He Knew He Was Right by Anthony Trollope (books you need to read .txt) 📕
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he there so long? ‘No doubt he has brought a message from Mr
Trevelyan,’ said her sister. ‘I dare say he will send word that I ought
not to have come to my uncle’s house.’ Then, at last, both Mr Outhouse
and Hugh Stanbury came into the room in which they were all sitting.
The greetings were cold and unsatisfactory, and Nora barely allowed
Hugh to touch the tip of her fingers. She was very angry with him, and
yet she knew that her anger was altogether unreasonable. That he had
caused her to refuse a marriage that had so much to attract her was not
his sin, not that; but that, having thus overpowered her by his
influence, he should then have stopped. And yet Nora had told herself
twenty times that it was quite impossible that she should become Hugh
Stanbury’s wife and that, were Hugh Stanbury to ask her, it would
become her to be indignant with him, for daring to make a proposition
so outrageous. And now she was sick at heart, because he did not speak
to her!
He had, of course, come to St. Diddulph’s with a message from
Trevelyan, and his secret was soon told to them all. Trevelyan himself
was upstairs in the sanded parlour of the Full Moon public-house, round
the corner. Mrs Trevelyan, when she heard this, clasped her hands and
bit her lips. What was he there for? If he wanted to see her, why did
he not come boldly to the parsonage? But it soon appeared that he had
no desire to see his wife. ‘I am to take Louey to him,’ said Hugh
Stanbury, ‘if you will allow me.’
‘What to be taken away from me!’ exclaimed the mother. But Hugh assured
her that no such idea had been formed; that he would have concerned
himself in no such stratagem, and that he would himself undertake to
bring the boy back again within an hour. Emily was, of course, anxious
to be informed what other message was to be conveyed to her; but there
was no other message—no message either of love or of instruction.
‘Mr Stanbury,’ said the parson, ‘has left me something in my hands for
you.’ This ‘something’ was given over to her as soon as Stanbury had
left the house, and consisted of cheques for various small sums,
amounting in all to 200 pounds. ‘And he hasn’t said what I am to do
with it?’ Emily asked of her uncle. Mr Outhouse declared that the
cheques had been given to him without any instructions on that head. Mr
Trevelyan had simply expressed his satisfaction that his wife should be
with her uncle and aunt, had sent the money, and had desired to see the
child.
The boy was got ready, and Hugh walked with him in his arms round the
corner, to the Full Moon. He had to pass by the bar, and the barmaid
and the potboy looked at him very hard. ‘There’s a young ‘ooman has to
do with that ere little game,’ said the potboy ‘And it’s two to one the
young ‘ooman has the worst of it,’ said the barmaid. ‘They mostly
does,’ said the potboy, not without some feeling of pride in the
immunities of his sex. ‘Here he is,’ said Hugh, as he entered the
parlour. ‘My boy, there’s papa.’ The child at this time was more than a
year old, and could crawl about and use his own legs with the
assistance of a finger to his little hand, and could utter a sound
which the fond mother interpreted to mean papa; for with all her hot
anger against her husband, the mother was above all things anxious that
her child should be taught to love his father’s name. She would talk of
her separation from her husband as though it must be permanent; she
would declare to her sister how impossible it was that they should ever
again live together; she would repeat to herself over and over the tale
of the injustice that had been done to her, assuring herself that it
was out of the question that she should ever pardon the man; but yet,
at the bottom of her heart, there was a hope that the quarrel should be
healed before her boy would be old enough to understand the nature of
quarrelling. Trevelyan took the child on to his knee, and kissed him;
but the poor little fellow, startled by his transference from one male
set of arms to another, confused by the strangeness of the room, and by
the absence of things familiar to his sight, burst out into loud tears.
He had stood the journey round the corner in Hugh’s arms manfully, and,
though he had looked about him with very serious eyes, as he passed
through the bar, he had borne that, and his carriage up the stairs; but
when he was transferred to his father, whose air, as he took the boy,
was melancholy and lugubrious in the extreme, the poor little fellow
could endure no longer a mode of treatment so unusual, and, with a
grimace which for a moment or two threatened the coming storm, burst
out with an infantile howl. ‘That’s how he has been taught,’ said
Trevelyan.
‘Nonsense,’ said Stanbury. ‘He’s not been taught at all. It’s Nature.’
‘Nature that he should be afraid of his own father! He did not cry when
he was with you.’
‘No as it happened, he did not. I played with him when I was at
Nuncombe; but, of course, one can’t tell when a child will cry, and
when it won’t.’
‘My darling, my dearest, my own son!’ said Trevelyan, caressing the
child, and trying to comfort him; but the poor little fellow only cried
the louder. It was now nearly two months since he had seen his father,
and, when age is counted by months only, almost everything may be
forgotten in six weeks. ‘I suppose you must take him back again,’ said
Trevelyan, sadly.
‘Of course, I must take him back again. Come along, Louey, my boy.’
‘It is cruel very cruel,’ said Trevelyan. ‘No man living could love his
child better than I love mine or, for the matter of that, his wife. It
is very cruel.’
‘The remedy is in your own hands, Trevelyan,’ said Stanbury, as he
marched off with the boy in his arms.
Trevelyan had now become so accustomed to being told by everybody that
he was wrong, and was at the same time so convinced that he was right,
that he regarded the perversity of his friends as a part of the
persecution to which he was subjected. Even Lady Milborough, who
objected to Colonel Osborne quite as strongly as did Trevelyan himself,
even she blamed him now, telling him that he had done wrong to separate
himself from his wife. Mr Bideawhile, the old family lawyer, was of the
same opinion. Trevelyan had spoken to Mr Bideawhile as to the
expediency of making some lasting arrangement for a permanent
maintenance for his wife; but the attorney had told him that nothing of
the kind could be held to be lasting. It was clearly the husband’s duty
to look forward to a reconciliation, and Mr Bideawhile became quite
severe in the tone of rebuke which he assumed. Stanbury treated him
almost as though he were a madman. And as for his wife herself when she
wrote to him she would not even pretend to express any feeling of
affection. And yet, as he thought, no man had ever done more for a
wife. When Stanbury had gone with the child, he sat waiting for him in
the parlour of the public-house, as miserable a man as one could find.
He had promised himself something that should be akin to pleasure in
seeing his boy but it had been all disappointment and pain. What was it
that they expected him to do? What was it that they desired? His wife
had behaved with such indiscretion as almost to have compromised his
honour; and in return for that he was to beg her pardon, confess
himself to have done wrong, and allow her to return in triumph! That
was the light in which he regarded his own position; but he promised to
himself that let his own misery be what it might he would never so
degrade him. The only person who had been true to him was Bozzle. Let
them all look to it. If there were any further intercourse between his
wife and Colonel Osborne, he would take the matter into open court, and
put her away publicly, let Mr Bideawhile say what he might. Bozzle
should see to that and as to himself, he would take himself out of
England and hide himself abroad. Bozzle should know his address, but he
would give it to no one else. Nothing on earth should make him yield to
a woman who had ill-treated him nothing but confession and promise of
amendment on her part. If she would acknowledge and promise, then he
would forgive all, and the events of the last four months should never
again be mentioned by him. So resolving he sat and waited till Stanbury
should return to him.
When Stanbury got back to the parsonage with the boy he had nothing to
do but to take his leave. He would fain have asked permission to come
again, could he have invented any reason for doing so. But the child
was taken from him at once by its mother, and he was left alone with Mr
Outhouse. Nora Rowley did not even show herself, and he hardly knew how
to express sympathy and friendship for the guests at the parsonage,
without seeming to be untrue to his friend Trevelyan. ‘I hope all this
may come to an end soon,’ he said.
‘I hope it may, Mr Stanbury,’ said the clergyman; ‘but to tell you the
truth, it seems to me that Mr Trevelyan is so unreasonable a man, so
much like a madman indeed, that I hardly know how to look forward to
any future happiness for my niece.’ This was spoken with the utmost
severity that Mr Outhouse could assume.
‘And yet no man loves his wife more tenderly.’
‘Tender love should show itself by tender conduct, Mr Stanbury. What
has he done to his wife? He has blackened her name among all his
friends and hers, he has turned her out of his house, he has reviled
her and then thinks to prove how good he is by sending her money. The
only possible excuse is that he must be mad.’
Stanbury went back to the Full Moon, and retraced his steps with his
friend towards Lincoln’s Inn. Two minutes took him from the parsonage
to the public-house, but during these two minutes he resolved that he
would speak his mind roundly to Trevelyan as they returned home.
Trevelyan should either take his wife back again at once, or else he,
Stanbury, would have no more to do with him. He said nothing till they
had threaded together the maze of streets which led them from the
neighbourhood of the Church of St. Diddulph’s into the straight way of
the Commercial Road. Then he began. ‘Trevelyan,’ said he, ‘you are
wrong in all this from beginning to end.’
‘What do you mean?’
‘Just what I say. If there was anything in what your wife did to offend
you, a soft word from you would have put it all right.’
‘A soft word! How do you know what soft words I used?’
‘A soft word now would do it. You have only to bid her come back to
you, and let bygones be bygones, and all would be right.
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