Doctor Thorne by Anthony Trollope (epub ebook reader .TXT) 📕
The two eldest, Augusta and Beatrice, lived, and were apparently likely to live. The four next faded and died one after another--all in the same sad year--and were laid in the neat, new cemetery at Torquay. Then came a pair, born at one birth, weak, delicate, frail little flowers, with dark hair and dark eyes, and thin, long, pale faces, with long, bony hands, and long bony feet, whom men looked on as fated to follow their sisters with quick steps. Hitherto, however, they had not followed them, nor had they suffered as their sisters had suffered; and some people at Greshamsbury attributed this to the fact that a change had been made in the family medical practitioner.
Then came the youngest of the flock, she whose birth we have said was not heralded with loud joy; for when she came into the world, four others, with pale temples, wan, worn cheeks,
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somehow—I am quite sure you have not been to blame.”
“No,” said she, very quietly, as though the position was one quite
a matter of course. “I don’t think I have been very much to blame.
There will be misfortunes sometimes when nobody is to blame.”
“I do not quite understand it all,” said the squire; “but if Frank—”
“Oh! we will not talk about him,” said she, still laughing gently.
“You can understand, Mary, how dear he must be to me; but if—”
“Mr Gresham, I would not for worlds be the cause of any
unpleasantness between you and him.”
“But I cannot bear to think that we have banished you, Mary.”
“It cannot be helped. Things will all come right in time.”
“But you will be so lonely here.”
“Oh! I shall get over all that. Here, you know, Mr Gresham, ‘I am
monarch of all I survey;’ and there is a great deal in that.”
The squire did not quite catch her meaning, but a glimmering of it
did reach him. It was competent to Lady Arabella to banish her from
Greshamsbury; it was within the sphere of the squire’s duties to
prohibit his son from an imprudent match; it was for the Greshams to
guard their Greshamsbury treasure as best they could within their
own territories: but let them beware that they did not attack her on
hers. In obedience to the first expression of their wishes, she had
submitted herself to this public mark of their disapproval because
she had seen at once, with her clear intellect, that they were only
doing that which her conscience must approve. Without a murmur,
therefore, she consented to be pointed at as the young lady who had
been turned out of Greshamsbury because of the young squire. She had
no help for it. But let them take care that they did not go beyond
that. Outside those Greshamsbury gates she and Frank Gresham, she
and Lady Arabella met on equal terms; let them each fight their own
battle.
The squire kissed her forehead affectionately and took his leave,
feeling, somehow, that he had been excused and pitied, and made much
of; whereas he had called on his young neighbour with the intention
of excusing, and pitying, and making much of her. He was not
quite comfortable as he left the house; but, nevertheless, he was
sufficiently honest-hearted to own to himself that Mary Thorne was a
fine girl. Only that it was so absolutely necessary that Frank should
marry money—and only, also, that poor Mary was such a birthless
foundling in the world’s esteem—only, but for these things, what a
wife she would have made for that son of his!
To one person only did she talk freely on the subject, and that one
was Patience Oriel; and even with her the freedom was rather of the
mind than of the heart. She never said a word of her feeling with
reference to Frank, but she said much of her position in the village,
and of the necessity she was under to keep out of the way.
“It is very hard,” said Patience, “that the offence should be all
with him, and the punishment all with you.”
“Oh! as for that,” said Mary, laughing, “I will not confess to any
offence, nor yet to any punishment; certainly not to any punishment.”
“It comes to the same thing in the end.”
“No, not so, Patience; there is always some little sting of disgrace
in punishment: now I am not going to hold myself in the least
disgraced.”
“But, Mary, you must meet the Greshams sometimes.”
“Meet them! I have not the slightest objection on earth to meet all,
or any of them. They are not a whit dangerous to me, my dear. ‘Tis
I that am the wild beast, and ‘tis they that must avoid me,” and
then she added, after a pause—slightly blushing—“I have not the
slightest objection even to meet him if chance brings him in my way.
Let them look to that. My undertaking goes no further than this, that
I will not be seen within their gates.”
But the girls so far understood each other that Patience undertook,
rather than promised, to give Mary what assistance she could; and,
despite Mary’s bravado, she was in such a position that she much
wanted the assistance of such a friend as Miss Oriel.
After an absence of some six weeks, Frank, as we have seen, returned
home. Nothing was said to him, except by Beatrice, as to these new
Greshamsbury arrangements; and he, when he found Mary was not at the
place, went boldly to the doctor’s house to seek her. But it has been
seen, also, that she discreetly kept out of his way. This she had
thought fit to do when the time came, although she had been so ready
with her boast that she had no objection on earth to meet him.
After that there had been the Christmas vacation, and Mary had again
found discretion to be the better part of valour. This was doubtless
disagreeable enough. She had no particular wish to spend her
Christmas with Miss Oriel’s aunt instead of at her uncle’s fireside.
Indeed, her Christmas festivities had hitherto been kept at
Greshamsbury, the doctor and herself having made a part of the family
circle there assembled. This was out of the question now; and perhaps
the absolute change to old Miss Oriel’s house was better for her than
the lesser change to her uncle’s drawing-room. Besides, how could she
have demeaned herself when she met Frank in their parish church? All
this had been fully understood by Patience, and, therefore, had this
Christmas visit been planned.
And then this affair of Frank and Mary Thorne ceased for a while to
be talked of at Greshamsbury, for that other affair of Mr Moffat and
Augusta monopolised the rural attention. Augusta, as we have said,
bore it well, and sustained the public gaze without much flinching.
Her period of martyrdom, however, did not last long, for soon
the news arrived of Frank’s exploit in Pall Mall; and then the
Greshamsburyites forgot to think much more of Augusta, being fully
occupied in thinking of what Frank had done.
The tale, as it was first told, declared that Frank had followed Mr
Moffat up into his club; had dragged him thence into the middle of
Pall Mall, and had then slaughtered him on the spot. This was by
degrees modified till a sobered fiction became generally prevalent,
that Mr Moffat was lying somewhere, still alive, but with all his
bones in a general state of compound fracture. This adventure again
brought Frank into the ascendant, and restored to Mary her former
position as the Greshamsbury heroine.
“One cannot wonder at his being very angry,” said Beatrice,
discussing the matter with Mary—very imprudently.
“Wonder—no; the wonder would have been if he had not been angry. One
might have been quite sure that he would have been angry enough.”
“I suppose it was not absolutely right for him to beat Mr Moffat,”
said Beatrice, apologetically.
“Not right, Trichy? I think he was very right.”
“Not to beat him so very much, Mary!”
“Oh, I suppose a man can’t exactly stand measuring how much he does
these things. I like your brother for what he has done, and I say
so frankly—though I suppose I ought to eat my tongue out before I
should say such a thing, eh, Trichy?”
“I don’t know that there’s any harm in that,” said Beatrice,
demurely. “If you both liked each other there would be no harm in
that—if that were all.”
“Wouldn’t there?” said Mary, in a low tone of bantering satire; “that
is so kind, Trichy, coming from you—from one of the family, you
know.”
“You are well aware, Mary, that if I could have my wishes—”
“Yes: I am well aware what a paragon of goodness you are. If you
could have your way I should be admitted into heaven again; shouldn’t
I? Only with this proviso, that if a stray angel should ever whisper
to me with bated breath, mistaking me, perchance, for one of his own
class, I should be bound to close my ears to his whispering, and
remind him humbly that I was only a poor mortal. You would trust me
so far, wouldn’t you, Trichy?”
“I would trust you in any way, Mary. But I think you are unkind in
saying such things to me.”
“Into whatever heaven I am admitted, I will go only on this
understanding: that I am to be as good an angel as any of those
around me.”
“But, Mary dear, why do you say this to me?”
“Because—because—because—ah me! Why, indeed, but because I have no
one else to say it to. Certainly not because you have deserved it.”
“It seems as though you were finding fault with me.”
“And so I am; how can I do other than find fault? How can I help
being sore? Trichy, you hardly realise my position; you hardly see
how I am treated; how I am forced to allow myself to be treated
without a sign of complaint. You don’t see it all. If you did, you
would not wonder that I should be sore.”
Beatrice did not quite see it all; but she saw enough of it to know
that Mary was to be pitied; so, instead of scolding her friend
for being cross, she threw her arms round her and kissed her
affectionately.
But the doctor all this time suffered much more than his niece did.
He could not complain out loudly; he could not aver that his pet lamb
had been ill treated; he could not even have the pleasure of openly
quarrelling with Lady Arabella; but not the less did he feel it to
be most cruel that Mary should have to live before the world as an
outcast, because it had pleased Frank Gresham to fall in love with
her.
But his bitterness was not chiefly against Frank. That Frank had been
very foolish he could not but acknowledge; but it was a kind of folly
for which the doctor was able to find excuse. For Lady Arabella’s
cold propriety he could find no excuse.
With the squire he had spoken no word on the subject up to this
period of which we are now writing. With her ladyship he had never
spoken on it since that day when she had told him that Mary was
to come no more to Greshamsbury. He never now dined or spent his
evenings at Greshamsbury, and seldom was to be seen at the house,
except when called in professionally. The squire, indeed, he
frequently met; but he either did so in the village, or out on
horseback, or at his own house.
When the doctor first heard that Sir Roger had lost his seat, and had
returned to Boxall Hill, he resolved to go over and see him. But the
visit was postponed from day to day, as visits are postponed which
may be made any day, and he did not in fact go till he was summoned
there somewhat peremptorily. A message was brought to him one evening
to say that Sir Roger had been struck by paralysis, and that not a
moment was to be lost.
“It always happens at night,” said Mary, who had more sympathy for
the living uncle whom she did know, than for the other dying uncle
whom she did not know.
“What matters?—there—just give me my scarf. In all probability I
may not be home to-night—perhaps
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