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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went the counterpane on the ground, and Frank soon found himself in
the very position which that useful article had so lately filled.
“Oh! Master Frank! oh, Master Frank!” said her ladyship, almost in an
hysterical fit of joy; and then she hugged and kissed him as she had
never kissed and hugged her own son since that son had first left the
parent nest.
Frank bore it patiently and with a merry laugh. “But, Lady
Scatcherd,” said he, “what will they all say? you forget I am a man
now,” and he stooped his head as she again pressed her lips upon his
forehead.
“I don’t care what none of ‘em say,” said her ladyship, quite going
back to her old days; “I will kiss my own boy; so I will. Eh, but
Master Frank, this is good of you. A sight of you is good for sore
eyes; and my eyes have been sore enough too since I saw you;” and she
put her apron up to wipe away a tear.
“Yes,” said Frank, gently trying to disengage himself, but not
successfully; “yes, you have had a great loss, Lady Scatcherd. I was
so sorry when I heard of your grief.”
“You always had a soft, kind heart, Master Frank; so you had. God’s
blessing on you! What a fine man you have grown! Deary me! Well, it
seems as though it were only just t’other day like.” And she pushed
him a little off from her, so that she might look the better into his
face.
“Well. Is it all right? I suppose you would hardly know me again now
I’ve got a pair of whiskers?”
“Know you! I should know you well if I saw but the heel of your
foot. Why, what a head of hair you have got, and so dark too! but it
doesn’t curl as it used once.” And she stroked his hair, and looked
into his eyes, and put her hand to his cheeks. “You’ll think me an
old fool, Master Frank: I know that; but you may think what you like.
If I live for the next twenty years you’ll always be my own boy; so
you will.”
By degrees, slow degrees, Frank managed to change the conversation,
and to induce Lady Scatcherd to speak on some other topic than his
own infantine perfections. He affected an indifference as he spoke of
her guest, which would have deceived no one but Lady Scatcherd; but
her it did deceive; and then he asked where Mary was.
“She’s just gone out on her donkey—somewhere about the place. She
rides on a donkey mostly every day. But you’ll stop and take a bit of
dinner with us? Eh, now do ‘ee, Master Frank.”
But Master Frank excused himself. He did not choose to pledge himself
to sit down to dinner with Mary. He did not know in what mood they
might return with regard to each other at dinner-time. He said,
therefore, that he would walk out and, if possible, find Miss Thorne;
and that he would return to the house again before he went.
Lady Scatcherd then began making apologies for Sir Louis. He was an
invalid; the doctor had been with him all the morning, and he was not
yet out of his room.
These apologies Frank willingly accepted, and then made his way as
he could on to the lawn. A gardener, of whom he inquired, offered to
go with him in pursuit of Miss Thorne. This assistance, however, he
declined, and set forth in quest of her, having learnt what were her
most usual haunts. Nor was he directed wrongly; for after walking
about twenty minutes, he saw through the trees the legs of a donkey
moving on the green-sward, at about two hundred yards from him. On
that donkey doubtless sat Mary Thorne.
The donkey was coming towards him; not exactly in a straight line,
but so much so as to make it impossible that Mary should not see him
if he stood still. He did stand still, and soon emerging from the
trees, Mary saw him all but close to her.
Her heart gave a leap within her, but she was so far mistress of
herself as to repress any visible sign of outward emotion. She did
not fall from her donkey, or scream, or burst into tears. She merely
uttered the words, “Mr Gresham!” in a tone of not unnatural surprise.
“Yes,” said he, trying to laugh, but less successful than she had
been in suppressing a show of feeling. “Mr Gresham! I have come over
at last to pay my respects to you. You must have thought me very
uncourteous not to do so before.”
This she denied. “She had not,” she said, “thought him at all
uncivil. She had come to Boxall Hill to be out of the way; and, of
course, had not expected any such formalities.” As she uttered this
she almost blushed at the abrupt truth of what she was saying. But
she was taken so much unawares that she did not know how to make the
truth other than abrupt.
“To be out of the way!” said Frank. “And why should you want to be
out of the way?”
“Oh! there were reasons,” said she, laughing. “Perhaps I have
quarrelled dreadfully with my uncle.”
Frank at the present moment had not about him a scrap of badinage. He
had not a single easy word at his command. He could not answer her
with anything in guise of a joke; so he walked on, not answering at
all.
“I hope all my friends at Greshamsbury are well,” said Mary. “Is
Beatrice quite well?”
“Quite well,” said he.
“And Patience?”
“What, Miss Oriel; yes, I believe so. I haven’t seen her this day or
two.” How was it that Mary felt a little flush of joy, as Frank spoke
in this indifferent way about Miss Oriel’s health?
“I thought she was always a particular friend of yours,” said she.
“What! who? Miss Oriel? So she is! I like her amazingly; so does
Beatrice.” And then he walked about six steps in silence, plucking up
courage for the great attempt. He did pluck up his courage and then
rushed at once to the attack.
“Mary!” said he, and as he spoke he put his hand on the donkey’s
neck, and looked tenderly into her face. He looked tenderly, and, as
Mary’s ear at once told her, his voice sounded more soft than it had
ever sounded before. “Mary, do you remember the last time that we
were together?”
Mary did remember it well. It was on that occasion when he had
treacherously held her hand; on that day when, according to law, he
had become a man; when he had outraged all the propriety of the de
Courcy interest by offering his love to Mary in Augusta’s hearing.
Mary did remember it well; but how was she to speak of it? “It was
your birthday, I think,” said she.
“Yes, it was my birthday. I wonder whether you remember what I said
to you then?”
“I remember that you were very foolish, Mr Gresham.”
“Mary, I have come to repeat my folly;—that is, if it be folly.
I told you then that I loved you, and I dare say that I did so
awkwardly, like a boy. Perhaps I may be just as awkward now; but you
ought at any rate to believe me when you find that a year has not
altered me.”
Mary did not think him at all awkward, and she did believe him. But
how was she to answer him? She had not yet taught herself what answer
she ought to make if he persisted in his suit. She had hitherto been
content to run away from him; but she had done so because she would
not submit to be accused of the indelicacy of putting herself in his
way. She had rebuked him when he first spoke of his love; but she had
done so because she looked on what he said as a boy’s nonsense. She
had schooled herself in obedience to the Greshamsbury doctrines. Was
there any real reason, any reason founded on truth and honesty, why
she should not be a fitting wife to Frank Gresham,—Francis Newbold
Gresham, of Greshamsbury, though he was, or was to be?
He was well born—as well born as any gentleman in England. She
was basely born—as basely born as any lady could be. Was this
sufficient bar against such a match? Mary felt in her heart that some
twelvemonth since, before she knew what little she did now know of
her own story, she would have said it was so. And would she indulge
her own love by inveigling him she loved into a base marriage? But
then reason spoke again. What, after all, was this blood of which she
had taught herself to think so much? Would she have been more honest,
more fit to grace an honest man’s hearthstone, had she been the
legitimate descendant of a score of legitimate duchesses? Was it not
her first duty to think of him—of what would make him happy? Then of
her uncle—what he would approve? Then of herself—what would best
become her modesty; her sense of honour? Could it be well that she
should sacrifice the happiness of two persons to a theoretic love of
pure blood?
So she had argued within herself; not now, sitting on the donkey,
with Frank’s hand before her on the tame brute’s neck; but on other
former occasions as she had ridden along demurely among those trees.
So she had argued; but she had never brought her arguments to a
decision. All manner of thoughts crowded on her to prevent her doing
so. She would think of the squire, and resolve to reject Frank; and
would then remember Lady Arabella, and resolve to accept him. Her
resolutions, however, were most irresolute; and so, when Frank
appeared in person before her, carrying his heart in his hand, she
did not know what answer to make to him. Thus it was with her as with
so many other maidens similarly circumstanced; at last she left it
all to chance.
“You ought, at any rate, to believe me,” said Frank, “when you find
that a year has not altered me.”
“A year should have taught you to be wiser,” said she. “You should
have learnt by this time, Mr Gresham, that your lot and mine are not
cast in the same mould; that our stations in life are different.
Would your father or mother approve of your even coming here to see
me?”
Mary, as she spoke these sensible words, felt that they were “flat,
stale, and unprofitable.” She felt, also, that they were not true in
sense; that they did not come from her heart; that they were not such
as Frank deserved at her hands, and she was ashamed of herself.
“My father I hope will approve of it,” said he. “That my mother
should disapprove of it is a misfortune which I cannot help; but
on this point I will take no answer from my father or mother; the
question is one too personal to myself. Mary, if you say that you
will not, or cannot return my love, I will go away;—not from here
only, but from Greshamsbury. My presence shall not banish you from
all that you hold dear. If you can honestly say that I am nothing to
you, can be nothing to you, I will then tell my mother that she may
be at ease, and I will go away somewhere and get over it as I may.”
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