Patience by Barbara Hofland (that summer book TXT) đź“•
When the parting was really over, it may be supposed each gave herself up for a time to the intense overwhelming sense of sorrow, such a separation must inevitably inflict. Mrs. Aylmer trembled for the future peace of her beloved charge; she revolted at the idea of those employments her mother seemed to point out for her, and not less at the new associates with whom she might be called to mix; and she justly blamed herself for suffering so handsome and attractive a girl as Dora to depart without adverting to th
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used a much better term for his feelings towards Dora, whom it is
certain he would at one time have purchased at any price, and whom he
continued to gaze upon with very considerable admiration. They were now
receiving company, and he so far conceded to Dora’s wishes, as to permit
her sisters to be generally with them; but it appeared as much with a
desire to place Dora above Catharine, and thereby vindicate his own
taste, as from a wish to oblige her; and the direct, or indirect
sparrings, which took place constantly between two persons of their
description, rendered every day a period of trial to Dora.
Scarcely had she been married two months, when other letters arrived
from Smyrna, by which they learnt that the necessity of a resident
partner at that place was so apparent, as to threaten the ruin of the
house if it were delayed. Stancliffe laid them before Dora, observing
“they only confirmed the former.”
“I will go with you any where, my love,” was the immediate reply of his
young wife.
“But I am not inclined to go:—our articles of partnership are equally
binding on your father—and in short, he must go, and shall.”
“I am afraid his health will suffer—it is too late in life for him to
change his climate and his habits, whereas, you are accustomed to it; my
dear, pray think, before you decide.”
“I have thought—I have decided—either he shall go, or find some
other person to lend him money on his bond, than the fool he sought to
cheat and circumvent.”
Stancliffe was as good, or rather as bad, as his word; and Mr.
Hemingford was compelled to see clearly that he must set out
immediately, for his partner still held him in his power:—indeed it was
evident, that as he had now no other stay but his business, he must
preserve it; whereas his youthful partner had the means of life should
the other fail.
Bitter were the lamentations this resolution caused in the family of Mr.
Hemingford; but to no person perhaps was the trial felt, so severe a one
as the father himself, since he saw that parting with his boy was for
the child’s sake inevitable, and his heart had been so long attached to
this, as the one object on which his affections rested, and to which
his hopes clung, that the loss of him appeared a pang almost as terrible
as death.
When every thing was finally arranged, Mr. Stancliffe’s heart evidently
softened towards the suffering family; and he not only readily agreed,
(according to Mr. Blackwell’s proposition,) that Frank should form a
part of his family, but gave an invitation to Harriet, also, upon her
leaving school, and seconded every contrivance suggested by the active
good will of Dora for their assistance and accommodation, with a
liberality that rendered him exceedingly dear to her. This was indeed
the kinder, because she had been compelled to see that, although
hospitable to profusion, and occasionally capable of squandering money,
yet Everton Stancliffe was not generous in general, and very frequently
he was careful even to parsimony.
This great change was felt by Frank with various sensations; he was
loath to part with his papa, whom he tenderly loved, but he was so much
more attached to Dora than to any human being, that he could scarcely be
sorry for any circumstance which placed him under the same roof with
her—he was also inclined to love his brother-in-law, for he admired him
exceedingly, and with the curiosity natural to his age, was delighted to
hear him relate circumstances, or describe places connected with his
travels; but yet Frank was also a little afraid of him, and could not
perfectly forgive him for having taken away his darling sister.
Though few daughters could have less to regret than Dora, yet the deep
consideration and pity, which led her to oppose their departure so far
as she dared, continued to affect her; and she bade them farewel under
great depression of spirits, in which her father evidently partook, as
he was extremely agitated, and repeatedly recommended her to the care
and love of her husband in the tenderest manner, together with Frank,
who was not present at their departure, lest his health should be
injured by the stimulus given to his sensibility.
The disorder under which this poor boy laboured, and which had proved
fatal to his brothers, was the occasional rupture of internal blood
vessels, by which his life was frequently placed in danger, and his
general health rendered extremely delicate, though free from pain and
particular complaint. On this account he could never be trusted at
school, or with any assemblage of children, since play would inevitably
be fatal to him, nor could he be subjected to reproof except very
gently administered, since a fit of crying might in his case become
fatal: his life was necessarily dull, and his attainments few; but he
was a child so full of kindness and intelligence, so grateful for
attention, and so humble from a consciousness of dependance, that he
seldom gave occasion for reproof since he had been under the guidance of
Dora, and was generally an object of pity or affection. The more than
feminine delicacy of his complection, and almost ethereal slightness of
his form, aided by his mild blue eyes, and a profusion of pale brown
ringlets, that flowed over his face, gave an idea of angelic beauty in
his person, at the same time that they bespoke the fragile tenure of a
life that was in perpetual jeopardy.
The first care of Mr. Stancliffe was to remove to the late dwelling of
his partner, on account of its convenience as a house of business; and
he appeared to enter on the duties which now rested solely upon him,
with the activity and ability for which Mr. Hemingford had ever given
him credit; but this zeal was of very short duration. Accustomed to
indulgences inconsistent with the daily routine required, as soon as he
became busy, it might truly be said he became indolent; for although he
entered with avidity into all extraordinary duties or pleasures, because
they necessarily proved his powers and excited him to exertions, he sunk
without that stimulus into positive inaction—he must do great things,
or do nothing at all.
Yawning away the morning on a sofa, and making late evenings in gay
parties—never seen on Change, seldom visible in his counting-house,
always willing to invite the foreign merchant to dinner, but never ready
to receive his commissions, or attend to his shipments—trusting all to
servants, yet treating them with a cold hauteur which rendered them
averse to his person, and indifferent to his interest, Mr. Stancliffe in
a very short time changed the tide of public opinion, and private
prosperity; and those who had pitied the young man who was tied to a
partner whose extravagant family had reduced his property, and injured
the credit of the house, now maintained that to the services of
Hemingford alone it had been indebted for stability, and that as the
elder Stancliffe had gained money through his diligence, the younger
must preserve it by the same medium, or lose it.
In the mean time Dora attended to her duties with that quiet, but
unremitting vigilance, which is ever effective; and finding that she
could not, consistent with the situation she filled in society, indulge
her love for reading and drawing, (which she held to be the greatest
pleasures of life,) she gave herself up to those pursuits most agreeable
to her husband, whose pleasure it was that she should be a busy
housekeeper in the early part of the day, and frequently take a part in
musical performances with parties in the evening. Mr. Stancliffe’s
mother had been much of a cook, and although her situation in life had
placed her above the necessity of such employments, had, partly from a
desire of pampering her son’s appetite, and partly to fill up the
vacuity of time, (heavy to an unfurnished mind and undirected taste,)
engaged herself much in culinary employments; and from her example, her
son concluded that all good wives ought to do the same, as he had now
ceased to gaze on Dora’s complection, or examine the form of her
fingers, and the pinkyness of her palms, he thought her cool hands might
be well employed in pastry, of which he was particularly fond.
To win his approbation, and feel rewarded by his smiles, was the first
apparent object of Dora’s life; but yet it is certain, that her heart
was silently engaged in higher hopes and expectations. She trusted that
her own activity would be the stimulant to his, and that her meekness
and self-controul, in the petty vexations and unceasing crosses, which
happen in every establishment, would lead him to endure those thwartings
of circumstances, which every man in business must submit to; and her
gentle admonitions to Frank were frequently of such a nature as to
awaken him to the exercise of the talents she praised, but she never
presumed to give advice, much less to remonstrate, with her husband.
Two hours in the day she constantly dedicated to Frank, who had also
masters to attend him, and now began to make rapid progress in his
education, which Stancliffe aided much by praise, saying frequently,
“aye, my boy, I will soon have you in the counting-house—I will make a
man of you by and bye,” words which Dora construed into general
encouragement; but she learnt with surprise and almost dismay, that he
really intended to place the poor child there, so soon as he could be
rendered in the least degree useful; and upon her proposing to engage a
person to supply her place to him as a governess, when the task became
too laborious for her, she was assured “that it was wholly unnecessary,
for that her sister Harriet might supply her place to him. These were
not times in which to increase the expences of the family beyond what
the necessity of the case required.”
From a young husband, about to become a father for the first time, these
words were cold, and almost harsh; and the heart of the young creature
to whom they were addressed, sunk, as she recollected that she had no
mother, or friend, to whom she could look for comfort or assistance, at
that awful period which every woman trembles to encounter, and which
calls imperatively for all the aids of kindness, and the supports of
consolatory love. The provisions made by a husband for the
accommodations of his beloved wife, and the expected claimant on his
tenderness, may be pardoned for partaking the character of extravagance,
but never ought to diverge in a contrary direction.
Happily for Dora, she was herself so disinterested and generous, that it
was scarcely possible for her to conceive the opposite principles could
operate in the mind of one she loved; and frequent as the proofs of
meanness and selfishness in Stancliffe’s conduct had already been, she
generally imputed them either to deficient consideration, or a habit
contracted from circumstances with which she was unacquainted. She
contrasted the trifling saving he now attempted, with the expence he had
perhaps incurred the day before; and not being aware that those who are
the most covetous, may from the same cause be the most profuse,
concluded, that when her dear Everton did wrong, it was from chance,
(either in saving, or spending,) whenever his action could be construed
into good, she registered it as proceeding from principle and
disposition.
If ever man could be flattered into virtue, Everton Stancliffe appeared
likely to become that man; for unconnected as his wife now was,
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