CHAPTER XLVI
Intelligence
I MUST HAVE BEEN MARRIED, IF I MAY TRUST TO
MY IMPERFECT memory for dates, about a year or so, when one
evening, as I was returning from a solitary walk, thinking of the
book I was then writing—for my success had steadily increased with
my steady application, and I was engaged at that time upon my first
work of fiction—I came past Mrs. Steerforth’s house. I had often
passed it before, during my residence in that neighbourhood, though
never when I could choose another road. Howbeit, it did sometimes
happen that it was not easy to find another, without making a long
circuit, and so I had passed that way, upon the whole, pretty
often.
I had never done more than glance at the house, as
I went by with a quickened step. It had been uniformly gloomy and
dull. None of the best rooms abutted on the road, and the narrow,
heavily-framed old-fashioned windows, never cheerful under any
circumstances, looked very dismal, close shut, and with their
blinds always drawn down. There was a covered way across a little
paved court, to an entrance that was never used, and there was one
round staircase window, at odds with all the rest, and the only one
unshaded by a blind, which had the same unoccupied blank look. I do
not remember that I ever saw a light in all the house. If I had
been a casual passer-by, I should have probably supposed that some
childless person lay dead in it. If I had happily possessed no
knowledge of the place, and had seen it often in that changeless
state, I should have pleased my fancy with many ingenious
speculations, I dare say.
As it was, I thought as little of it as I might.
But my mind could not go by it and leave it, as my body did, and it
usually awakened a long train of meditations. Coming before me on
this particular evening that I mention, mingled with the childish
recollections and later fancies, the ghosts of half-formed hopes,
the broken shadows of disappointments dimly seen and understood,
the blending of experience and imagination, incidental to the
occupation with which my thoughts had been busy, it was more than
commonly suggestive. I fell into a brown study as I walked on, and
a voice at my side made me start.
It was a woman’s voice, too. I was not long in
recollecting Mrs. Steerforth’s little parlour-maid, who had
formerly worn blue ribbons in her cap. She had taken them out now,
to adapt herself, I suppose, to the altered character of the house,
and wore but one or two disconsolate bows of sober brown.
“If you please, sir, would you have the goodness to
walk in, and speak to Miss Dartle?”
“Has Miss Dartle sent you for me?” I
inquired.
“Not tonight, sir, but it’s just the same. Miss
Dartle saw you pass a night or two ago, and I was to sit at work on
the staircase, and when I saw you pass again, to ask you to step in
and speak to her.”
I turned back, and inquired of my conductor, as we
went along, how Mrs. Steerforth was. She said her lady was but
poorly, and kept her own room a good deal.
When we arrived at the house, I was directed to
Miss Dartle in the garden, and left to make my presence known to
her myself. She was sitting on a seat at one end of a kind of
terrace, overlooking the great city. It was a sombre evening, with
a lurid light in the sky, and, as I saw the prospect scowling in
the distance, with here and there some larger object starting up
into the sullen glare, I fancied it was no inapt companion to the
memory of this fierce woman.
She saw me as I advanced, and rose for a moment to
receive me. I thought her, then, still more colourless and thin
than when I had seen her last, the flashing eyes still brighter,
and the scar still plainer.
Our meeting was not cordial. We had parted angrily
on the last occasion, and there was an air of disdain about her,
which she took no pains to conceal.
“I am told you wish to speak to me, Miss Dartle,”
said I, standing near her, with my hand upon the back of the seat,
and declining her gesture of invitation to sit down.
“If you please,” said she. “Pray has this girl been
found?”
“No.”
“And yet she has run away!”
I saw her thin lips working while she looked at me,
as if they were eager to load her with reproaches.
“Run away?” I repeated.
“Yes! From him,” she said, with a laugh. “If she is
not found, perhaps she never will be found. She may be dead!”
The vaunting cruelty with which she met my glance,
I never saw expressed in any other face that ever I have
seen.
“To wish her dead,” said I, “may be the kindest
wish that one of her own sex could bestow upon her. I am glad that
time has softened you so much, Miss Dartle.”
She condescended to make no reply, but, turning on
me with another scornful laugh, said:
“The friends of this excellent and much-injured
young lady are friends of yours. You are their champion, and assert
their rights. Do you wish to know what is known of her?”
“Yes,” said I.
She rose with an ill-favoured smile, and, taking a
few steps towards a wall of holly that was near at hand, dividing
the lawn from a kitchen-garden, said, in a louder voice, “Come
here!”—as if she were calling to some unclean beast.
“You will restrain any demonstrative championship
or vengeance in this place, of course, Mr. Copperfield?” said she,
looking over her shoulder at me with the same expression.
I inclined my head, without knowing what she meant,
and she said, “Come here!” again, and returned, followed by the
respectable Mr. Littimer, who, with undiminished respectability,
made me a bow, and took up his position behind her. The air of
wicked grace, of triumph, in which, strange to say, there was yet
something feminine and alluring, with which she reclined upon the
seat between us, and looked at me, was worthy of a cruel Princess
in a Legend.
“Now,” said she, imperiously, without glancing at
him, and touching the old wound as it throbbed, perhaps, in this
instance, with pleasure rather than pain. “Tell Mr. Copperfield
about the flight.”
“Mr. James and myself, ma‘am—”
“Don’t address yourself to me!” she interrupted
with a frown.
“Mr. James and myself, sir—” “Nor to me, if you
please,” said I.
Mr. Littimer, without being at all discomposed,
signified by a slight obeisance, that anything that was most
agreeable to us was most agreeable to him, and began again:
“Mr. James and myself have been abroad with the
young woman, ever since she left Yarmouth under Mr. James’s
protection. We have been in a variety of places, and seen a deal of
foreign country. We have been in France, Switzerland, Italy—in
fact, almost all parts.”
He looked at the back of the seat, as if he were
addressing himself to that, and softly played upon it with his
hands, as if he were striking chords upon a dumb piano.
“Mr. James took quite uncommonly to the young
woman, and was more settled, for a length of time, than I have
known him to be since I have been in his service. The young woman
was very improvable, and spoke the languages, and wouldn’t have
been known for the same country-person. I noticed that she was much
admired wherever we went.”
Miss Dartle put her hand upon her side. I saw him
steal a glance at her, and slightly smile to himself.
“Very much admired, indeed, the young woman was.
What with her dress, what with the air and sun, what with being
made so much of, what with this, that, and the other, her merits
really attracted general notice.”
He made a short pause. Her eyes wandered restlessly
over the distant prospect, and she bit her nether lip to stop that
busy mouth.
Taking his hands from the seat, and placing one of
them within the other, as he settled himself on one leg, Mr.
Littimer proceeded, with his eyes cast down, and his respectable
head a little advanced, and a little on one side:
“The young woman went on in this manner for some
time, being occasionally low in her spirits, until I think she
began to weary Mr. James by giving way to her low spirits and
tempers of that kind, and things were not so comfortable. Mr.
James, he began to be restless again. The more restless he got, the
worse she got, and I must say, for myself, that I had a very
difficult time of it indeed between the two. Still matters were
patched up here, and made good there, over and over again, and,
altogether, lasted, I am sure, for a longer time than anybody could
have expected.”
Recalling her eyes from the distance, she looked at
me again now, with her former air. Mr. Littimer, clearing his
throat behind his. hand with a respectable short cough, changed
legs, and went on:
“At last, when there had been, upon the whole, a
good many words and reproaches, Mr. James he set off one morning,
from the neighbourhood of Naples, where we had a villa (the young
woman being very partial to the sea), and, under pretence of coming
back in a day or so, left it in charge with me to break it out
that, for the general happiness of all concerned, he was”—here an
interruption of the short cough—“gone. But Mr. James, I must say,
certainly did behave extremely honourable, for he proposed that the
young woman should marry a very respectable person, who was fully
prepared to overlook the past, and who was, at least, as good as
anybody the young woman could have aspired to in a regular way, her
connexions being very common.”
He changed legs again, and wetted his lips. I was
convinced that the scoundrel spoke of himself, and I saw my
conviction reflected in Miss Dartle’s face.
“This I also had it in charge to communicate. I was
willing to do anything to relieve Mr. James from his difficulty,
and to restore harmony between himself and an affectionate parent,
who has undergone so much on his account. Therefore I undertook the
commission. The young woman’s violence when she came to, after I
broke the fact of his departure, was beyond all expectations. She
was quite mad, and had to be held by force, or, if she couldn’t
have got to a knife, or got to the sea, she’d have beaten her head
against the marble floor.”
Miss Dartle, leaning back upon the seat, with a
light of exultation in her face, seemed almost to caress the sounds
this fellow had uttered.
“But when I came to the second part of what had
been entrusted to me,” said Mr. Littimer, rubbing his hands,
uneasily, “which anybody might have supposed would have been, at
all events, appreciated as a kind intention, then the young woman
came out in her true colours. A more outrageous person I never did
see. Her conduct was surprisingly bad. She had no more gratitude,
no more feeling, no more patience, no more reason in her, than a
stock or a stone. If I hadn’t been upon my guard, I am convinced
she would have had my blood.”
“I think the better of her for it,” said I,
indignantly.
Mr. Littimer bent his head, as much as to say,
“Indeed, sir? But you’re young!” and resumed his narrative.
“It was necessary, in short, for a time, to take
away everything nigh her, that she could do herself, or anybody
else, an injury with, and to shut her up close. Notwithstanding
which, she got out in the night, forced the lattice of a window,
that I had nailed up myself, dropped on a vine that was trailed
below, and never has been seen or heard of, to my knowledge,
since.”
“She is dead, perhaps,” said Miss Dartle with a
smile as if she could have spurned the body of the ruined
girl.
“She may have drowned herself, miss,” returned Mr.
Littimer, catching at an excuse for addressing himself to somebody.
“It’s very possible. Or, she may have had assistance from the
boatmen, and the boatmen’s wives and children. Being given to low
company, she was very much in the habit of talking to them on the
beach, Miss Dartle, and sitting by their boats. I have known her do
it, when Mr. James has been away, whole days. Mr. James was far
from pleased to find out once, that she had told the children she
was a boatman’s daughter, and that in her own country, long ago,
she had roamed about the beach, like them.”
Oh, Emily! Unhappy beauty! What a picture rose
before me of her sitting on the far off-shore, among the children
like herself when she was innocent, listening to little voices such
as might have called her Mother had she been a poor man’s wife and
to the great voice of the sea, with its eternal “Never more!”
“When it was clear that nothing could be done, Miss
Dartle—”
“Did I tell you not to speak to me?” she said, with
stern contempt.
“You spoke to me, miss,” he replied. “I beg your
pardon. But it is my service to obey.”
“Do your service,” she returned. “Finish your
story, and go!”
“When it was clear,” he said, with infinite
respectability, and an obedient bow, “that she was not to be found,
I went to Mr. James, at the place where it had been agreed that I
should write to him, and informed him of what had occurred. Words
passed between us in consequence, and I felt it due to my character
to leave him. I could bear, and I have borne, a great deal from Mr.
James, but he insulted me too far. He hurt me. Knowing the
unfortunate difference between himself and his mother, and what her
anxiety of mind was likely to be, I took the liberty of coming home
to England, and relating—”
“For money which I paid him,” said Miss Dartle to
me.
“Just so, ma‘am—and relating what I knew. I am not
aware,” said Mr. Littimer, after a moment’s reflection, “that there
is anything else. I am at present out of employment, and should be
happy to meet with a respectable situation.”
Miss Dartle glanced at me, as though she would
inquire if there were anything that I desired to ask. As there was
something which had occurred to my mind, I said in reply:
“I could wish to know from this—creature”—I could
not bring myself to utter any more conciliatory word—“whether they
intercepted a letter that was written to her from home, or whether
he supposes that she received it.”
He remained calm and silent, with his eyes fixed on
the ground, and the tip of every finger of his right hand
delicately poised against the tip of every finger of his
left.
Miss Dartle turned her head disdainfully towards
him.
“I beg your pardon, miss,” he said, awakening from
his abstraction, “but, however submissive to you, I have my
position, though a servant. Mr. Copperfield and you, miss, are
different people. If Mr. Copperfield wishes to know anything from
me, I take the liberty of reminding Mr. Copperfield that he can put
a question to me. I have a character to maintain.”
After a momentary struggle with myself, I turned my
eyes upon him, and said, “You have heard my question. Consider it
addressed to yourself, if you choose. What answer do you
make?”
“Sir,” he rejoined, with an occasional separation
and reunion of those delicate tips, “my answer must be qualified,
because, to betray Mr. James’s confidence to his mother, and to
betray it to you, are two different actions. It is not probable, I
consider, that Mr. James would encourage the receipt of letters
likely to increase low spirits and unpleasantness, but further than
that, sir, I should wish to avoid going.”
“Is that all?” inquired Miss Dartle of me.
I indicated that I had nothing more to say.
“Except,” I added, as I saw him moving off, “that I understand this
fellow’s part in the wicked story, and that, as I shall make it
known to the honest man who has been her father from her childhood,
I would recommend him to avoid going too much into public.”
He had stopped the moment I began, and had listened
with his usual repose of manner.
“Thank you, sir. But you’ll excuse me if I say,
sir, that there are neither slaves or slave-drivers in this
country, and that people are not allowed to take the law into their
own hands. If they do, it is more to their own peril, I believe,
than to other people’s. Consequently speaking, I am not at all
afraid of going wherever I may wish, sir.”
With that, he made a polite bow, and, with another
to Miss Dartle, went away through the arch in the wall of holly by
which he had come. Miss Dartle and I regarded each other for a
little while in silence, her manner being exactly what it was, when
she had produced the man.
“He says besides,” she observed, with a slow
curling of her lip, “that his master, as he hears, is coasting
Spain, and this done, is away to gratify his seafaring tastes till
he is weary. But this is of no interest to you. Between these two
proud persons, mother and son, there is a wider breach than before,
and little hope of its healing, for they are one at heart, and time
makes each more obstinate and imperious. Neither is this of any
interest to you, but it introduces what I wish to say. This devil
whom you make an angel of, I mean this low girl whom he picked out
of the tide-mud,” with her black eyes full upon me, and her
passionate finger up, “may be alive, —for I believe some common
things are hard to die. If she is, you will desire to have a pearl
of such price found and taken care of. We desire that, too, that he
may not by any chance be made her prey again. So far, we are united
in one interest, and that is why I, who would do her any mischief
that so coarse a wretch is capable of feeling, have sent for you to
hear what you have heard.”
I saw, by the change in her face, that some one was
advancing behind me. It was Mrs. Steerforth, who gave me her hand
more coldly than of yore, and with an augmentation of her former
stateliness of manner, but still, I perceived—and I was touched by
it—with an ineffaceable remembrance of my old love for her son. She
was greatly altered. Her fine figure was far less upright, her
handsome face was deeply marked, and her hair was almost white. But
when she sat down on the seat, she was a handsome lady still, and
well I knew the bright eye with its lofty look, that had been a
light in my very dreams at school.
“Is Mr. Copperfield informed of everything,
Rosa?”
“Yes.”
“And has he heard Littimer himself?”
“Yes, I have told him why you wished it.”
“You are a good girl. I have had some slight
correspondence with your former friend, sir,” addressing me, “but
it has not restored his sense of duty or natural obligation.
Therefore I have no other object in this, than what Rosa has
mentioned. If, by the course which may relieve the mind of the
decent man you brought here (for whom I am sorry—I can say no
more), my son may be saved from again falling into the snares of a
designing enemy, well!”
She drew herself up, and sat looking straight
before her, far away.
“Madam,” I said respectfully, “I understand. I
assure you I am in no danger of putting any strained construction
on your motives. But I must say, even to you, having known this
injured family from childhood, that if you suppose the girl, so
deeply wronged, has not been cruelly deluded, and would not rather
die a hundred deaths than take a cup of water from your son’s hand
now, you cherish a terrible mistake.”
“Well, Rosa, well!” said Mrs. Steerforth, as the
other was about to interpose, “it is no matter. Let it be. You are
married, sir, I am told?”
I answered that I had been some time married.
“And are doing well? I hear little in the quiet
life I lead, but I understand you are beginning to be
famous.”
“I have been very fortunate,” I said, “and find my
name connected with some praise.”
“You have no mother?”—in a softened voice.
“No.”
“It is a pity,” she returned. “She would have been
proud of you. Good night!”
I took the hand she held out with a dignified,
unbending air, and it was as calm in mine as if her breast had been
at peace. Her pride could still its very pulses, it appeared, and
draw the placid veil before her face, through which she sat looking
straight before her on the far distance.
As I moved away from them along the terrace, I
could not help observing how steadily they both sat gazing on the
prospect, and how it thickened and closed around them. Here and
there, some early lamps were seen to twinkle in the distant city,
and, in the eastern quarter of the sky, the lurid light still
hovered. But, from the greater part of the broad valley interposed,
a mist was rising like a sea, which, mingling with the darkness,
made it seem as if the gathering waters would encompass them. I
have reason to remember this, and think of it with awe, for, before
I looked upon those two again, a stormy sea had risen to their
feet.
Reflecting on what had been thus told me, I felt it
right that it should be communicated to Mr. Peggotty. On the
following evening I went into London in quest of him. He was always
wandering about from place to place, with his one object of
recovering his niece before him, but was more in London than
elsewhere. Often and often, now, had I seen him in the dead of
night passing along the streets, searching, among the few who
loitered out-of-doors at those untimely hours, for what he dreaded
to find.
He kept a lodging over the little chandler’s shop
in Hungerford Market, which I have had occasion to mention more
than once, and from which he first went forth upon his errand of
mercy. Hither I directed my walk. On making inquiry for him, I
learned from the people of the house that he had not gone out yet,
and I should find him in his room upstairs.
He was sitting reading by a window in which he kept
a few plants. The room was very neat and orderly. I saw in a moment
that it was always kept prepared for her reception, and that he
never went out but he thought it possible he might bring her home.
He had not heard my tap at the door, and only raised his eyes when
I laid my hand upon his shoulder.
“Mas‘r Davy! Thankee, sir! thankee hearty, for this
visit! Sit ye down. You’re kindly welcome, sirl”
“Mr. Peggotty,” said I, taking the chair he handed
me, “don’t expect much! I have heard some news.”
“Of Em‘lyl”
He put his hand, in a nervous manner, on his mouth,
and turned pale, as he fixed his eyes on mine.
“It gives no clue to where she is, but she is not
with him.”
He sat down, looking intently at me, and listened
in profound silence to all I had to tell. I well remember the sense
of dignity, beauty even, with which the patient gravity of his face
impressed me, when, having gradually removed his eyes from mine, he
sat looking downward, leaning his forehead on his hand. He offered
no interruption, but remained throughout perfectly still. He seemed
to pursue her figure through the narrative, and to let every other
shape go by him, as if it were nothing.
When I had done, he shaded his face, and continued
silent. I looked out of the window for a little while, and occupied
myself with the plants.
“How do you fare to feel about it, Mas‘r Davy?” he
inquired at length.
“I think that she is living,” I replied.
“I doen’t know. Maybe the first shock was too
rough, and in the wildness of her art—! That there blue water as
she used to speak on. Could she have thowt o’ that so many year,
because it was to be her gravel”
He said this, musing, in a low, frightened voice,
and walked across the little room.
.“And yet,” he added, “Mas‘r Davy, I have felt so
sure as she was living—I have know’d awake and sleeping, as it was
so trew that I should find her—I have been so led on by it, and
held up by it—that I doen’t believe I can have been deceived. No!
Em’ly’s alive!”
He put his hand down firmly on the table, and set
his sunburnt face into a resolute expression.
“My niece, Em‘ly, is alive, sir!” he said,
steadfastly. “I doen’t know wheer it comes from, or how ’tis, but
I am told as she’s alive!”
He looked almost like a man inspired, as he said
it. I waited for a few moments, until he could give me his
undivided attention, and then proceeded to explain the precaution
that, it had occurred to me last night, it would be wise to
take.
“Now, my dear friend—” I began.
“Thankee, thankee, kind sir,” he said, grasping my
hand in both of his.
“If she should make her way to London, which is
likely —for where could she lose herself so readily as in this vast
city, and what would she wish to do, but lose and hide herself, if
she does not go home?—”
“And she won’t go home,” he interposed, shaking his
head mournfully. “If she had left of her own accord, she might, not
as ‘twas, sir.”
“If she should come here,” said I, “I believe there
is one person here, more likely to discover her than any other in
the world. Do you remember—hear what I say, with fortitude—think of
your great object!—do you remember Martha?”
“Of our town?”
I needed no other answer than his face.
“Do you know that she is in London?”
“I have seen her in the streets,” he answered with
a shiver.
“But you don’t know,” said I, “that Emily was
charitable to her, with Ham’s help, long before she fled from home.
Nor that, when we met one night, and spoke together in the room
yonder, over the way, she listened at the door.”
“Mas‘r Davy!” he replied in astonishment. “That
night when it snew so hard?”
“That night. I have never seen her since. I went
back, after parting from you, to speak to her, but she was gone. I
was unwilling to mention her to you then, and I am now, but she is
the person of whom I speak, and with whom I think we should
communicate. Do you understand?”
“Too well, sir,” he replied. We had sunk our voices
almost to a whisper, and continued to speak in that tone.
“You say you have seen her. Do you think that you
could find her? I could only hope to do so by chance.”
“I think, Mas‘r Davy, I know wheer to look.”
“It is dark. Being together, shall we go out now,
and try to find her tonight?”
He assented, and prepared to accompany me. Without
appearing to observe what he was doing, I saw how carefully he
adjusted the little room, put a candle ready and the means of
lighting it, arranged the bed, and finally took out of a drawer one
of her dresses (I remember to have seen her wear it), neatly folded
with some other garments, and a bonnet, which he placed upon a
chair. He made no allusion to these clothes, neither did I. There
they had been waiting for her, many and many a night, no
doubt.
“The time was, Mas‘r Davy,” he said, as we came
downstairs, “when I thowt this girl, Martha, a’most like the dirt
underneath my Em‘ly’s feet. God forgive me, there’s a difference
now!”
As we went along, partly to hold him in
conversation, and partly to satisfy myself, I asked him about Ham.
He said, almost in the same words as formerly, that Ham was just
the same, “wearing away his life with kiender no care nohow for‘t,
but never murmuring, and liked by all.”
I asked him what he thought Ham’s state of mind
was, in reference to the cause of their misfortunes? Whether he
believed it was dangerous? What he supposed, for example, Ham would
do, if he and Steerforth ever should encounter?
“I doen’t know, sir,” he replied. “I have thowt of
it oftentimes, but I can’t arrize myself of it, no matters.”
I recalled to his remembrance the morning after her
departure, when we were all three on the beach. “Do you recollect,”
said I, “a certain wild way in which he looked out to sea, and
spoke about ‘the end of it’?”
“Sure I do!” said he.
“What do you suppose he meant?”
“Mas‘r Davy,” he replied, “I’ve put the question to
myself a mort o’times, and never found no answer. And theer’s one
curious thing—that, though he is so pleasant, I wouldn’t fare to
feel comfortable to try and get his mind upon’t. He never said a
wured to me as warn’t as dootiful as dootiful could be, and it
ain’t likely as he’d begin to speak any other ways now, but it’s
fur from being fleet water in his mind, where them thowts lays.
It’s deep, sir, and I can’t see down.”
“You are right,” said I, “and that has sometimes
made me anxious.”
“And me too, Mas‘r Davy,” he rejoined. “Even more
so, I do assure you, than his ventersome ways, though both belongs
to the alteration in him. I doen’t know as he’d do violence under
any circumstances, but I hope as them two may be kep
asunders.”
We had come, through Temple Bar, into the city.
Conversing no more now, and walking at my side, he yielded himself
up to the one aim of his devoted life, and went on, with that
hushed concentration of his faculties which would have made his
figure solitary in a multitude. We were not far from Blackfriars
Bridge, when he turned his head and pointed to a solitary female
figure flitting along the opposite side of the street. I knew it,
readily, to be the figure that we sought.
We crossed the road, and were pressing on towards
her, when it occurred to me that she might be more disposed to feel
a woman’s interest in the lost girl, if we spoke to her in a
quieter place, aloof from the crowd, and where we should be less
observed. I advised my companion, therefore, that we should not
address her yet, but follow her, consulting in this, likewise, an
indistinct desire I had, to know where she went.
He acquiescing, we followed at a distance, never
losing sight of her, but never caring to come very near, as she
frequently looked about. Once she stopped to listen to a band of
music, and then we stopped too.
She went on a long way. Still we went on. It was
evident, from the manner in which she held her course, that she was
going to some fixed destination, and this, and her keeping in the
busy streets, and I suppose the strange fascination in the secrecy
and mystery of so following anyone, made me adhere to my first
purpose. At length she turned into a dull, dark street, where the
noise and crowd were lost, and I said, “We may speak to her now,”
and, mending our pace, we went after her.