CHAPTER XLVII
How the Bride Was Received, and Who Were
Asked to the Wedding
And thus after all did Frank perform his
great duty; he did marry money; or rather, as the wedding has not
yet taken place, and is, indeed, as yet hardly talked of, we should
more properly say that he had engaged himself to marry money. And
then, such a quantity of money! The Scatcherd wealth greatly
exceeded the Dunstable wealth; so that our hero may be looked on as
having performed his duties in a manner deserving the very highest
commendation from all classes of the De Courcy connexion.
And he received it. But that was nothing.
That he should be fêted by the De
Courcys and Greshams, now that he was about to do his duty by his
family in so exemplary a manner: that he should be patted on the
back, now that he no longer meditated that vile crime which had
been so abhorrent to his mother’s soul; this was only natural; this
is hardly worthy of remark. But there was another to be fêted,
another person to be made a personage, another blessed human mortal
about to do her duty by the family of Gresham in a manner that
deserved, and should receive, Lady Arabella’s warmest
caresses.
Dear Mary! It was, indeed, not singular that
she should be prepared to act so well, seeing that in early youth
she had had the advantage of an education in the Greshamsbury
nursery; but not on that account was it the less fitting that her
virtue should be acknowledged, eulogised, nay, all but
worshipped.
How the party at the doctor’s got itself
broken up, I am not prepared to say. Frank, I know, stayed and
dined there, and his poor mother, who would not retire to rest till
she had kissed him, and blessed him, and thanked him for all he was
doing for the family, was kept waiting in her dressing-room till a
very unreasonable hour of the night.
It was the squire who brought the news up to
the house. “Arabella,” he said, in a low, but somewhat solemn
voice, “you will be surprised at the news I bring you. Mary Thorne
is the heiress to all the Scatcherd property!”
“Oh, heavens! Mr. Gresham.”
“Yes, indeed,” continued the squire. “So it
is; it is very, very—” But Lady Arabella had fainted. She was a
woman who generally had her feelings and her emotions much under
her own control; but what she now heard was too much for her. When
she came to her senses, the first words that escaped her lips were,
“Dear Mary!”
But the household had to sleep on the news
before it could be fully realised. The squire was not by nature a
mercenary man. If I have at all succeeded in putting his character
before the reader, he will be recognised as one not over attached
to money for money’s sake. But things had gone so hard with him,
the world had become so rough, so ungracious, so full of thorns,
the want of means had become an evil so keenly felt in every hour,
that it cannot be wondered at that his dreams that night should be
of a golden elysium. The wealth was not coming to him. True. But
his chief sorrow had been for his son. Now that son would be his
only creditor. It was as though mountains of marble had been taken
from off his bosom.
But Lady Arabella’s dreams flew away at once
into the seventh heaven. Sordid as they certainly were, they were
not absolutely selfish. Frank would now certainly be the first
commoner in Barsetshire; of course he would represent the county;
of course there would be the house in town; it wouldn’t be her
house, but she was contented that the grandeur should be that of
her child. He would have heaven knows what to spend per annum. And
that it should come through Mary Thorne! What a blessing she had
allowed Mary to be brought into the Greshamsbury nursery! Dear
Mary!
“She will of course be one now,” said
Beatrice to her sister. With her, at the present moment, “one” of
course meant one of the bevy that was to attend her at the altar.
“Oh dear! how nice! I shan’t know what to say to her to-morrow. But
I know one thing.”
“What is that?” asked Augusta.
“She will be as mild and as meek as a little
dove. If she and the doctor had lost every shilling in the world,
she would have been as proud as an eagle.” It must be acknowledged
that Beatrice had had the wit to read Mary’s character
aright.
But Augusta was not quite pleased with the
whole affair. Not that she begrudged her brother his luck, or Mary
her happiness. But her ideas of right and wrong—perhaps we should
rather say Lady Amelia’s ideas—would not be fairly carried
out.
“After all, Beatrice, this does not alter her
birth. I know it is useless saying anything to Frank.”
“Why, you wouldn’t break both their hearts
now?”
“I don’t want to break their hearts,
certainly. But there are those who put their dearest and warmest
feelings under restraint rather than deviate from what they know to
be proper.” Poor Augusta! she was the stern professor of the order
of this philosophy; the last in the family who practised with
unflinching courage its cruel behests; the last, always excepting
the Lady Amelia.
And how slept Frank that night? With him, at
least, let us hope, nay, let us say boldly, that his happiest
thoughts were not of the wealth which he was to acquire. But yet it
would be something to restore Boxall Hill to Greshamsbury;
something to give back to his father those rumpled vellum
documents, since the departure of which the squire had never had a
happy day; nay, something to come forth again to his friends as a
gay, young country squire, instead of as a farmer, clod-compelling
for his bread. We would not have him thought to be better than he
was, nor would we wish to make him of other stuff than nature
generally uses. His heart did exult at Mary’s wealth; but it leaped
higher still when he thought of purer joys.
And what shall we say of Mary’s dreams? With
her, it was altogether what she should give, not at all what she
should get. Frank had loved her so truly when she was so poor, such
an utter castaway; Frank, who had ever been the heir of
Greshamsbury! Frank, who with his beauty, and spirit, and his
talents might have won the smiles of the richest, the grandest, the
noblest! What lady’s heart would not have rejoiced to be allowed to
love her Frank? But he had been true to her through everything. Ah!
how often she thought of that hour, when suddenly appearing before
her, he had strained her to his breast, just as she had resolved
how best to bear the death-like chill of his supposed
estrangements! She was always thinking of that time. She fed her
love by recurring over and over to the altered feeling of that
moment. And now she could pay him for his goodness. Pay him! No,
that would be a base word, a base thought. Her payment must be
made, if God would so grant it, in many, many years to come. But
her store, such as it was, should be emptied into his lap. It was
soothing to her pride that she would not hurt him by her love, that
she would bring no injury to the old house. “Dear, dear Frank” she
murmured, as her waking dreams, conquered at last by sleep, gave
way to those of the fairy world.
But she thought not only of Frank; dreamed
not only of him. What had he not done for her, that uncle of hers,
who had been more loving to her than any father! How was he, too,
to be paid? Paid, indeed! Love can only be paid in its own coin: it
knows of no other legal tender. Well, if her home was to be
Greshamsbury, at any rate she would not be separated from
him.
What the doctor dreamed of that night,
neither he or anyone ever knew. “Why, uncle, I think you’ve been
asleep,” said Mary to him that evening as he moved for a moment
uneasily on the sofa. He had been asleep for the last
three-quarters of an hour—but Frank, his guest, had felt no
offence. “No, I’ve not been exactly asleep,” said he; “but I’m very
tired. I wouldn’t do it all again, Frank, to double the money. You
haven’t got any more tea, have you, Mary?”
On the following morning, Beatrice was of
course with her friend. There was no awkwardness between them in
meeting. Beatrice had loved her when she was poor, and though they
had not lately thought alike on one very important subject, Mary
was too gracious to impute that to Beatrice as a crime.
“You will be one now, Mary; of course you
will.”
“If Lady Arabella will let me come.”
“Oh, Mary; let you! Do you remember what you
said once about coming, and being near me? I have so often thought
of it. And now, Mary, I must tell you about Caleb;” and the young
lady settled herself on the sofa, so as to have a comfortable long
talk. Beatrice had been quite right. Mary was as meek with her, and
as mild as a dove.
And then Patience Oriel came. “My fine,
young, darling, magnificent, overgrown heiress,” said Patience,
embracing her. “My breath deserted me, and I was nearly stunned
when I heard of it. How small we shall all be, my dear! I am quite
prepared to toady you immensely; but pray be a little gracious to
me, for the sake of auld lang syne.”
Mary gave a long, long kiss. “Yes, for auld
lang syne, Patience; when you took me away under your wing to
Richmond.” Patience also had loved her when she was in her trouble,
and that love, too, should never be forgotten.
But the great difficulty was Lady Arabella’s
first meeting with her. “I think I’ll go down to her after
breakfast,” said her ladyship to Beatrice, as the two were talking
over the matter while the mother was finishing her toilet.
“I am sure she will come up if you like it,
mamma.”
“She is entitled to every courtesy—as Frank’s
accepted bride, you know,” said Lady Arabella. “I would not for
worlds fail in any respect to her for his sake.”
“He will be glad enough for her to come, I am
sure,” said Beatrice. “I was talking with Caleb this morning, and
he says—”
The matter was of importance, and Lady
Arabella gave it her most mature consideration. The manner of
receiving into one’s family an heiress whose wealth is to cure all
one’s difficulties, disperse all one’s troubles, give a balm to all
the wounds of misfortune, must, under any circumstances, be worthy
of much care. But when that heiress has been already treated as
Mary had been treated!
“I must see her, at any rate, before I go to
Courcy.” said Lady Arabella.
“Are you going to Courcy, mamma?”
“Oh, certainly; yes, I must see my
sister-in-law now. You don’t seem to realise the importance, my
dear, of Frank’s marriage. He will be in a great hurry about it,
and, indeed, I cannot blame him. I expect that they will all come
here.”
“Who, mamma? the De Courcys?”
“Yes, of course. I shall be very much
surprised if the earl does not come now. And I must consult my
sister-in-law as to asking the Duke of Omnium.”
Poor Mary!
“And I think it will perhaps be better,”
continued Lady Arabella, “that we should have a larger party than
we intended at your affair. The countess, I’m sure, would come now.
We couldn’t put it off for ten days; could we, dear?”
“Put it off ten days!”
“Yes; it would be convenient.”
“I don’t think Mr. Oriel would like that at
all, mamma. You know he has made all his arrangements for his
Sundays—”
Pshaw! The idea of the parson’s Sundays being
allowed to have any bearing on such a matter as Frank’s wedding
would now become! Why, they would have—how much? Between twelve and
fourteen thousand a year! Lady Arabella, who had made her
calculations a dozen times during the night, had never found it to
be much less than the larger sum. Mr. Oriel’s Sundays,
indeed!
After much doubt, Lady Arabella acceded to
her daughter’s suggestion, that Mary should be received at
Greshamsbury instead of being called on at the doctor’s house. “If
you think she won’t mind the coming up first,” said her ladyship.
“I certainly could receive her better here. I should be
more—more—more able, you know, to express what I feel. We had
better go into the big drawing-room to-day, Beatrice. Will you
remember to tell Mrs. Richards?”
“Oh, certainly,” was Mary’s answer when
Beatrice, with a voice a little trembling, proposed to her to walk
up to the house. “Certainly I will, if Lady Arabella will receive
me—only one thing, Trichy.”
“What’s that, dearest?”
“Frank will think that I come after
him.”
“Never mind what he thinks. To tell you the
truth, Mary, I often call upon Patience for the sake of finding
Caleb. That’s all fair now, you know.”
Mary very quietly put on her straw bonnet,
and said she was ready to go up to the house. Beatrice was a little
fluttered, and showed it. Mary was, perhaps, a good deal fluttered,
but she did not show it. She had thought a good deal of her first
interview with Lady Arabella, of her first return to the house; but
she had resolved to carry herself as though the matter were easy to
her. She would not allow it to be seen that she felt that she
brought with her to Greshamsbury, comfort, ease, and renewed
opulence.
So she put on her straw bonnet and walked up
with Beatrice. Everybody about the place had already heard the
news. The old woman at the lodge curtsied low to her; the gardener,
who was mowing the lawn. The butler, who opened the front door—he
must have been watching Mary’s approach—had manifestly put on a
clean white neckcloth for the occasion.
“God bless you once more, Miss Thorne!” said
the old man, in a half-whisper. Mary was somewhat troubled, for
everything seemed, in a manner, to bow down before her. And why
should not everything bow down before her, seeing that she was in
very truth the owner of Greshamsbury?
And then a servant in livery would open the
big drawing-room door. This rather upset both Mary and Beatrice. It
became almost impossible for Mary to enter the room just as she
would have done two years ago; but she got through the difficulty
with much self-control.
“Mamma, here’s Mary,” said Beatrice.
Nor was Lady Arabella quite mistress of
herself, although she had studied minutely how to bear
herself.
“Oh, Mary, my dear Mary; what can I say to
you?” and then, with a handkerchief to her eyes, she ran forward
and hid her face on Miss Thorne’s shoulders. “What can I say—can
you forgive me my anxiety for my son?”
“How do you do, Lady Arabella?” said
Mary.
“My daughter! my child! my Frank’s own bride!
Oh, Mary! oh, my child! If I have seemed unkind to you, it has been
through love to him.”
“All these things are over now,” said Mary.
“Mr. Gresham told me yesterday that I should be received as Frank’s
future wife; and so, you see, I have come.” And then she slipped
through Lady Arabella’s arms, and sat down, meekly down, on a
chair. In five minutes she had escaped with Beatrice into the
school-room, and was kissing the children, and turning over the new
trousseau. They were, however, soon interrupted, and there was,
perhaps, some other kissing besides that of the children.
“You have no business in here at all, Frank,”
said Beatrice. “Has he, Mary?”
“None in the world, I should think.”
“See what he has done to my poplin; I hope
you won’t have your things treated so cruelly. He’ll be careful
enough about them.”
“Is Oriel a good hand at packing up
finery—eh, Beatrice?” asked Frank.
“He is, at any rate, too well-behaved to
spoil it.” Thus Mary was again made at home in the household of
Greshamsbury.
Lady Arabella did not carry out her little
plan of delaying the Oriel wedding. Her idea had been to add some
grandeur to it, in order to make it a more fitting precursor of
that other greater wedding which was to follow so soon in its wake.
But this, with the assistance of the countess, she found herself
able to do without interfering with poor Mr. Oriel’s Sunday
arrangements. The countess herself, with the Ladies Alexandrina and
Margaretta, now promised to come, even to this first affair; and
for the other, the whole De Courcy family would turn out, count and
countess, lords and ladies, Honourable Georges and Honourable
Johns. What honour, indeed, could be too great to show to a bride
who had fourteen thousand a year in her own right, or to a cousin
who had done his duty by securing such a bride to himself!
“If the duke be in the country, I am sure he
will be happy to come,” said the countess. “Of course, he will be
talking to Frank about politics. I suppose the squire won’t expect
Frank to belong to the old school now.”
“Frank, of course, will judge for himself,
Rosina—with his position, you know!” And so things were settled at
Courcy Castle.
And then Beatrice was wedded and carried off
to the Lakes. Mary, as she had promised, did stand near her; but
not exactly in the gingham frock of which she had once spoken. She
wore on that occasion— But it will be too much, perhaps, to tell
the reader what she wore as Beatrice’s bridesmaid, seeing that a
couple of pages, at least, must be devoted to her marriage-dress,
and seeing, also, that we have only a few pages to finish
everything; the list of visitors, the marriage settlements, the
dress, and all included.
It was in vain that Mary endeavoured to
repress Lady Arabella’s ardour for grand doings. After all, she was
to be married from the doctor’s house, and not from Greshamsbury,
and it was the doctor who should have invited the guests; but, in
this matter, he did not choose to oppose her ladyship’s spirit, and
she had it all her own way.
“What can I do?” said he to Mary. “I have
been contradicting her in everything for the last two years. The
least we can do is to let her have her own way now in a trifle like
this.”
But there was one point on which Mary would
let nobody have his or her own way; on which the way to be taken
was very manifestly to be her own. This was touching the marriage
settlements. It must not be supposed, that if Beatrice were married
on a Tuesday, Mary could be married on the Tuesday week following.
Ladies with twelve thousand a year cannot be disposed of in that
way: and bridegrooms who do their duty by marrying money often have
to be kept waiting. It was spring, the early spring, before Frank
was made altogether a happy man.
But a word about the settlements. On this
subject the doctor thought he would have been driven mad. Messrs.
Slow & Bideawhile, as the lawyers of the Greshamsbury family—it
will be understood that Mr. Gazebee’s law business was of quite a
different nature, and his work, as regarded Greshamsbury, was now
nearly over—Messrs. Slow & Bideawhile declared that it would
never do for them to undertake alone to draw out the settlements.
An heiress, such as Mary, must have lawyers of her own; half a
dozen at least, according to the apparent opinion of Messrs. Slow
& Bideawhile. And so the doctor had to go to other lawyers, and
they had again to consult Sir Abraham, and Mr. Snilam on a dozen
different heads.
If Frank became tenant in tail, in right of
his wife, but under his father, would he be able to grant leases
for more than twenty-one years? and, if so, to whom would the right
of trover belong? As to flotsam and jetsam—there was a little
property, Mr. Critic, on the sea-shore—that was a matter that had
to be left unsettled at the last. Such points as these do take a
long time to consider. All this bewildered the doctor sadly, and
Frank himself began to make accusations that he was to be done out
of his wife altogether.
But, as we have said, there was one point on
which Mary would have her own way. The lawyers might tie up as they
would on her behalf all the money, and shares, and mortgages which
had belonged to the late Sir Roger, with this exception, all that
had ever appertained to Greshamsbury should belong to Greshamsbury
again; not in perspective, not to her children, or to her
children’s children, but at once. Frank should be lord of Boxall
Hill in his own right; and as to those other liens on Greshamsbury, let Frank manage that with
his father as he might think fit. She would only trouble herself to
see that he was empowered to do as he did think fit.
“But,” argued the ancient, respectable family
attorney to the doctor, “that amounts to two-thirds of the whole
estate. Two-thirds, Dr. Thorne! It is preposterous; I should almost
say impossible.” And the scanty hairs on the poor man’s head almost
stood on end as he thought of the outrageous manner in which the
heiress prepared to sacrifice herself.
“It will all be the same in the end,” said
the doctor, trying to make things smooth. “Of course, their joint
object will be to put the Greshamsbury property together
again.”
“But, my dear sir,”—and then, for twenty
minutes, the lawyer went on proving that it would by no means be
the same thing; but, nevertheless, Mary Thorne did have her own
way.
In the course of the winter, Lady de Courcy
tried very hard to induce the heiress to visit Courcy Castle, and
this request was so backed by Lady Arabella, that the doctor said
he thought she might as well go there for three or four days. But
here, again, Mary was obstinate.
“I don’t see it at all,” she said. “If you
make a point of it, or Frank, or Mr. Gresham, I will go; but I
can’t see any possible reason.” The doctor, when so appealed to,
would not absolutely say that he made a point of it, and Mary was
tolerably safe as regarded Frank or the squire. If she went, Frank
would be expected to go, and Frank disliked Courcy Castle almost
more than ever. His aunt was now more than civil to him, and, when
they were together, never ceased to compliment him on the desirable
way in which he had done his duty by his family.
And soon after Christmas a visitor came to
Mary, and stayed a fortnight with her: one whom neither she nor the
doctor had expected, and of whom they had not much more than heard.
This was the famous Miss Dunstable. “Birds of a feather flock
together,” said Mrs. Rantaway—late Miss Gushing—when she heard of
the visit. “The railway man’s niece—if you can call her a niece—and
the quack’s daughter will do very well together, no doubt.”
“At any rate, they can count their
money-bags,” said Mrs. Umbleby.
And in fact, Mary and Miss Dunstable did get
on very well together; and Miss Dunstable made herself quite happy
at Greshamsbury, although some people—including Mrs.
Rantaway—contrived to spread a report, that Dr. Thorne, jealous of
Mary’s money, was going to marry her.
“I shall certainly come and see you turned
off,” said Miss Dunstable, taking leave of her new friend. Miss
Dunstable, it must be acknowledged, was a little too fond of slang;
but then, a lady with her fortune, and of her age, may be fond of
almost whatever she pleases.
And so by degrees the winter wore away—very
slowly to Frank, as he declared often enough; and slowly, perhaps,
to Mary also, though she did not say so. The winter wore away, and
the chill, bitter, windy, early spring came round. The comic
almanacs give us dreadful pictures of January and February; but, in
truth, the months which should be made to look gloomy in England
are March and April. Let no man boast himself that he has got
through the perils of winter till at least the seventh of
May.
It was early in April, however, that the
great doings were to be done at Greshamsbury. Not exactly on the
first. It may be presumed, that in spite of the practical,
common-sense spirit of the age, very few people do choose to have
themselves united on that day. But some day in the first week of
that month was fixed for the ceremony, and from the end of February
all through March, Lady Arabella worked and strove in a manner that
entitled her to profound admiration.
It was at last settled that the breakfast
should be held in the large dining-room at Greshamsbury. There was
a difficulty about it which taxed Lady Arabella to the utmost, for,
in making the proposition, she could not but seem to be throwing
some slight on the house in which the heiress had lived. But when
the affair was once opened to Mary, it was astonishing how easy it
became.
“Of course,” said Mary, “all the rooms in our
house would not hold half the people you are talking about—if they
must come.”
Lady Arabella looked so beseechingly, nay, so
piteously, that Mary had not another word to say. It was evident
that they must all come: the De Courcys to the fifth generation;
the Duke of Omnium himself, and others in concatenation
accordingly.
“But will your uncle be angry if we have the
breakfast up here? He has been so very handsome to Frank, that I
wouldn’t make him angry for all the world.”
“If you don’t tell him anything about it,
Lady Arabella, he’ll think that it is all done properly. He will
never know, if he’s not told, that he ought to give the breakfast,
and not you.”
“Won’t he, my dear?” And Lady Arabella looked
her admiration for this very talented suggestion. And so that
matter was arranged. The doctor never knew, till Mary told him some
year or so afterwards, that he had been remiss in any part of his
duty.
And who was asked to the wedding? In the
first place, we have said that the Duke of Omnium was there. This
was, in fact, the one circumstance that made this wedding so
superior to any other that had ever taken place in that
neighbourhood. The Duke of Omnium never went anywhere; and yet he
went to Mary’s wedding! And Mary, when the ceremony was over,
absolutely found herself kissed by a duke. “Dearest Mary!”
exclaimed Lady Arabella, in her ecstasy of joy, when she saw the
honour that was done to her daughter-in-law.
“I hope we shall induce you to come to
Gatherum Castle soon,” said the duke to Frank. “I shall be having a
few friends there in the autumn. Let me see; I declare, I have not
seen you since you were good enough to come to my collection. Ha!
ha! ha! It wasn’t bad fun, was it?” Frank was not very cordial with
his answer. He had not quite reconciled himself to the difference
of his position. When he was treated as one of the “collection” at
Gatherum Castle, he had not married money.
It would be vain to enumerate all the De
Courcys that were there. There was the earl, looking very gracious,
and talking to the squire about the county. And there was Lord
Porlock, looking very ungracious, and not talking to anybody about
anything. And there was the countess, who for the last week past
had done nothing but pat Frank on the back whenever she could catch
him. And there were the Ladies Alexandrina, Margaretta, and Selina,
smiling at everybody. And the Honourable George, talking in
whispers to Frank about his widow—”Not such a catch as yours, you
know; but something extremely snug—and have it all my own way, too,
old fellow, or I shan’t come to the scratch.” And the Honourable
John prepared to toady Frank about his string of hunters; and the
Lady Amelia, by herself, not quite contented with these democratic
nuptials—”After all, she is so absolutely nobody; absolutely,
absolutely,” she said confidentially to Augusta, shaking her head.
But before Lady Amelia had left Greshamsbury, Augusta was quite at
a loss to understand how there could be need for so much
conversation between her cousin and Mr. Mortimer Gazebee.
And there were many more De Courcys, whom to
enumerate would be much too long.
And the bishop of the diocese, and Mrs.
Proudie were there. A hint had even been given, that his lordship
would himself condescend to perform the ceremony, if this should be
wished; but that work had already been anticipated by a very old
friend of the Greshams. Archdeacon Grantly, the rector of Plumstead
Episcopi, had long since undertaken this part of the business; and
the knot was eventually tied by the joint efforts of himself and
Mr. Oriel. Mrs. Grantly came with him, and so did Mrs. Grantly’s
sister, the new dean’s wife. The dean himself was at the time
unfortunately absent at Oxford.
And all the Bakers and the Jacksons were
there. The last time they had all met together under the squire’s
roof, was on the occasion of Frank’s coming of age. The present
gala doings were carried on a very different spirit. That had been
a very poor affair, but this was worthy of the best days of
Greshamsbury.
Occasion also had been taken of this happy
moment to make up, or rather to get rid of the last shreds of the
last feud that had so long separated Dr. Thorne from his own
relatives. The Thornes of Ullathorne had made many overtures in a
covert way. But our doctor had contrived to reject them. “They
would not receive Mary as their cousin,” said he, “and I will go
nowhere that she cannot go.” But now all this was altered. Mrs.
Gresham would certainly be received in any house in the county. And
thus, Mr. Thorne of Ullathorne, an amiable, popular old bachelor,
came to the wedding; and so did his maiden sister, Miss Monica
Thorne, than whose no kinder heart glowed through all
Barsetshire.
“My dear,” said she to Mary, kissing her, and
offering her some little tribute, “I am very glad to make your
acquaintance; very. It was not her fault,” she added, speaking to
herself. “And now that she will be a Gresham, that need not be any
longer be thought of.” Nevertheless, could Miss Thorne have spoken
her inward thoughts out loud, she would have declared, that Frank
would have done better to have borne his poverty than marry wealth
without blood. But then, there are but few so stanch as Miss
Thorne; perhaps none in that county—always excepting Lady
Amelia.
And the Oriels were there, of course: the
rector and his young wife, and Patience again enacting bridesmaid.
It was pretty to see how Beatrice came out as a matron, and gave
all manner of matured counsel to her still maiden friend. A month
or two of married life does make such a difference.
And Miss Dunstable, also, was a bridesmaid.
“Oh, no” said she, when asked; “you should have them young and
pretty.” But she gave way when she found that Mary did not flatter
her by telling her that she was either the one or the other. “The
truth is,” said Miss Dunstable, “I have always been a little in
love with your Frank, and so I shall do it for his sake.” There
were but four: the other two were the Gresham twins. Lady Arabella
exerted herself greatly in framing hints to induce Mary to ask some
of the De Courcy ladies to do her so much honour; but on this head
Mary would please herself. “Rank,” said she to Beatrice, with a
curl on her lip, “has its drawbacks—and must put up with
them.”
And now I find that I have not one page—not
half a page—for the wedding-dress. But what matters? Will it not be
all found written in the columns of the Morning Post?
And thus Frank married money, and became a
great man. Let us hope that he will be a happy man. As the time of
the story has been brought down so near to the present era, it is
not practicable for the novelist to tell much of his future career.
When I last heard from Barsetshire, it seemed to be quite settled
that he is to take the place of one of the old members at the next
election; and they say, also, that there is no chance of any
opposition. I have heard, too, that there have been many very
private consultations between him and various gentlemen of the
county, with reference to the hunt; and the general feeling is said
to be that the hounds should go to Boxall Hill.
At Boxall Hill the young people established
themselves on their return from the Continent. And that reminds me
that one word must be said of Lady Scatcherd.
“You will always stay here with us,” said
Mary to her, caressing her ladyship’s rough hand, and looking
kindly into that kind face.
But Lady Scatcherd would not consent to this.
“I will come and see you sometimes, and then I shall enjoy myself.
Yes, I will come and see you, and my own dear boy.” The affair was
ended by her taking Mrs. Opie Green’s cottage, in order that she
might be near the doctor; Mrs. Opie Green having
married—somebody.
And of whom else must we say a word?
Patience, also, of course, got a husband—or will do so. Dear
Patience! it would be a thousand pities that so good a wife should
be lost to the world. Whether Miss Dunstable will ever be married,
or Augusta Gresham, or Mr. Moffat, or any of the tribe of the De
Courcys—except Lady Amelia—I cannot say. They have all of them
still their future before them. That Bridget was married to
Thomas—that I am able to assert; for I know that Janet was much put
out by their joint desertion.
Lady Arabella has not yet lost her admiration
for Mary, and Mary, in return, behaves admirably. Another event is
expected, and her ladyship is almost as anxious about that as she
was about the wedding. “A matter, you know, of such importance in
the county!” she whispered to Lady de Courcy.
Nothing can be more happy than the
intercourse between the squire and his son. What their exact
arrangements are, we need not specially inquire; but the demon of
pecuniary embarrassment has lifted his black wings from the demesne
of Greshamsbury.
And now we have but one word left for the
doctor. “If you don’t come and dine with me,” said the squire to
him, when they found themselves both deserted, “mind, I shall come
and dine with you.” And on this principle they seem to act. Dr.
Thorne continues to extend his practice, to the great disgust of
Dr. Fillgrave; and when Mary suggested to him that he should
retire, he almost boxed her ears. He knows the way, however, to
Boxall Hill as well as he ever did, and is willing to acknowledge,
that the tea there is almost as good as it ever was at
Greshamsbury.
THE END