CHAPTER VII
The Doctor’s Garden
Mary had contrived to quiet her lover with
considerable propriety of demeanour. Then came on her the somewhat
harder task of quieting herself. Young ladies, on the whole, are
perhaps quite as susceptible of the softer feelings as young
gentlemen are. Now Frank Gresham was handsome, amiable, by no means
a fool in intellect, excellent in heart; and he was, moreover, a
gentleman, being the son of Mr. Gresham of Greshamsbury. Mary had
been, as it were, brought up to love him. Had aught but good
happened to him, she would have cried as for a brother. It must not
therefore be supposed that when Frank Gresham told her that he
loved her, she had heard it altogether unconcerned.
He had not, perhaps, made his declaration
with that propriety of language in which such scenes are generally
described as being carried on. Ladies may perhaps think that Mary
should have been deterred, by the very boyishness of his manner,
from thinking at all seriously on the subject. His “will you, won’t
you—do you, don’t you?” does not sound like the poetic raptures of
a highly inspired lover. But, nevertheless, there had been warmth,
and a reality in it not in itself repulsive; and Mary’s
anger—anger? no, not anger—her objections to the declarations were
probably not based on the absurdity of her lover’s language.
We are inclined to think that these matters
are not always discussed by mortal lovers in the poetically
passionate phraseology which is generally thought to be appropriate
for their description. A man cannot well describe that which he has
never seen nor heard; but the absolute words and acts of one such
scene did once come to the author’s knowledge. The couple were by
no means plebeian, or below the proper standard of high bearing and
high breeding; they were a handsome pair, living among educated
people, sufficiently given to mental pursuits, and in every way
what a pair of polite lovers ought to be. The all-important
conversation passed in this wise. The site of the passionate scene
was the sea-shore, on which they were walking, in autumn.
Gentleman. “Well, Miss ——, the long and short
of it is this: here I am; you can take me or leave me.”
Lady—scratching a gutter on the sand with her
parasol, so as to allow a little salt water to run out of one hole
into another. “Of course, I know that’s all nonsense.”
Gentleman. “Nonsense! By Jove, it isn’t
nonsense at all: come, Jane; here I am: come, at any rate you can
say something.”
Lady. “Yes, I suppose I can say
something.”
Gentleman. “Well, which is it to be; take me
or leave me?”
Lady—very slowly, and with a voice perhaps
hardly articulate, carrying on, at the same time, her engineering
works on a wider scale. “Well, I don’t exactly want to leave
you.”
And so the matter was settled: settled with
much propriety and satisfaction; and both the lady and gentleman
would have thought, had they ever thought about the matter at all,
that this, the sweetest moment of their lives, had been graced by
all the poetry by which such moments ought to be hallowed.
When Mary had, as she thought, properly
subdued young Frank, the offer of whose love she, at any rate, knew
was, at such a period of his life, an utter absurdity, then she
found it necessary to subdue herself. What happiness on earth could
be greater than the possession of such a love, had the true
possession been justly and honestly within her reach? What man
could be more lovable than such a man as would grow from such a
boy? And then, did she not love him—love him already, without
waiting for any change? Did she not feel that there was that about
him, about him and about herself, too, which might so well fit them
for each other? It would be so sweet to be the sister of Beatrice,
the daughter of the squire, to belong to Greshamsbury as a part and
parcel of itself.
But though she could not restrain these
thoughts, it never for a moment occurred to her to take Frank’s
offer in earnest. Though she was a grown woman, he was still a boy.
He would have to see the world before he settled in it, and would
change his mind about woman half a score of times before he
married. Then, too, though she did not like the Lady Arabella, she
felt that she owed something, if not to her kindness, at least to
her forbearance; and she knew, felt inwardly certain, that she
would be doing wrong, that the world would say she was doing wrong,
that her uncle would think her wrong, if she endeavoured to take
advantage of what had passed.
She had not for an instant doubted; not for a
moment had she contemplated it as possible that she should ever
become Mrs. Gresham because Frank had offered to make her so; but,
nevertheless, she could not help thinking of what had occurred—of
thinking of it, most probably much more than Frank did
himself.
A day or two afterwards, on the evening
before Frank’s birthday, she was alone with her uncle, walking in
the garden behind their house, and she then essayed to question
him, with the object of learning if she were fitted by her birth to
be the wife of such a one as Frank Gresham. They were in the habit
of walking there together when he happened to be at home of a
summer’s evening. This was not often the case, for his hours of
labour extended much beyond those usual to the upper working world,
the hours, namely, between breakfast and dinner; but those minutes
that they did thus pass together, the doctor regarded as perhaps
the pleasantest of his life.
“Uncle,” said she, after a while, “what do
you think of this marriage of Miss Gresham’s?”
“Well, Minnie”—such was his name of
endearment for her—”I can’t say I have thought much about it, and I
don’t suppose anybody else has either.”
“She must think about it, of course; and so
must he, I suppose.”
“I’m not so sure of that. Some folks would
never get married if they had to trouble themselves with thinking
about it.”
“I suppose that’s why you never got married,
uncle?”
“Either that, or thinking of it too much. One
is as bad as the other.”
Mary had not contrived to get at all near her
point as yet; so she had to draw off, and after a while begin
again.
“Well, I have been thinking about it, at any
rate, uncle.”
“That’s very good of you; that will save me
the trouble; and perhaps save Miss Gresham too. If you have thought
it over thoroughly, that will do for all.”
“I believe Mr. Moffat is a man of no
family.”
“He’ll mend in that point, no doubt, when he
has got a wife.”
“Uncle, you’re a goose; and what is worse, a
very provoking goose.”
“Niece, you’re a gander; and what is worse, a
very silly gander. What is Mr. Moffat’s family to you and me? Mr.
Moffat has that which ranks above family honours. He is a very rich
man.”
“Yes,” said Mary, “I know he is rich; and a
rich man I suppose can buy anything—except a woman that is worth
having.”
“A rich man can buy anything,” said the
doctor; “not that I meant to say that Mr. Moffat has bought Miss
Gresham. I have no doubt that they will suit each other very well,”
he added with an air of decisive authority, as though he had
finished the subject.
But his niece was determined not to let him
pass so. “Now, uncle,” said she, “you know you are pretending to a
great deal of worldly wisdom, which, after all, is not wisdom at
all in your eyes.”
“Am I?”
“You know you are: and as for the impropriety
of discussing Miss Gresham’s marriage—”
“I did not say it was improper.”
“Oh, yes, you did; of course such things must
be discussed. How is one to have an opinion if one does not get it
by looking at the things which happen around us?”
“Now I am going to be blown up,” said Dr.
Thorne.
“Dear uncle, do be serious with me.”
“Well, then, seriously, I hope Miss Gresham
will be very happy as Mrs. Moffat.”
“Of course you do: so do I. I hope it as much
as I can hope what I don’t at all see ground for expecting.”
“People constantly hope without any such
ground.”
“Well, then, I’ll hope in this case. But,
uncle—”
“Well, my dear?”
“I want your opinion, truly and really. If
you were a girl—”
“I am perfectly unable to give any opinion
founded on so strange an hypothesis.”
“Well; but if you were a marrying man.”
“The hypothesis is quite as much out of my
way.”
“But, uncle, I am a girl, and perhaps I may
marry—or at any rate think of marrying some day.”
“The latter alternative is certainly possible
enough.”
“Therefore, in seeing a friend taking such a
step, I cannot but speculate on the matter as though I were myself
in her place. If I were Miss Gresham, should I be right?”
“But, Minnie, you are not Miss
Gresham.”
“No, I am Mary Thorne; it is a very different
thing, I know. I suppose I might marry
anyone without degrading myself.”
It was almost ill-natured of her to say this;
but she had not meant to say it in the sense which the sounds
seemed to bear. She had failed in being able to bring her uncle to
the point she wished by the road she had planned, and in seeking
another road, she had abruptly fallen into unpleasant places.
“I should be very sorry that my niece should
think so,” said he; “and am sorry, too, that she should say so.
But, Mary, to tell the truth, I hardly know at what you are
driving. You are, I think, not so clear minded—certainly, not so
clear worded—as is usual with you.”
“I will tell you, uncle;” and, instead of
looking up into his face, she turned her eyes down on the green
lawn beneath her feet.
“Well, Minnie, what is it?” and he took both
her hands in his.
“I think that Miss Gresham should not marry
Mr. Moffat. I think so because her family is high and noble, and
because he is low and ignoble. When one has an opinion on such
matters, one cannot but apply it to things and people around one;
and having applied my opinion to her, the next step naturally is to
apply it to myself. Were I Miss Gresham, I would not marry Mr.
Moffat though he rolled in gold. I know where to rank Miss Gresham.
What I want to know is, where I ought to rank myself?”
They had been standing when she commenced her
last speech; but as she finished it, the doctor moved on again, and
she moved with him. He walked on slowly without answering her; and
she, out of her full mind, pursued aloud the tenor of her
thoughts.
“If a woman feels that she would not lower
herself by marrying in a rank beneath herself, she ought also to
feel that she would not lower a man that she might love by allowing
him to marry into a rank beneath his own—that is, to marry
her.”
“That does not follow,” said the doctor
quickly. “A man raises a woman to his own standard, but a woman
must take that of the man she marries.”
Again they were silent, and again they walked
on, Mary holding her uncle’s arm with both her hands. She was
determined, however, to come to the point, and after considering
for a while how best she might do it, she ceased to beat any longer
about the bush, and asked him a plain question.
“The Thornes are as good a family as the
Greshams, are they not?”
“In absolute genealogy they are, my dear.
That is, when I choose to be an old fool and talk of such matters
in a sense different from that in which they are spoken of by the
world at large, I may say that the Thornes are as good, or perhaps
better, than the Greshams, but I should be sorry to say so
seriously to anyone. The Greshams now stand much higher in the
county than the Thornes do.”
“But they are of the same class.”
“Yes, yes; Wilfred Thorne of Ullathorne, and
our friend the squire here, are of the same class.”
“But, uncle, I and Augusta Gresham—are we of
the same class?”
“Well, Minnie, you would hardly have me boast
that I am the same class with the squire—I, a poor country
doctor?”
“You are not answering me fairly, dear uncle;
dearest uncle, do you not know that you are not answering me
fairly? You know what I mean. Have I a right to call the Thornes of
Ullathorne my cousins?”
“Mary, Mary, Mary!” said he after a minute’s
pause, still allowing his arm to hang loose, that she might hold it
with both her hands. “Mary, Mary, Mary! I would that you had spared
me this!”
“I could not have spared it to you for ever,
uncle.”
“I would that you could have done so; I would
that you could!”
“It is over now, uncle: it is told now. I
will grieve you no more. Dear, dear, dearest! I should love you
more than ever now; I would, I would, I would if that were
possible. What should I be but for you? What must I have been but
for you?” And she threw herself on his breast, and clinging with
her arms round his neck, kissed his forehead, cheeks, and
lips.
There was nothing more said then on the
subject between them. Mary asked no further question, nor did the
doctor volunteer further information. She would have been most
anxious to ask about her mother’s history had she dared to do so;
but she did not dare to ask; she could not bear to be told that her
mother had been, perhaps was, a worthless woman. That she was truly
a daughter of a brother of the doctor, that she did know. Little as
she had heard of her relatives in her early youth, few as had been
the words which had fallen from her uncle in her hearing as to her
parentage, she did know this, that she was the daughter of Henry
Thorne, a brother of the doctor, and a son of the old prebendary.
Trifling little things that had occurred, accidents which could not
be prevented, had told her this; but not a word had ever passed
anyone’s lips as to her mother. The doctor, when speaking of his
youth, had spoken of her father; but no one had spoken of her
mother. She had long known that she was the child of a Thorne; now
she knew also that she was no cousin of the Thornes of Ullathorne;
no cousin, at least, in the world’s ordinary language, no niece
indeed of her uncle, unless by his special permission that she
should be so.
When the interview was over, she went up
alone to the drawing-room, and there she sat thinking. She had not
been there long before her uncle came up to her. He did not sit
down, or even take off the hat which he still wore; but coming
close to her, and still standing, he spoke thus—”Mary, after what
has passed I should be very unjust and very cruel to you not to
tell you one thing more than you have now learned. Your mother was
unfortunate in much, not in everything; but the world, which is
very often stern in such matters, never judged her to have
disgraced herself. I tell you this, my child, in order that you may
respect her memory;” and so saying, he again left her without
giving her time to speak a word.
What he then told her he had told in mercy.
He felt what must be her feelings when she reflected that she had
to blush for her mother; that not only could she not speak of her
mother, but that she might hardly think of her with innocence; and
to mitigate such sorrow as this, and also to do justice to the
woman whom his brother had so wronged, he had forced himself to
reveal so much as is stated above.
And then he walked slowly by himself,
backwards and forwards through the garden, thinking of what he had
done with reference to this girl, and doubting whether he had done
wisely and well. He had resolved, when first the little infant was
given over to his charge, that nothing should be known of her or by
her as to her mother. He was willing to devote himself to this
orphan child of his brother, this last seedling of his father’s
house; but he was not willing so to do this as to bring himself in
any manner into familiar contact with the Scatcherds. He had
boasted to himself that he, at any rate, was a gentleman; and that
she, if she were to live in his house, sit at his table, and share
his hearth, must be a lady. He would tell no lie about her; he
would not to anyone make her out to be aught other or aught better
than she was; people would talk about her of course, only let them
not talk to him; he conceived of himself—and the conception was not
without due ground—that should any do so, he had that within him
which would silence them. He would never claim for this little
creature—thus brought into the world without a legitimate position
in which to stand—he would never claim for her any station that
would not properly be her own. He would make for her a station as
best he could. As he might sink or swim, so should she.
So he had resolved; but things had arranged
themselves, as they often do, rather than been arranged by him.
During ten or twelve years no one had heard of Mary Thorne; the
memory of Henry Thorne and his tragic death had passed away; the
knowledge that an infant had been born whose birth was connected
with that tragedy, a knowledge never widely spread, had faded down
into utter ignorance. At the end of these twelve years, Dr. Thorne
had announced, that a young niece, a child of a brother long since
dead, was coming to live with him. As he had contemplated, no one
spoke to him; but some people did no doubt talk among themselves.
Whether or not the exact truth was surmised by any, it matters not
to say; with absolute exactness, probably not; with great approach
to it, probably yes. By one person, at any rate, no guess whatever
was made; no thought relative to Dr. Thorne’s niece ever troubled
him; no idea that Mary Scatcherd had left a child in England ever
occurred to him; and that person was Roger Scatcherd, Mary’s
brother.
To one friend, and only one, did the doctor
tell the whole truth, and that was to the old squire. “I have told
you,” said the doctor, “partly that you may know that the child has
no right to mix with your children if you think much of such
things. Do you, however, see to this. I would rather that no one
else should be told.”
No one else had been told; and the squire had
“seen to it,” by accustoming himself to look at Mary Thorne running
about the house with his own children as though she were of the
same brood. Indeed, the squire had always been fond of Mary, had
personally noticed her, and, in the affair of Mam’selle Larron, had
declared that he would have her placed at once on the bench of
magistrates—much to the disgust of the Lady Arabella.
And so things had gone on and on, and had not
been thought of with much downright thinking; till now, when she
was one-and-twenty years of age, his niece came to him, asking as
to her position, and inquiring in what rank of life she was to look
for a husband.
And so the doctor walked backwards and
forwards through the garden, slowly, thinking now with some
earnestness what if, after all, he had been wrong about his niece?
What if by endeavouring to place her in the position of a lady, he
had falsely so placed her, and robbed her of all legitimate
position? What if there was no rank of life to which she could now
properly attach herself?
And then, how had it answered, that plan of
his of keeping her all to himself? He, Dr. Thorne, was still a poor
man; the gift of saving money had not been his; he had ever had a
comfortable house for her to live in, and, in spite of Doctors
Fillgrave, Century, Rerechild, and others, had made from his
profession an income sufficient for their joint wants; but he had
not done as others do: he had no three or four thousand pounds in
the Three per Cents. on which Mary might live in some comfort when
he should die. Late in life he had insured his life for eight
hundred pounds; and to that, and that only, had he to trust for
Mary’s future maintenance. How had it answered, then, this plan of
letting her be unknown to, and undreamed of by, those who were as
near to her on her mother’s side as he was on the father’s? On that
side, though there had been utter poverty, there was now absolute
wealth.
But when he took her to himself, had he not
rescued her from the very depths of the lowest misery: from the
degradation of the workhouse; from the scorn of honest-born
charity-children; from the lowest of the world’s low conditions?
Was she not now the apple of his eye, his one great sovereign
comfort—his pride, his happiness, his glory? Was he to make her
over, to make any portion of her over to others, if, by doing so,
she might be able to share the wealth, as well as the coarse
manners and uncouth society of her at present unknown connexions?
He, who had never worshipped wealth on his own behalf; he, who had
scorned the idol of gold, and had ever been teaching her to scorn
it; was he now to show that his philosophy had all been false as
soon as the temptation to do so was put in his way?
But yet, what man would marry this bastard
child, without a sixpence, and bring not only poverty, but ill
blood also on his own children? It might be very well for him, Dr.
Thorne; for him whose career was made, whose name, at any rate, was
his own; for him who had a fixed standing-ground in the world; it
might be well for him to indulge in large views of a philosophy
antagonistic to the world’s practice; but had he a right to do it
for his niece? What man would marry a girl so placed? For those
among whom she might have legitimately found a level, education had
now utterly unfitted her. And then, he well knew that she would
never put out her hand in token of love to anyone without telling
all she knew and all she surmised as to her own birth.
And that question of this evening; had it not
been instigated by some appeal to her heart? Was there not already
within her breast some cause for disquietude which had made her so
pertinacious? Why else had she told him then, for the first time,
that she did not know where to rank herself? If such an appeal had
been made to her, it must have come from young Frank Gresham. What,
in such case, would it behove him to do? Should he pack up his all,
his lancet-cases, pestle and mortar, and seek anew fresh ground in
a new world, leaving behind a huge triumph to those learned enemies
of his, Fillgrave, Century, and Rerechild? Better that than remain
at Greshamsbury at the cost of his child’s heart and pride.
And so he walked slowly backwards and
forwards through his garden, meditating these things painfully
enough.