He Knew He Was Right by Anthony Trollope (books you need to read .txt) 📕
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‘If he wheeled a big barrow, you’d have to wheel a little one,’ said
her sister.
‘Then I’d do it. I shouldn’t mind. There has been this advantage in St.
Diddulph’s, that nothing can be triste, nothing dull, nothing ugly
after it.’
‘It may be so with you, Nora, that is in imagination.’
‘What I mean is that living here has taught me much that I never could
have learned in Curzon Street. I used to think myself such a fine young
woman but, upon my word, I think myself a finer one now.’
‘I don’t quite know what you mean.’
‘I don’t quite know myself; but I nearly know. I do know this, that
I’ve made up my own mind about what I mean to do.’
‘You’ll change it, dear, when mamma is here, and things are comfortable
again. It’s my belief that Mr Glascock would come to you again tomorrow
if you would let him.’ Mrs Trevelyan was, naturally, in complete
ignorance of the experience of transatlantic excellence which Mr
Glascock had encountered in Italy.
‘But I certainly should not let him. How would it be possible after
what I wrote to Hugh?’
‘All that might pass away,’ said Mrs Trevelyan slowly, after a long
pause.
‘All what might pass away? Have I not given him a distinct promise?
Have I not told him that I loved him, and sworn that I would be true to
him? Can that be made to pass away, even if one wished it?’
‘Of course it can. Nothing need be fixed for you till you have stood at
the altar with a man and been made his wife. You may choose still. I
can never choose again.’
‘I never will, at any rate,’ said Nora.
Then there was another pause. ‘It seems strange to me, Nora,’ said the
elder sister, ‘that after what you have seen you should be so keen to
be married to any one.’
‘What is a girl to do?’
‘Better drown herself than do as I have done. Only think what there is
before me. What I have gone through is nothing to it. Of course I must
go back to the Islands. Where else am I to live? Who else will take
me?’
‘Come to us,’ said Nora.
‘Us, Nora! Who are the us? But in no way would that be possible. Papa
will be here, perhaps, for six months.’ Nora thought it quite possible
that she might have a home of her own before six months were passed,
even though she might be wheeling the smaller barrow, but she would not
say so. ‘And by that time everything must be decided.’
‘I suppose it must.’
‘Of course papa and mamma must go back,’ said Mrs Trevelyan.
‘Papa might take a pension. He’s entitled to a pension now.’
‘He’ll never do that as long as he can have employment. They’ll go
back, and I must go with them. Who else would take me in?’
‘I know who would take you in, Emily.’
‘My darling, that is romance. As for myself, I should not care where I
went. If it were even to remain here, I could bear it.’
‘I could not,’ said Nora, decisively.
‘It is so different with you, dear. I don’t suppose it is possible I
should take my boy with me to the Islands; and how am I to go anywhere
without him?’ Then she broke down, and fell into a paroxysm of sobs,
and was in very truth a broken-hearted woman.
Nora was silent for some minutes, but at last she spoke. ‘Why do you
not go back to him, Emily?’
‘How am I to go back to him? What am I to do to make him take me back?’
At this very moment Trevelyan was in the house, but they did not know
it.
‘Write to him,’ said Nora.
‘What am I to say? In very truth I do believe that he is mad. If I
write to him, should I defend myself or accuse myself? A dozen times I
have striven to write such a letter, not that I might send it, but that
I might find what I could say should I ever wish to send it. And it is
impossible. I can only tell him how unjust he has been, how cruel, how
mad, how wicked!’
‘Could you not say to him simply this? “Let us be together, wherever it
may be; and let bygones be bygones.”’
‘While he is watching me with a policeman? While he is still thinking
that I entertain a lover? While he believes that I am the base thing
that he has dared to think me?’
‘He has never believed it.’
‘Then how can he be such a villain as to treat me like this? I could
not go to him, Nora not unless I went to him as one who was known to be
mad, over whom in his wretched condition it would be my duty to keep
watch. In no other way could I overcome my abhorrence of the outrages
to which he has subjected me.’
‘But for the child’s sake, Emily.’
‘Ah, yes! If it were simply to grovel in the dust before him it should
be done. If humiliation would suffice, or any self-abasement that were
possible to me! But I should be false if I said that I look forward to
any such possibility. How can he wish to have me back again after what
he has said and done? I am his wife, and he has disgraced me before all
men by his own words. And what have I done, that I should not have done;
what left undone on his behalf that I should have done? It is hard that
the foolish workings of a weak man’s mind should be able so completely
to ruin the prospects of a woman’s life!’
Nora was beginning to answer this by attempting to shew that the
husband’s madness was, perhaps, only temporary, when there came a knock
at the door, and Mrs Outhouse was at once in the room. It will be well
that the reader should know what had taken place at the parsonage while
the two sisters had been together upstairs, so that the nature of Mrs
Outhouse’s mission to them may explain itself. Mr Outhouse had been in
his closet downstairs, when the maidservant brought word to him that
Mr Trevelyan was in the parlour, and was desirous of seeing him.
‘Mr Trevelyan!’ said the unfortunate clergyman, holding up both his
hands. The servant understood the tragic importance of the occasion
quite as well as did her master, and simply shook her head. ‘Has your
mistress seen him?’ said the master. The girl again shook her head.
‘Ask your mistress to come to me,’ said the clergyman. Then the girl
disappeared; and in a few minutes Mrs Outhouse, equally imbued with the
tragic elements of the day, was with her husband.
Mr Outhouse began by declaring that no consideration should induce him
to see Trevelyan, and commissioned his wife to go to the man and tell
him that he must leave the house. When the unfortunate woman expressed
an opinion that Trevelyan had some legal rights upon which he might
probably insist, Mr Outhouse asserted roundly that he could have no
legal right to remain in that parsonage against the will of the rector.
‘If he wants to claim his wife and child, he must do it by law not by
force; and thank God, Sir Marmaduke will be here before he can do
that.’ ‘But I can’t make him go,’ said Mrs Outhouse. ‘Tell him that
you’ll send for a policeman,’ said the clergyman.
It had come to pass that there had been messages backwards and forwards
between the visitor and the master of the house, all carried by that
unfortunate lady.
Trevelyan did not demand that his wife and child should be given up to
him, did not even, on this occasion, demand that his boy should be
surrendered to him now, at once. He did say, very repeatedly, that of
course he must have his boy, but seemed to imply that, under certain
circumstances, he would be willing to take his wife to live with him
again. This appeared to Mrs Outhouse to be so manifestly the one thing
that was desirable, to be the only solution of the difficulty that could
be admitted as a solution at all, that she went to work on that hint,
and ventured to entertain a hope that a reconciliation might be
effected. She implored her husband to lend a hand to the work, by which
she intended to imply that he should not only see Trevelyan, but
consent to meet the sinner on friendly terms. But Mr Outhouse was on
the occasion ever more than customarily obstinate. His wife might do
what she liked. He would neither meddle nor make. He would not
willingly see Mr Trevelyan in his own house unless, indeed, Mr
Trevelyan should attempt to force his way up into the nursery. Then he
said that which left no doubt on his wife’s mind that, should any
violence be attempted, her husband would manfully join the melee.
But it soon became evident that no such attempt was to be made on that
day. Trevelyan was lachrymose, heartbroken, and a sight pitiable to
behold. When Mrs Outhouse loudly asserted that his wife had not sinned
against him in the least ‘not in a tittle, Mr Trevelyan,’ she repeated
over and over again he began to assert himself, declaring that she had
seen the man in Devonshire, and corresponded with him since she had
been at St. Diddulph’s; and when the lady had declared that the latter
assertion was untrue, he had shaken his head, and had told her that
perhaps she did not know all. But the misery of the man had its effect
upon her, and at last she proposed to be the bearer of a message to his
wife. He had demanded to see his child, offering his promise that he
would not attempt to take the boy by force on this occasion saying,
also, that his claim by law was so good, that no force could be
necessary. It was proposed by Mrs Outhouse that he should first see the
mother, and to this he at last assented. How blessed a thing would it be
if these two persons could be induced to forget the troubles of the
last twelve months, and once more to love and trust each other! ‘But,
sir,’ said Mrs Outhouse, putting her hand upon his arm ‘you must not
upbraid her, for she will not bear it. ‘She knows nothing of what is due
to a husband,’ said Trevelyan, gloomily. The task was not hopeful; but,
nevertheless, the poor woman resolved to do her best.
And now Mrs Outhouse was in her niece’s room, asking her to go down and
see her husband. Little Louis had at the time been with the nurse, and
the very moment that the mother heard that the child’s father was in
the house, she jumped up and rushed away to get possession of her
treasure. ‘Has he come for baby?’ Nora asked in dismay. Then Mrs
Outhouse, anxious to obtain a convert to her present views, boldly
declared that Mr Trevelyan had no such intention. Mrs Trevelyan came
back at once with the boy, and then listened to all her aunt’s
arguments. ‘But I will not take baby with me,’ she said. At last it was
decided that she should go down alone, and that the child should
afterwards be taken to his father in the drawing-room; Mrs Outhouse
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