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Dr Thorne by Anthony Trollope - CHAPTER XXIII

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Dr Thorne

CHAPTER XXIII

RET­RO­SPEC­TIVE

It was de­clared in the ear­ly pages of this work that Dr Thorne was to be our hero; but it would ap­pear very much as though he had lat­ter­ly been for­got­ten. Since that evening when he re­tired to rest with­out let­ting Mary share the grievous weight which was on his mind, we have nei­ther seen nor heard aught of him.

It was then full mid­sum­mer, and it now ear­ly spring: and dur­ing the in­ter­ven­ing months the doc­tor had not had a hap­py time of it. On that night, as we have be­fore told, he took his niece to his heart; but he could not then bring him­self to tell her that which it was so im­per­ative that she should know. Like a cow­ard, he would put off the evil hour, till the next morn­ing, and thus robbed him­self of his night’s sleep.

But when the morn­ing came the du­ty could not be post­poned. La­dy Ara­bel­la had giv­en him to un­der­stand that his niece would no longer be a guest at Gre­shams­bury; and it was quite out of the ques­tion that Mary, af­ter this, should be al­lowed to put her foot with­in the gate of the do­main with­out hav­ing learnt what La­dy Ara­bel­la had said. So he told it be­fore break­fast, walk­ing round their lit­tle gar­den, she with her hand in his.

He was per­fect­ly thun­der­struck by the col­lect­ed–nay, cool way in which she re­ceived his tid­ings. She turned pale, in­deed; he felt al­so that her hand some­what trem­bled in his own, and he per­ceived that for a mo­ment her voice shook; but no an­gry word es­caped her lip, nor did she even deign to re­pu­di­ate the charge, which was, as it were, con­veyed in La­dy Ara­bel­la’s re­quest. The doc­tor knew, or thought he knew–nay, he did know–that Mary was whol­ly blame­less in the mat­ter: that she had at least giv­en no en­cour­age­ment to any love on the part of the young heir; but, nev­er­the­less, he had ex­pect­ed that she would avouch her own in­no­cence. This, how­ev­er, she by no means did.

‘La­dy Ara­bel­la is quite right,’ she said, ‘quite right; if she has any fear of that kind, she can­not be too care­ful.’

‘She is a self­ish, proud wom­an,’ said the doc­tor; ‘quite in­dif­fer­ent to the feel­ings of oth­ers; quite care­less how deeply she may hurt her neigh­bours, if, in do­ing so, she may pos­si­bly ben­efit her­self.’

‘She will not hurt me, un­cle, nor yet you. I can live with­out go­ing to Gre­shams­bury.’

‘But it is not to be en­dured that she should dare to cast an im­pu­ta­tion on my dar­ling.’

‘On me, un­cle? She casts no im­pu­ta­tion on me. Frank has been fool­ish: I have said noth­ing of it, for it was not worth while to trou­ble you. But as La­dy Ara­bel­la choos­es to in­ter­fere, I have no right to blame her. He has said what he should not have said; he has been fool­ish. Un­cle, you know I could not pre­vent it.’

‘Let her send him away then, not you; let her ban­ish him.’

‘Un­cle, he is her son. A moth­er can hard­ly send her son away so eas­ily: could you send me away, un­cle?’

He mere­ly an­swered her by twin­ing his arm round her waist and press­ing her to his side. He was well sure that she was bad­ly treat­ed; and yet now that she so un­ac­count­ably took La­dy Ara­bel­la’s part, he hard­ly knew how to make this out plain­ly to be the case.

‘Be­sides, un­cle, Gre­shams­bury is in a man­ner his own; how can he be ban­ished from his fa­ther’s house? No, un­cle; there is an end of my vis­its there. They shall find that I will not thrust my­self in their way.’

And then Mary, with a calm brow and steady gait, went in and made the tea.

And what might be the feel­ings of her heart when she so sen­ten­tious­ly told her un­cle that Frank had been fool­ish? She was of the same age with him; as im­pres­sion­able, though more pow­er­ful in hid­ing such im­pres­sions,–as all wom­en should be; her heart was as warm, her blood as full of life, her in­nate de­sire for the com­pan­ion­ship of some much-​loved ob­ject as strong as his. Frank had been fool­ish in avow­ing his pas­sion. No such fol­ly as that could be laid at her door. But had she been proof against the oth­er fol­ly? Had she been able to walk heart-​whole by his side, while he chat­ted his com­mon­places about love? Yes, they are com­mon­places when we read them in nov­els; com­mon enough, too, to some of us when we write them; but they are by no means com­mon­place when first heard by a young girl in the rich, balmy fra­grance of Ju­ly evening stroll.

Nor are they com­mon­places when so ut­tered for the first or sec­ond time at least, or per­haps the third. ‘Tis a pity that so heav­en­ly a plea­sure should pall up­on the sens­es.

If it was so that Frank’s fol­ly had been lis­tened to with a cer­tain amount of plea­sure, Mary did not even ad­mit so much to her­self. But why should it have been oth­er­wise? Why should she have been less prone to love than he was? Had he not ev­ery­thing which girls do love? which girls should love? which God cre­at­ed no­ble, beau­ti­ful, all but god­like, in or­der that wom­en, all but god­desslike, might love? To love thor­ough­ly, tru­ly, hearti­ly, with her whole body, soul, heart, and strength; should not that be count­ed for a mer­it in a wom­an? And yet we are wont to make a dis­grace of it. We do so most un­nat­ural­ly, most un­rea­son­ably; for we ex­pect our daugh­ters to get them­selves mar­ried off our hands. When the pe­ri­od of that step comes, then love is prop­er enough; but up to that–be­fore that–as re­gards all those pre­lim­inary pas­sages which must, we sup­pose, be nec­es­sary–in all those it be­comes a young la­dy to be icy-​heart­ed as a riv­er-​god in win­ter.

‘O whis­tle and I’ll come to you my lad! O whis­tle and I’ll come to you my lad! Tho’ fa­ther and mither and a’should go mad O whis­tle and I’ll come to you my lad!’

This is the kind of love which a girl should feel be­fore she puts her hand proud­ly in that of her lover, and con­sents that they two shall be made one flesh.

Mary felt no such love as this. She, too, had some in­ner per­cep­tion of that dread des­tiny by which it be­hoved Frank Gre­sham to be fore­warned. She, too–though she had nev­er heard so much said in words–had an al­most in­stinc­tive knowl­edge that his fate re­quired him to mar­ry mon­ey. Think­ing over this in her own way, she was not slow to con­vince her­self that it was out of the ques­tion that she should al­low her­self to love Frank Gre­sham. How­ev­er well her heart might be in­clined to such a feel­ing, it was her du­ty to re­press it. She re­solved, there­fore, to do so; and she some­times flat­tered her­self that she had kept her res­olu­tion.

These were bad times for the doc­tor, and bad times for Mary too. She had de­clared that she could live with­out go­ing to Gre­shams­bury; but she did not find it so easy. She had been go­ing to Gre­sham­bury all her life, and it was cus­tom­ary with her to be there as at home. Such old cus­toms are not bro­ken with­out pain. Had she left the place it would have been far dif­fer­ent; but, as it was, she dai­ly passed the gates, dai­ly saw and spoke to some of the ser­vants, who knew her as well as they did the young ladies of the fam­ily–was in hourly con­tact, as it were, with Gre­shams­bury. It was not on­ly that she did not go there, but that ev­ery one knew that she had sud­den­ly dis­con­tin­ued do­ing so. Yes, she could live with­out go­ing to Gre­shams­bury; but for some time she had but a poor life of it. She felt, nay, al­most heard, that ev­ery man and wom­an, boy and girl in the vil­lage was telling his and her neigh­bour that Mary Thorne no longer went to the house be­cause of La­dy Ara­bel­la and the young squire.

But Beat­rice, of course, came to her. What was she to say to Beat­rice? The truth! Nay, but it is not al­ways so easy to say the truth, even to one’s dear­est friends.

‘But you’ll come up now he has gone?’ said Beat­rice.

‘No, in­deed,’ said Mary; ‘that would hard­ly be pleas­ant to La­dy Ara­bel­la, nor to me ei­ther. No, Trichy, dear­est; my vis­its to dear old Gre­shams­bury are done, done, done: per­haps in some twen­ty years’ time I may be walk­ing down the lawn with your broth­er, and dis­cussing the child­ish days–that is, al­ways, if the then Mrs Gre­sham shall have in­vit­ed me.’

‘How can Frank have been so wrong, so un­kind, so cru­el?’ said Beat­rice.

This, how­ev­er, was a light in which Miss Thorne did not take any plea­sure, in dis­cussing the mat­ter. Her ideas of Frank’s fault, and un­kind­ness and cru­el­ty, were doubt­less dif­fer­ent from those of her sis­ter. Such cru­el­ty was not un­nat­ural­ly ex­cused in her eyes by many cir­cum­stances which Beat­rice did not ful­ly un­der­stand. Mary was quite ready to go hand in hand with La­dy Ara­bel­la and the rest of Gre­shams­bury fold in putting an end, if pos­si­ble, to Frank’s pas­sion: she would give not one a right to ac­cuse her of as­sist­ing to ru­in the young heir; but she could hard­ly bring her­self to ad­mit that he was so very wrong–no, nor yet even so very cru­el.

And then the squire came to see her, and this was a yet hard­er tri­al than the vis­it of Beat­rice. It was so dif­fi­cult for her to speak to him that she could not but wish him away; and yet, had he not come, had he al­to­geth­er ne­glect­ed her, she would have felt it to be un­kind. She had ev­er been his pet, had al­ways re­ceived kind­ness from him.

‘I am sor­ry for all this, Mary; very sor­ry,’ said he, stand­ing up, and hold­ing both her hands in his.

‘It can’t be helped, sir,’ said she, smil­ing.

‘I don’t know,’ said he; ‘I don’t know–it ought to be helped 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 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 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, not 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 that I am the wild beast, and ’tis that they 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 Pa­tience 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 those 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 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 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 mo­nop­olized 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 Gre­sham­buryites 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 the 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 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 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 may 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 if 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 re­al­ize 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 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 not till late to-​mor­row. God bless you, Mary!’ and away the doc­tor went on his cold bleak ride to Box­all Hill.

‘Who is to be his heir?’ As the doc­tor rode along, he could not quite rid his mind of the ques­tion. The poor man now about to die had wealth enough to make many heirs. What if his heart should have soft­ened to­wards his sis­ter’s child! What if Mary should be found to be pos­sessed of such wealth that the Gre­shams should be again be hap­py to wel­come her at Gre­shams­bury!

The doc­tor was not a lover of mon­ey–and he did his best to get rid of such per­ni­cious thoughts. But his long­ings, per­haps, were not so much that Mary should be rich, as that she should have the pow­er of heap­ing coals of fire up­on the heads of those peo­ple who had so in­jured her.