest, in my present mood,
the effort of answering should overmaster self-command.</p>
<p>“Come,” said he, more softly, “tell me the truth—you
grieve at being parted from friends—is it not so?”</p>
<p>The insinuating softness was not more acceptable than the inquisitorial
curiosity. I was silent. He came into the room, sat down on the bench about two
yards from me, and persevered long, and, for him, patiently, in attempts to
draw me into conversation—attempts necessarily unavailing, because I
<i>could</i> not talk. At last I entreated to be let alone. In uttering the
request, my voice faltered, my head sank on my arms and the table. I wept
bitterly, though quietly. He sat a while longer. I did not look up nor speak,
till the closing door and his retreating step told me that he was gone. These
tears proved a relief.</p>
<p>I had time to bathe my eyes before breakfast, and I suppose I appeared at that
meal as serene as any other person: not, however, quite as jocund-looking as
the young lady who placed herself in the seat opposite mine, fixed on me a pair
of somewhat small eyes twinkling gleefully, and frankly stretched across the
table a white hand to be shaken. Miss Fanshawe’s travels, gaieties, and
flirtations agreed with her mightily; she had become quite plump, her cheeks
looked as round as apples. I had seen her last in elegant evening attire. I
don’t know that she looked less charming now in her school-dress, a kind
of careless peignoir of a dark-blue material, dimly and dingily plaided with
black. I even think this dusky wrapper gave her charms a triumph; enhancing by
contrast the fairness of her skin, the freshness of her bloom, the golden
beauty of her tresses.</p>
<p>“I am glad you are come back, Timon,” said she. Timon was one of
her dozen names for me. “You don’t know how often I have wanted you
in this dismal hole.”</p>
<p>“Oh, have you? Then, of course, if you wanted me, you have something for
me to do: stockings to mend, perhaps.” I never gave Ginevra a
minute’s or a farthing’s credit for disinterestedness.</p>
<p>“Crabbed and crusty as ever!” said she. “I expected as much:
it would not be you if you did not snub one. But now, come, grand-mother, I
hope you like coffee as much, and pistolets as little as ever: are you disposed
to barter?”</p>
<p>“Take your own way.”</p>
<p>This way consisted in a habit she had of making me convenient. She did not like
the morning cup of coffee; its school brewage not being strong or sweet enough
to suit her palate; and she had an excellent appetite, like any other healthy
school-girl, for the morning pistolets or rolls, which were new-baked and very
good, and of which a certain allowance was served to each. This allowance being
more than I needed, I gave half to Ginevra; never varying in my preference,
though many others used to covet the superfluity; and she in return would
sometimes give me a portion of her coffee. This morning I was glad of the
draught; hunger I had none, and with thirst I was parched. I don’t know
why I chose to give my bread rather to Ginevra than to another; nor why, if two
had to share the convenience of one drinking-vessel, as sometimes
happened—for instance, when we took a long walk into the country, and
halted for refreshment at a farm—I always contrived that she should be my
convive, and rather liked to let her take the lion’s share, whether of
the white beer, the sweet wine, or the new milk: so it was, however, and she
knew it; and, therefore, while we wrangled daily, we were never alienated.</p>
<p>After breakfast my custom was to withdraw to the first classe, and sit and
read, or think (oftenest the latter) there alone, till the nine-o’clock
bell threw open all doors, admitted the gathered rush of externes and
demi-pensionnaires, and gave the signal for entrance on that bustle and
business to which, till five P.M., there was no relax.</p>
<p>I was just seated this morning, when a tap came to the door.</p>
<p>“Pardon, Mademoiselle,” said a pensionnaire, entering gently; and
having taken from her desk some necessary book or paper, she withdrew on
tip-toe, murmuring as she passed me, “Que mademoiselle est
appliquée!”</p>
<p>Appliquée, indeed! The means of application were spread before me, but I was
doing nothing; and had done nothing, and meant to do nothing. Thus does the
world give us credit for merits we have not. Madame Beck herself deemed me a
regular bas-bleu, and often and solemnly used to warn me not to study too much,
lest “the blood should all go to my head.” Indeed, everybody in the
Rue Fossette held a superstition that “Meess Lucie” was learned;
with the notable exception of M. Emanuel, who, by means peculiar to himself,
and quite inscrutable to me, had obtained a not inaccurate inkling of my real
qualifications, and used to take quiet opportunities of chuckling in my ear his
malign glee over their scant measure. For my part, I never troubled myself
about this penury. I dearly like to think my own thoughts; I had great pleasure
in reading a few books, but not many: preferring always those on whose style or
sentiment the writer’s individual nature was plainly stamped; flagging
inevitably over characterless books, however clever and meritorious: perceiving
well that, as far as my own mind was concerned, God had limited its powers and,
its action—thankful, I trust, for the gift bestowed, but unambitious of
higher endowments, not restlessly eager after higher culture.</p>
<p>The polite pupil was scarcely gone, when, unceremoniously, without tap, in
burst a second intruder. Had I been blind I should have known who this was. A
constitutional reserve of manner had by this time told with wholesome and, for
me, commodious effect, on the manners of my co-inmates; rarely did I now suffer
from rude or intrusive treatment. When I first came, it would happen once and
again that a blunt German would clap me on the shoulder, and ask me to run a
race; or a riotous Labassecourienne seize me by the arm and drag me towards the
playground: urgent proposals to take a swing at the “Pas de Géant,”
or to join in a certain romping hide-and-seek game called “Un, deux,
trois,” were formerly also of hourly occurrence; but all these little
attentions had ceased some time ago—ceased, too, without my finding it
necessary to be at the trouble of point-blank cutting them short. I had now no
familiar demonstration to dread or endure, save from one quarter; and as that
was English I could bear it. Ginevra Fanshawe made no scruple of—at
times—catching me as I was crossing the carré, whirling me round in a
compulsory waltz, and heartily enjoying the mental and physical discomfiture
her proceeding induced. Ginevra Fanshawe it was who now broke in upon “my
learned leisure.” She carried a huge music-book under her arm.</p>
<p>“Go to your practising,” said I to her at once: “away with
you to the little salon!”</p>
<p>“Not till I have had a talk with you, chère amie. I know where you have
been spending your vacation, and how you have commenced sacrificing to the
graces, and enjoying life like any other belle. I saw you at the concert the
other night, dressed, actually, like anybody else. Who is your
tailleuse?”</p>
<p>“Tittle-tattle: how prettily it begins! My tailleuse!—a
fiddlestick! Come, sheer off, Ginevra. I really don’t want your
company.”</p>
<p>“But when I want yours so much, ange farouche, what does a little
reluctance on your part signify? Dieu merci! we know how to manoeuvre with our
gifted compatriote—the learned ‘ourse Britannique.’ And so,
Ourson, you know Isidore?”</p>
<p>“I know John Bretton.”</p>
<p>“Oh, hush!” (putting her fingers in her ears) “you crack my
tympanums with your rude Anglicisms. But, how is our well-beloved John? Do tell
me about him. The poor man must be in a sad way. What did he say to my
behaviour the other night? Wasn’t I cruel?”</p>
<p>“Do you think I noticed you?”</p>
<p>“It was a delightful evening. Oh, that divine de Hamal! And then to watch
the other sulking and dying in the distance; and the old lady—my future
mamma-in-law! But I am afraid I and Lady Sara were a little rude in quizzing
her.”</p>
<p>“Lady Sara never quizzed her at all; and for what <i>you</i> did,
don’t make yourself in the least uneasy: Mrs. Bretton will survive
<i>your</i> sneer.”</p>
<p>“She may: old ladies are tough; but that poor son of hers! Do tell me
what he said: I saw he was terribly cut up.”</p>
<p>“He said you looked as if at heart you were already Madame de
Hamal.”</p>
<p>“Did he?” she cried with delight. “He noticed that? How
charming! I thought he would be mad with jealousy.</p>
<p>“Ginevra, have you seriously done with Dr. Bretton? Do you want him to
give you up?”</p>
<p>“Oh! you know he <i>can’t</i> do that: but wasn’t he
mad?”</p>
<p>“Quite mad,” I assented; “as mad as a March hare.”</p>
<p>“Well, and how <i>ever</i> did you get him home?”</p>
<p>“How <i>ever</i>, indeed! Have you no pity on his poor mother and me?
Fancy us holding him tight down in the carriage, and he raving between us, fit
to drive everybody delirious. The very coachman went wrong, somehow, and we
lost our way.”</p>
<p>“You don’t say so? You are laughing at me. Now, Lucy
Snowe—”</p>
<p>“I assure you it is fact—and fact, also, that Dr. Bretton would
<i>not</i> stay in the carriage: he broke from us, and <i>would</i> ride
outside.”</p>
<p>“And afterwards?”</p>
<p>“Afterwards—when he <i>did</i> reach home—the scene
transcends description.”</p>
<p>“Oh, but describe it—you know it is such fun!”</p>
<p>“Fun for <i>you</i>, Miss Fanshawe? but” (with stern gravity)
“you know the proverb—‘What is sport to one may be death to
another.’”</p>
<p>“Go on, there’s a darling Timon.”</p>
<p>“Conscientiously, I cannot, unless you assure me you have some
heart.”</p>
<p>“I have—such an immensity, you don’t know!”</p>
<p>“Good! In that case, you will be able to conceive Dr. Graham Bretton
rejecting his supper in the first instance—the chicken, the sweetbread
prepared for his refreshment, left on the table untouched.
Then——but it is of no use dwelling at length on the harrowing
details. Suffice it to say, that never, in the most stormy fits and moments of
his infancy, had his mother such work to tuck the sheets about him as she had
that night.”</p>
<p>“He wouldn’t lie still?”</p>
<p>“He wouldn’t lie still: there it was. The sheets might be tucked
in, but the thing was to keep them tucked in.”</p>
<p>“And what did he say?”</p>
<p>“Say! Can’t you imagine him demanding his divine Ginevra,
anathematizing that demon, de Hamal—raving about golden locks, blue eyes,
white arms, glittering bracelets?”</p>
<p>“No, did he? He saw the bracelet?”</p>
<p>“Saw the bracelet? Yes, as plain as I saw it: and, perhaps, for the first
time, he saw also the brand-mark with which its pressure has encircled your
arm. Ginevra” (rising, and changing my tone), “come, we will have
an end of this. Go away to your practising.”</p>
<p>And I opened the door.</p>
<p>“But you have not told me all.”</p>
<p>“You had better not wait until I <i>do</i> tell you all. Such extra
communicativeness could give you no pleasure. March!”</p>
<p>“Cross thing!” said she; but she obeyed: and, indeed, the first
classe was my territory, and she could not there legally resist a notice of
quittance from me.</p>
<p>Yet, to speak the truth, never had I been less dissatisfied with her than I was
then. There was pleasure in thinking of the contrast between the reality and my
description—to remember Dr. John enjoying the drive home, eating his
supper with relish, and retiring to rest with Christian composure. It was only
when I saw him really unhappy that I felt really vexed with the fair, frail
cause of his suffering.</p>
<p class="p2">
A fortnight passed; I was getting once more inured to the harness of school,
and lapsing from the passionate pain of change to the palsy of custom. One
afternoon, in crossing the carré, on my way to the first classe, where I was
expected to assist at a lesson of “style and literature,” I saw,
standing by one of the long and large windows, Rosine, the portress. Her
attitude, as usual, was quite nonchalante. She always “stood at
ease;” one of her hands rested in her apron-pocket, the other at this
moment held to her eyes a letter, whereof Mademoiselle coolly perused the
address, and deliberately studied the seal.</p>
<p>A letter! The shape of a letter similar to that had haunted my brain in its
very core for seven days past. I had dreamed of a letter last night. Strong
magnetism drew me to that letter now; yet, whether I should have ventured to
demand of Rosine so much as a glance at that white envelope, with the spot of
red wax in the middle, I know not. No; I think I should have sneaked past in
terror of a rebuff from Disappointment: my heart throbbed now as if I already
heard the tramp of her approach. Nervous mistake! It was the rapid step of the
Professor of Literature measuring the corridor. I fled before him. Could I but
be seated quietly at my desk before his arrival, with the class under my orders
all in disciplined readiness, he would, perhaps, exempt me from notice; but, if
caught lingering in the carré, I should be sure to come in for a special
harangue. I had time to get seated, to enforce perfect silence, to take out my
work, and to commence it amidst the profoundest and best trained hush, ere M.
Emanuel entered with his vehement burst of latch and panel, and his deep,
redundant bow, prophetic of choler.</p>
<p>As usual he broke upon us like a clap of thunder; but instead of flashing
lightning-wise from the door to the estrade, his career halted midway at my
desk. Setting his face towards me and the window, his back to the pupils and
the room, he gave me a look—such a look as might have licensed me to
stand straight up and demand what he meant—a look of scowling distrust.</p>
<p>“Voilà! pour vous,” said he, drawing his hand from his waist-coat,
and placing on my desk a letter—the very letter I had seen in
Rosine’s hand—the letter whose face of enamelled white and single
Cyclop’s-eye of vermilion-red had printed themselves so clear and perfect
on the retina of an inward vision. I knew it, I felt it to be the letter of my
hope, the fruition of my wish, the release from my doubt, the ransom from my
terror. This letter M. Paul, with his unwarrantably interfering habits, had
taken from the portress, and now delivered it himself.</p>
<p>I might have been angry, but had not a second for the sensation. Yes: I held in
my hand not a slight note, but an envelope, which must, at least, contain a
sheet: it felt not flimsy, but firm, substantial, satisfying. And here was the
direction, “Miss Lucy Snowe,” in a clean, clear, equal, decided
hand; and here was the seal, round, full, deftly dropped by untremulous
fingers, stamped with the well-cut impress of initials, “J. G. B.”
I experienced a happy feeling—a glad emotion which went warm to my heart,
and ran lively through all my veins. For once a hope was realized. I held in my
hand a morsel of real solid joy: not a dream, not an image of the brain, not
one of those shadowy chances imagination pictures, and on which humanity
starves but cannot live; not a mess of that manna I drearily eulogized awhile
ago—which, indeed, at first melts on the lips with an unspeakable and
preternatural sweetness, but which, in the end, our souls full surely loathe;
longing deliriously for natural and earth-grown food, wildly praying
Heaven’s Spirits to reclaim their own spirit-dew and essence—an
aliment divine, but for mortals deadly. It was neither sweet hail nor small
coriander-seed—neither slight wafer, nor luscious honey, I had lighted
on; it was the wild, savoury mess of the hunter, nourishing and salubrious
meat, forest-fed or desert-reared, fresh, healthful, and life-sustaining. It
was what the old dying patriarch demanded of his son Esau, promising in
requital the blessing of his last breath. It was a godsend; and I inwardly
thanked the God who had vouchsafed it. Outwardly I only thanked man, crying,
“Thank you, thank you, Monsieur!”</p>
<p>Monsieur curled his lip, gave me a vicious glance of the eye, and strode to his
estrade. M. Paul was not at all a good little man, though he had good points.</p>
<p>Did I read my letter there and then? Did I consume the venison at once and with
haste, as if Esau’s shaft flew every day?</p>
<p>I knew better. The cover with its address—the seal, with its three clear
letters—was bounty and abundance for the present. I stole from the room,
I procured the key of the great dormitory, which was kept locked by day. I went
to my bureau; with a sort of haste and trembling lest Madame should creep
up-stairs and spy me, I opened a drawer, unlocked a box, and took out a case,
and—having feasted my eyes with one more look, and approached the seal
with a mixture of awe and shame and delight, to my lips—I folded the
untasted treasure, yet all fair and inviolate, in silver paper, committed it to
the case, shut up box and drawer, reclosed, relocked the dormitory, and
returned to class, feeling as if fairy tales were true, and fairy gifts no
dream. Strange, sweet insanity! And this letter, the source of my joy, I had
not yet read: did not yet know the number of its lines.</p>
<p>When I re-entered the schoolroom, behold M. Paul raging like a pestilence! Some
pupil had not spoken audibly or distinctly enough to suit his ear and taste,
and now she and others were weeping, and he was raving from his estrade, almost
livid. Curious to mention, as I appeared, he fell on me.</p>
<p>“Was I the mistress of these girls? Did I profess to teach them the
conduct befitting ladies?—and did I permit and, he doubted not, encourage
them to strangle their mother-tongue in their throats, to mince and mash it
between their teeth, as if they had some base cause to be ashamed of the words
they uttered? Was this modesty? He knew better. It was a vile pseudo
sentiment—the offspring or the forerunner of evil. Rather than submit to
this mopping and mowing, this mincing and grimacing, this, grinding of a noble
tongue, this general affectation and sickening stubbornness of the pupils of
the first class, he would throw them up for a set of insupportable petites
maîtresses, and confine himself to teaching the ABC to the babies of the third
division.”</p>
<p>What could I say to all this? Really nothing; and I hoped he would allow me to
be silent. The storm recommenced.</p>
<p>“Every answer to his queries was then refused? It seemed to be considered
in <i>that</i> place—that conceited boudoir of a first classe, with its
pretentious book-cases, its green-baized desks, its rubbish of flower-stands,
its trash of framed pictures and maps, and its foreign surveillante,
forsooth!—it seemed to be the fashion to think <i>there</i> that the
Professor of Literature was not worthy of a reply! These were new ideas;
imported, he did not doubt, straight from ‘la Grande Bretagne:’
they savoured of island insolence and arrogance.”</p>
<p>Lull the second—the girls, not one of whom was ever known to weep a tear
for the rebukes of any other master, now all melting like snow-statues before
the intemperate heat of M. Emanuel: I not yet much shaken, sitting down, and
venturing to resume my work.</p>
<p>Something—either in my continued silence or in the movement of my hand,
stitching—transported M. Emanuel beyond the last boundary of patience; he
actually sprang from his estrade. The stove stood near my desk, he attacked it;
the little iron door was nearly dashed from its hinges, the fuel was made to
fly.</p>
<p>“Est-ce que vous avez l’intention de m’insulter?” said
he to me, in a low, furious voice, as he thus outraged, under pretence of
arranging the fire.</p>
<p>It was time to soothe him a little if possible.</p>
<p>“Mais, Monsieur,” said I, “I would not insult you for the
world. I remember too well that you once said we should be friends.”</p>
<p>I did not intend my voice to falter, but it did: more, I think, through the
agitation of late delight than in any spasm of present fear. Still there
certainly was something in M. Paul’s anger—a kind of passion of
emotion—that specially tended to draw tears. I was not unhappy, nor much
afraid, yet I wept.</p>
<p>“Allons, allons!” said he presently, looking round and seeing the
deluge universal. “Decidedly I am a monster and a ruffian. I have only
one pocket-handkerchief,” he added, “but if I had twenty, I would
offer you each one. Your teacher shall be your representative. Here, Miss
Lucy.”</p>
<p>And he took forth and held out to me a clean silk handkerchief. Now a person
who did not know M. Paul, who was unused to him and his impulses, would
naturally have bungled at this offer—declined accepting the same—et
cetera. But I too plainly felt this would never do: the slightest hesitation
would have been fatal to the incipient treaty of peace. I rose and met the
handkerchief half-way, received it with decorum, wiped therewith my eyes, and,
resuming my seat, and retaining the flag of truce in my hand and on my lap,
took especial care during the remainder of the lesson to touch neither needle
nor thimble, scissors nor muslin. Many a jealous glance did M. Paul cast at
these implements; he hated them mortally, considering sewing a source of
distraction from the attention due to himself. A very eloquent lesson he gave,
and very kind and friendly was he to the close. Ere he had done, the clouds
were dispersed and the sun shining out—tears were exchanged for smiles.</p>
<p>In quitting the room he paused once more at my desk.</p>
<p>“And your letter?” said he, this time not quite fiercely.</p>
<p>“I have not yet read it, Monsieur.”</p>
<p>“Ah! it is too good to read at once; you save it, as, when I was a boy, I
used to save a peach whose bloom was very ripe?”</p>
<p>The guess came so near the truth, I could not prevent a suddenly-rising warmth
in my face from revealing as much.</p>
<p>“You promise yourself a pleasant moment,” said he, “in
reading that letter; you will open it when alone—n’est-ce pas? Ah!
a smile answers. Well, well! one should not be too harsh; ‘la jeunesse
n’a qu’un temps.’”</p>
<p>“Monsieur, Monsieur!” I cried, or rather whispered after him, as he
turned to go, “do not leave me under a mistake. This is merely a
friend’s letter. Without reading it, I can vouch for that.”</p>
<p>“Je conçois, je conçois: on sait ce que c’est qu’un ami.
Bonjour, Mademoiselle!”</p>
<p>“But, Monsieur, here is your handkerchief.”</p>
<p>“Keep it, keep it, till the letter is read, then bring it me; I shall
read the billet’s tenor in your eyes.”</p>
<p>When he was gone, the pupils having already poured out of the schoolroom into
the berceau, and thence into the garden and court to take their customary
recreation before the five-o’clock dinner, I stood a moment thinking, and
absently twisting the handkerchief round my arm. For some
reason—gladdened, I think, by a sudden return of the golden glimmer of
childhood, roused by an unwonted renewal of its buoyancy, made merry by the
liberty of the closing hour, and, above all, solaced at heart by the joyous
consciousness of that treasure in the case, box, drawer up-stairs,—I fell
to playing with the handkerchief as if it were a ball, casting it into the air
and catching it—as it fell. The game was stopped by another hand than
mine—a hand emerging from a paletôt-sleeve and stretched over my
shoulder; it caught the extemporised plaything and bore it away with these
sullen words:</p>
<p>“Je vois bien que vous vous moquez de moi et de mes effets.”</p>
<p>Really that little man was dreadful: a mere sprite of caprice and, ubiquity:
one never knew either his whim or his whereabout.</p>
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