He Knew He Was Right by Anthony Trollope (books you need to read .txt) 📕
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and if I am satisfied with what he does now, surely you need not
grumble.’ Miss Stanbury’s illness had undoubtedly been a great source
of contentment to the family at Heavitree, as they had all been able to
argue that her impending demise was the natural consequence of her
great sin in the matter of Dorothy’s proposed marriage. When, however,
they heard from Mr Martin that she would certainly recover, that Sir
Peter’s edict to that effect had gone forth, they were willing to
acknowledge that Providence, having so far punished the sinner, was
right in staying its hand and abstaining from the final blow. ‘I’m sure
we are delighted,’ said Mrs French, ‘for though she has said cruel
things of us and so untrue, too, yet of course it is our duty to forgive
her. And we do forgive her.’
Dorothy had written three or four notes to Brooke since his departure,
which contained simple bulletins of her aunt’s health. She always began
her letters with ‘My dear Mr Burgess,’ and ended them with ‘yours
truly.’ She never made any allusion to Brooke’s declaration of love, or
gave the slightest sign in her letters to shew that she even remembered
it. At last she wrote to say that her aunt was convalescent; and, in
making this announcement, she allowed herself some enthusiasm of
expression. She was so happy, and was so sure that Mr Burgess would be
equally so! And her aunt had asked after her ‘dear Brooke,’ expressing
her great satisfaction with him, in that he had come down to see her
when she had been almost too ill to see anyone. In answer to this there
came to her a real love-letter from Brooke Burgess. It was the first
occasion on which he had written to her. The little bulletins had
demanded no replies, and had received none. Perhaps there had been a
shade of disappointment on Dorothy’s side, in that she had written
thrice, and had been made rich with no word in return. But, although
her heart had palpitated on hearing the postman’s knock, and had
palpitated in vain, she had told herself that it was all as it should
be. She wrote to him, because she possessed information which it was
necessary that she should communicate. He did not write to her, because
there was nothing for him to tell. Then had come the love-letter, and
in the love-letter there was an imperative demand for a reply.
What was she to do? To have recourse to Priscilla for advice was her
first idea; but she herself believed that she owed a debt of gratitude
to her aunt, which Priscilla would not take into account—the
existence of which Priscilla would by no means admit. She knew
Priscilla’s mind in this matter, and was sure that Priscilla’s advice,
whatever it might be, would be given without any regard to her aunt’s
views. And then Dorothy was altogether ignorant of her aunt’s views.
Her aunt had been very anxious that she should marry Mr Gibson, but had
clearly never admitted into her mind the idea that she might possibly
marry Brooke Burgess; and it seemed to her that she herself would be
dishonest, both to her aunt and to her lover, if she were to bind this
man to herself without her aunt’s knowledge. He was to be her aunt’s
heir, and she was maintained by her aunt’s liberality! Thinking of all
this, she at last resolved that she would take the bull by the horns,
and tell her aunt. She felt that the task would be one almost beyond
her strength. Thrice she went into her aunt’s room, intending to make a
clean breast; Thrice her courage failed her, and she left the room with
her tale untold, excusing herself on various pretexts. Her aunt had
seemed to be not quite so well, or had declared herself to be tired, or
had been a little cross or else Martha had come in at the nick of time.
But there was Brooke Burgess’s letter unanswered, a letter that was read
night and morning, and which was never for an instant out of her mind.
He had demanded a reply, and he had a right at least to that. The
letter had been with her for four entire days before she had ventured
to speak to her aunt on the subject.
On the first of March Miss Stanbury came out of her bedroom for the
first time. Dorothy, on the previous day, had decided on postponing her
communication for this occasion; but, when she found herself sitting in
the little sitting-room up stairs close at her aunt’s elbow, and
perceived the signs of weakness which the new move had made
conspicuous, and heard the invalid declare that the little journey had
been almost too much for her, her heart misgave her. She ought to have
told her tale while her aunt was still in bed. But presently there came
a question, which put her into such a flutter that she was for the time
devoid of all resolution. ‘Has Brooke written?’ said Miss Stanbury.
‘Yes aunt; he has written.’
‘And what did he say?’ Dorothy was struck quite dumb. ‘Is there
anything wrong?’ And now, as Miss Stanbury asked the question, she
seemed herself to have forgotten that she had two minutes before
declared herself to be almost too feeble to speak. ‘I’m sure there is
something wrong. What is it? I will know’
‘There is nothing wrong, Aunt Stanbury’
‘Where is the letter? Let me see it.’
‘I mean there is nothing wrong about him.’
‘What is it, then?’
‘He is quite well, Aunt Stanbury.’
‘Shew me the letter. I will see the letter. I know that there is
something the matter. Do you mean to say you won’t shew me Brooke’s
letter?’
There was a moment’s pause before Dorothy answered. ‘I will shew you
his letter though I am sure he didn’t mean that I should shew it to
anyone.’
‘He hasn’t written evil of me?’
‘No; no; no. He would sooner cut his hand off than say a word bad of
you. He never says or writes anything bad of anybody. But Oh, aunt;
I’ll tell you everything. I should have told you before, only that you
were ill.’
Then Miss Stanbury was frightened. ‘What is it?’ she said hoarsely,
clasping the arms of the great chair, each with a thin, shrivelled
hand.
‘Aunt Stanbury, Brooke—Brooke wants me to be his wife!’
‘What!’
‘You cannot be more surprised than I have been, Aunt Stanbury; and
there has been no fault of mine.’
‘I don’t believe it,’ said the old woman.
‘Now you may read the letter,’ said Dorothy, standing up. She was quite
prepared to be obedient, but she felt that her aunt’s manner of
receiving the information was almost an insult.
‘He must be a fool,’ said Miss Stanbury.
This was hard to hear, and the colour went and came rapidly across
Dorothy’s cheeks as she gave herself a few moments to prepare an
answer. She already perceived that her aunt would be altogether adverse
to the marriage, and that therefore the marriage could never take
place. She had never for a moment allowed herself to think otherwise,
but, nevertheless, the blow was heavy on her. We all know how
constantly hope and expectation will rise high within our own bosoms in
opposition to our own judgment, how we become sanguine in regard to
events which we almost know can never come to pass. So it had been with
Dorothy. Her heart had been almost in a flutter of happiness since she
had had Brooke’s letter in her possession, and yet she never ceased to
declare to herself her own conviction that that letter could lead to no
good result. In regard to her own wishes on the subject she had never
asked herself a single question. As it had been quite beyond her power
to bring herself to endure the idea of marrying Mr Gibson, so it had
been quite impossible to her not to long to be Brooke’s wife from the
moment in which a suggestion to that effect had fallen from his lips.
This was a state of things so certain, so much a matter of course,
that, though she had not spoken a word to him in which she owned her
love, she had never for a moment doubted that he knew the truth and
that everybody else concerned would know it too. But she did not
suppose that her wishes would go for anything with her aunt. Brooke
Burgess was to become a rich man as her aunt’s heir, and her aunt would
of course have her own ideas about Brooke’s advancement in life. She
was quite prepared to submit without quarrelling when her aunt should
tell her that the idea must not be entertained. But the order might be
given, the prohibition might be pronounced, without an insult to her
own feelings as a woman. ‘He must he a fool,’ Miss Stanbury had said,
and Dorothy took time to collect her thoughts before she would reply.
In the meantime her aunt finished the reading of the letter.
‘He may be foolish in this,’ Dorothy said; ‘but I don’t think you
should call him a fool.’
‘I shall call him what I please. I suppose this was going on at the
time when you refused Mr Gibson.’
‘Nothing was going on. Nothing has gone on at all,’ said Dorothy, with
as much indignation as she was able to assume.
‘How can you tell me that? That is an untruth.’
‘It is not an untruth,’ said Dorothy, almost sobbing, but driven at the
same time to much anger.
‘Do you mean to say that this is the first you ever heard of it?’ And
she held out the letter, shaking it in her thin hand.
‘I have never said so, Aunt Stanbury.’
‘Yes, you did.’
‘I said that nothing was going on, when Mr Gibson was—. If you choose
to suspect me, Aunt Stanbury, I’ll go away. I won’t stay here if you
suspect me. When Brooke spoke to me, I told him you wouldn’t like it.’
‘Of course I don’t like it.’ But she gave no reason why she did not
like it.
‘And there was nothing more till this letter came. I couldn’t help his
writing to me. It wasn’t my fault.’
‘Psha!’
‘If you are angry, I am very sorry. But you haven’t a right to be
angry.’
‘Go on, Dorothy; go on. I’m so weak that I can hardly stir myself; it’s
the first moment that I’ve been out of my bed for weeks and of course
you can say what you please. I know what it will be. I shall have to
take to my bed again, and then in a very little time you can both make
fools of yourselves just as you like.’
This was an argument against which Dorothy of course found it to be
quite impossible to make continued combat. She could only shuffle her
letter back into her pocket, and be, if possible, more assiduous than
ever in her attentions to the invalid. She knew that she had been
treated most unjustly, and there would be a question to be answered as
soon as her aunt should be well as to the possibility of her remaining
in the Close subject to such injustice; but let her aunt say what she
might, or do what she might, Dorothy could not leave her for the
present. Miss Stanbury sat for a considerable time quite motionless,
with her eyes closed, and did not stir or make signs of
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