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Dr Thorne by Anthony Trollope - CHAPTER VII

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Dr Thorne

CHAPTER VII

THE DOC­TOR’S GAR­DEN

Mary had con­trived to qui­et her lover with con­sid­er­able pro­pri­ety of de­meanour. Then came on her the some­what hard­er task of qui­et­ing her­self. Young ladies, on the whole, are per­haps quite as sus­cep­ti­ble of the af­ter feel­ings as young gen­tle­men are. Now Frank Gre­sham, was hand­some, ami­able, by no means a fool in in­tel­lect, ex­cel­lent in heart; and he was, more­over, a gen­tle­man, be­ing the son of Mr Gre­sham of Gre­shams­bury. Mary had been, as it were, brought up to love him. Had aught but good hap­pened to him, she would have cried as for a broth­er. It must not there­fore be sup­posed that when Frank Gre­sham told her that he loved her, she had heard it al­to­geth­er un­con­cerned.

He had not, per­haps, made his dec­la­ra­tion with that pro­pri­ety of lan­guage in which such scenes are gen­er­al­ly de­scribed as be­ing car­ried on. Ladies may per­haps think that Mary should have been de­terred, by the very boy­ish­ness of his man­ner, from think­ing at all se­ri­ous­ly on the sub­ject. His ‘will you, won’t you–do you, don’t you?’ does not sound like the po­et­ic rap­tures of a high­ly in­spired lover. But, nev­er­the­less, there had been warmth, and a re­al­ity in it not in it­self re­pul­sive; and Mary’s anger–anger? no, not anger–her ob­jec­tions to the dec­la­ra­tions were prob­ably not based on the ab­sur­di­ty of her lover’s lan­guage.

We are in­clined to think that these mat­ters are not al­ways dis­cussed by mor­tal lovers in the po­et­ical­ly pas­sion­ate phrase­ol­ogy which is gen­er­al­ly thought to be ap­pro­pri­ate for their de­scrip­tion. A man can­not well de­scribe that which he has nev­er seen or heard; but the ab­so­lute words and acts of one such scene did once come to the au­thor’s knowl­edge. The cou­ple were by no means ple­beian, or be­low the prop­er stan­dard of high bear­ing and high breed­ing; they were a hand­some pair, liv­ing among ed­ucat­ed peo­ple, suf­fi­cient­ly giv­en to men­tal pur­suits, and in ev­ery way what a pair of po­lite lovers ought to be. The all-​im­por­tant con­ver­sa­tion passed in this wise. The site of the pas­sion­ate scene was the sea-​shore, on which they were walk­ing, in au­tumn.

Gen­tle­man. ‘Well, Miss –, the long and short of it is this: here I am; you can take me or leave me.’

La­dy-​scratch­ing a gut­ter on the sand with her para­sol, so as to al­low a lit­tle salt wa­ter to run out of one hole in­to an­oth­er. ‘Of course, I know that’s all non­sense.’

Gen­tle­man. ‘Non­sense! By Jove, it isn’t non­sense at all: come, Jane; here I am: come, at any rate you can say some­thing.’

La­dy. ‘Yes, I sup­pose I can say some­thing.’

Gen­tle­man. ‘Well, which is it to be; take me or leave me?’

La­dy–very slow­ly, and with a voice per­haps hard­ly ar­tic­ulate, car­ry­ing on, at the same time, her en­gi­neer­ing works on a wider scale. ‘Well, I don’t ex­act­ly want to leave you.’

And so the mat­ter was set­tled: set­tled with much pro­pri­ety and sat­is­fac­tion; and both the la­dy and gen­tle­man would have thought, had they ev­er thought about the mat­ter at all, that this, the sweet­est mo­ment of their lives, had been graced by all the po­et­ry by which such mo­ments ought to be hal­lowed.

When Mary had, as she thought, prop­er­ly sub­dued young Frank, the of­fer of whose love she, at any rate, knew was, at such a pe­ri­od of his life, an ut­ter ab­sur­di­ty, then she found it nec­es­sary to sub­due her­self. What hap­pi­ness on earth could be greater than the pos­ses­sion of such a love, had the true pos­ses­sion been just­ly and hon­est­ly with­in her reach? What man could be more lov­able than such a man as would grow from such a boy? And then, did she not love him–love him al­ready, with­out wait­ing for any change? Did she not feel that there was that about him, about him and about her­self, too, which might so well fit them for each oth­er? It would be so sweet to be the sis­ter of Beat­rice, the daugh­ter of the squire, to be­long to Gre­shams­bury as a part and par­cel of it­self.

But though she could not re­strain these thoughts, it nev­er for a mo­ment oc­curred to her to take Frank’s of­fer in earnest. Though she was a grown wom­an, he was still a boy. He would have to see the world be­fore he set­tled in it, and would change his mind about wom­an half a score of times be­fore he mar­ried. Then, too, though she did not like the La­dy Ara­bel­la, she felt that she owed some­thing, if not to her kind­ness, at least to her for­bear­ance; and she knew, felt in­ward­ly cer­tain, that she would be do­ing wrong, that the world would say that she was do­ing wrong, that her un­cle would think her wrong, if she en­deav­oured to take ad­van­tage of what had passed.

She had not for an in­stant doubt­ed; not for a mo­ment had she con­tem­plat­ed it as pos­si­ble that she should ev­er be­come Mrs Gre­sham be­cause Frank had of­fered to make her so; but, nev­er­the­less, she could not help think­ing of what had oc­curred–of think­ing of it, most prob­ably much more than Frank did him­self.

A day or two af­ter­wards, on the evening be­fore Frank’s birth­day, she was alone with her un­cle, walk­ing in the gar­den be­hind their house, and she then es­sayed to ques­tion him, with the ob­ject of learn­ing if she were fit­ted by her birth to be the wife of such a one as Frank Gre­sham. They were in the habit of walk­ing there to­geth­er when he hap­pened to be at home of a sum­mer’s evening. This was not of­ten the case, for his hours of labour ex­tend­ed much be­yond those usu­al to the up­per work­ing world, the hours, name­ly, be­tween break­fast and din­ner; but those min­utes that they did thus pass to­geth­er, the doc­tor re­gard­ed as per­haps the pleas­an­test of his life.

‘Un­cle,’ said she, af­ter a while, ‘what do you think of this mar­riage of Miss Gre­sham’s?’

‘Well, Min­nie’–such was his name of en­dear­ment for her–’I can’t say I have thought much about it, and I don’t sup­pose any­body else has ei­ther.’

‘She must think about it, of course; and so must he, I sup­pose.’

‘I’m not so sure of that. Some folks would nev­er get mar­ried if they had to trou­ble them­selves with think­ing about it.’

‘I sup­pose that’s why you nev­er got mar­ried, un­cle?’

‘Ei­ther that, or think­ing of it too much. One is as bad as the oth­er.’

‘Well, I have been think­ing about it, at any rate, un­cle.’

‘That’s very good of you; that will save me the trou­ble; and per­haps save Miss Gre­sham too. If you have thought it over thor­ough­ly, that will do for all.’

‘I be­lieve Mr Mof­fat is a man of no fam­ily.’

‘He’ll mend in that point, no doubt, when he has got a wife.’

‘Un­cle, you’re a goose; and what is worse, a very pro­vok­ing goose.’

‘Niece, you’re a gan­der; and what is worse, a very sil­ly gan­der. What is Mr Mof­fat’s fam­ily to you, and me? Mr Mof­fat has that which ranks above fam­ily hon­ours. He is a very rich man.’

‘Yes,’ said Mary, ‘I know he is rich; and a rich man I sup­pose can buy any­thing–ex­cept a wom­an that is worth hav­ing.’

‘A rich man can buy any­thing,’ said the doc­tor; ‘not that I meant to say that Mr Mof­fat has bought Miss Gre­sham. I have no doubt that they will suit each oth­er very well,’ he added with an air of de­ci­sive au­thor­ity, as though he had fin­ished the sub­ject.

But his niece was de­ter­mined not to let him pass so. ‘Now, un­cle,’said she, ‘you know you are pre­tend­ing to a great deal of world­ly wis­dom, which, af­ter all, is not wis­dom at all in your eyes.’

‘Am I?’

‘You know you are: and as for the im­pro­pri­ety of dis­cussing Miss Gre­sham’s mar­riage–’

‘I did not say it was im­prop­er.’

‘Oh, yes, you did; of course such things must be dis­cussed. How is one to have an opin­ion if one does not get it by look­ing at the things that hap­pen around us?’

‘Now I am go­ing to be blown up,’ said Dr Thorne.

‘Dear un­cle, do be se­ri­ous with me.’

‘Well, then, se­ri­ous­ly, I hope Miss Gre­sham will be very hap­py as Mrs Mof­fat.’

‘Of course you do: so do I. I hope it as much as I can hope what I don’t at all see ground for ex­pect­ing.’

‘Peo­ple con­stant­ly hope with­out any such ground.’

‘Well, then, I’ll hope in this case. But, un­cle–’

‘Well, my dear?’

‘I want your opin­ion, tru­ly and re­al­ly. If you were a girl–’

‘I am per­fect­ly un­able to give any opin­ion found­ed on so strange an hy­poth­esis.’

‘Well; but if you were a mar­ry­ing man.’

‘The hy­poth­esis is quite as much out of my way.’

‘But, un­cle, I am a girl, and per­haps I may mar­ry;–or at any rate think of mar­ry­ing some day.’

‘The lat­ter al­ter­na­tive is cer­tain­ly pos­si­ble enough.’

‘There­fore, in see­ing a friend tak­ing such a step, I can­not but spec­ulate on the mat­ter as though I were my­self in her place. If I were Miss Gre­sham, should I be right?’

‘But, Min­nie, you are not Miss Gre­sham.’

‘No, I am Mary Thorne; it is a very dif­fer­ent thing, I know. I sup­pose I might mar­ry any one with­out de­grad­ing my­self.’

It was al­most ill-​na­tured of her to say this; but she had not meant to say it in the sense which the sounds seemed to bear. She had failed in be­ing able to bring her un­cle to the point she wished by the road she had planned, and in seek­ing an­oth­er road, she had abrupt­ly fall­en in­to un­pleas­ant places.

‘I should be very sor­ry that my niece should think so,’ said he; ‘and am sor­ry, too, that she should say so. But, Mary, to tell the truth, I hard­ly know at what you are driv­ing. You are, I think, not so clear mind­ed–cer­tain­ly, not so clear word­ed–as is usu­al with you.’

‘I will tell you, un­cle;’ and, in­stead of look­ing up in­to his face, she turned her eyes down on to the green lawn be­neath her feet.

‘Well, Min­nie, what is it?’ and he took both her hands in his.

‘I think that Miss Gre­sham should not mar­ry Mr Mof­fat. I think so be­cause her fam­ily is high and no­ble, and be­cause he is low and ig­no­ble. When one has an opin­ion on such mat­ters, one can­not but ap­ply it to things and peo­ple around one; and hav­ing ap­plied my opin­ion to her, the next step nat­ural­ly is to ap­ply it to my­self. Were I Miss Gre­sham, I would not mar­ry Mr Mof­fat though he rolled in gold. I know where to rank Miss Gre­sham. What I want to know is, where I ought to rank my­self?’

They had been stand­ing when she com­menced he last speech; but as she fin­ished it, the doc­tor moved on again, and she moved with him. He walked on very slow­ly with­out an­swer­ing her; and she, out of her full mind, pur­sued aloud the tenor of her thoughts.

‘That does not fol­low,’ said the doc­tor quick­ly. ‘A man rais­es a wom­an to his own stan­dard, but a wom­an must take that of her hus­band.’

Again they were silent, and again they walked on, Mary hold­ing her un­cle’s arm with both her hands. She was de­ter­mined, how­ev­er, to come to the point, and af­ter con­sid­er­ing for a while how best she might do it, she ceased to beat any longer about the bush, and asked him a plain ques­tion.

‘The Thornes are as good a fam­ily as the Gre­shams are they not?’

‘In ab­so­lute ge­neal­ogy they are, my dear. That is, when I choose to be an old fool and talk of such mat­ters in a sense dif­fer­ent from that in which they are spo­ken of by the world at large, I may say that the Thornes are as good, or per­haps bet­ter, than the Gre­shams, but I should be sor­ry to say so se­ri­ous­ly to any one. The Gre­shams now stand much high­er in the coun­ty than the Thornes do.’

‘But they are of the same class.’

‘Yes, yes; Wil­fred Thorne of Ul­lathorne, and our friend the squire here, are of the same class.’

‘But, un­cle, I and Au­gus­ta Gre­sham–are we of the same class?’

‘Well, Min­nie, you would hard­ly have me boast that I am the same class with the squire–I, a poor coun­try doc­tor?’

‘You are not an­swer­ing me fair­ly, dear un­cle; dear­est un­cle, do you not know that you are not an­swer­ing me fair­ly? You know what I mean. Have I a right to call the Thornes of Ul­lathorne my cousins?’

‘Mary, Mary, Mary!’ said he af­ter a minute’s pause, still al­low­ing his arm to hang loose, that she might hold it with both her hands. ‘Mary, Mary, Mary! I would that you had spared me this!’

‘I could not have spared it to you for ev­er, un­cle.’

‘I would that you could have done so; I would that you could!’

‘It is over now, un­cle: it is told now. I will grieve you no more. Dear, dear, dear­est! I should love you more than ev­er now; I would, I would, I would if that were pos­si­ble. What should I be but for you? What must I have been but for you?’ And she threw her­self on his breast, and cling­ing with her arms round his neck, kissed his fore­head, cheeks, and lips.

There was noth­ing more said then on the sub­ject be­tween them. Mary asked no fur­ther ques­tion, nor did the doc­tor vol­un­teer fur­ther in­for­ma­tion. She would have been most anx­ious to ask about her moth­er’s his­to­ry had she dared to do so; but she did not dare to ask; she could not bear to be told that her moth­er had been, per­haps was, a worth­less wom­an. That she was tru­ly a daugh­ter of a broth­er of the doc­tor, that she did know. Lit­tle as she had heard of her rel­atives in her ear­ly youth, few as had been the words which had fall­en from her un­cle in her hear­ing as to her parent­age, she did know this, that she was the daugh­ter of Hen­ry Thorne, a broth­er of the doc­tor, and a son of the old prebendary. Tri­fling lit­tle things that had oc­curred, ac­ci­dents which could not be pre­vent­ed, had told her this; but not a word had ev­er passed any one’s lips as to her moth­er. The doc­tor, when speak­ing of his youth, had spo­ken of her fa­ther; but no one had spo­ken of her moth­er. She had long known that she was the child of a Thorne; now she knew al­so that she was no cousin of the Thornes of Ul­lathorne; no cousin, at least, in the world’s or­di­nary lan­guage, no niece in­deed of her un­cle, un­less by his spe­cial per­mis­sion that she should be so.

When the in­ter­view was over, she went up alone to the draw­ing-​room, and there she sat think­ing. She had not been there long be­fore her un­cle came up to her. He did not sit down, or even take off the hat which he still wore; but com­ing close to her, and still stand­ing, he spoke thus:-

‘Mary, af­ter what has passed I should be very un­just and very cru­el to you not to tell you one thing more than you have now learned. Your moth­er was un­for­tu­nate in much, not in ev­ery­thing; but the world, which is very of­ten stern in such mat­ters, nev­er judged her to have dis­graced her­self. I tell you this, my child, in or­der that you may re­spect her mem­ory;’ and so say­ing, he again left her with­out giv­ing her time to speak a word.

What he then told her he had told in mer­cy. He felt what must be her feel­ings when she re­flect­ed that she had to blush for her moth­er; that not on­ly could she not speak of her moth­er, but that she might hard­ly think of her with in­no­cence; and to mit­igate such sor­row as this, and al­so to do jus­tice to the wom­an whom his broth­er had so wronged, he had forced him­self to re­veal so much as is stat­ed above.

And then he walked slow­ly by him­self, back­wards and for­wards through the gar­den, think­ing of what he had done with ref­er­ence to this girl, and doubt­ing whether he had done wise­ly and well. He had re­solved, when first the lit­tle in­fant was giv­en over to his charge, that noth­ing should be known of her or by her as to her moth­er. He was will­ing to de­vote him­self to this or­phan child of his broth­er, this last seedling of his fa­ther’s house; but he was not will­ing so to do this as to bring him­self in any man­ner in­to fa­mil­iar con­tact with the Scatcherds. He had boast­ed to him­self that he, at any rate, was a gen­tle­man; and that she, if she were to live in his house, sit at his ta­ble, and share his hearth, must be a la­dy. He would tell no lie about her; he would not to any one make her out to be aught oth­er or aught bet­ter than she was; peo­ple would talk about her of course, on­ly let them not talk to him; he con­ceived of him­self–and the con­cep­tion was not with­out due ground–that should any do so, he had that with­in him which would si­lence them. He would nev­er claim for this lit­tle crea­ture–thus brought in­to the world with­out a le­git­imate po­si­tion in which to stand–he would nev­er claim for her any sta­tion that would not prop­er­ly be her own. He would make for her a sta­tion as best he could. As he might sink or swim, so should she.

So he had re­solved; but things had ar­ranged them­selves, as they of­ten do, rather than been ar­ranged by him. Dur­ing ten or twelve years no one had heard of Mary Thorne; the mem­ory of Hen­ry Thorne and his trag­ic death had passed away; the knowl­edge that an in­fant had been born whose birth was con­nect­ed with that tragedy, a knowl­edge nev­er wide­ly spread, had fad­ed down in­to ut­ter ig­no­rance. At the end of these twelve years, Dr Thorne had an­nounced, that a young niece, a child of a broth­er long since dead, was com­ing to live with him. As he had con­tem­plat­ed, no one spoke to him; but some peo­ple did no doubt talk among them­selves. Whether or not the ex­act truth was sur­mised by any, it mat­ters not to say; with ab­so­lute ex­act­ness, prob­ably not; with great ap­proach to it, prob­ably yes. By one per­son, at any rate, no guess what­ev­er was made; no thought rel­ative to Dr Thorne’s niece ev­er trou­bled him; no idea that Mary Scatcherd had left a child in Eng­land ev­er oc­curred to him; and that per­son was Roger Scatcherd, Mary’s broth­er.

To one friend, and on­ly one, did the doc­tor tell the whole truth, and that was to the old squire. ‘I have told you,’ said the doc­tor, ‘part­ly that you may know that the child has no right to mix with your chil­dren if you think much of such things. Do you, how­ev­er, see to this. I would rather that no one else should be told.’

No one else had been told; and the squire had ’seen to it,’ by ac­cus­tom­ing him­self to look at Mary Thorne run­ning about the house with his own chil­dren as though she were of the same brood. In­deed, the squire had al­ways been fond of Mary, had per­son­al­ly no­ticed her, and, in the af­fair of Mam’selle Lar­ron, had de­clared that he would have her placed at once on the bench of mag­is­trates;–much to the dis­gust of the La­dy Ara­bel­la.

And so things had gone on and on, and had not been thought of with much down­right think­ing; till now, when she was one-​and-​twen­ty years of age, his niece came to him, ask­ing as to her po­si­tion, and in­quir­ing in what rank of life she was to find a hus­band.

And so the doc­tor walked, back­wards and for­wards through the gar­den, slow­ly, think­ing now with some earnest­ness what if, af­ter all, he had been wrong about his niece? What if by en­deav­our­ing to place her in the po­si­tion of a la­dy, he had false­ly so placed her, and robbed her of her le­git­imate po­si­tion? What if there was no rank of life in which she could now prop­er­ly at­tach her­self?

And then, how had it an­swered, that plan of his of keep­ing her all to him­self? He, Dr Thorne, was still a poor man; the gift of sav­ing mon­ey had not been his; he had ev­er a com­fort­able house for her to live in, and, in spite of Doc­tors Fill­grave, Cen­tu­ry, Rerechild, and oth­ers, had made from his pro­fes­sion an in­come suf­fi­cient for their joint wants; but he had not done as oth­ers do: he had no three or four thou­sand pounds in the Three per Cents., on which Mary might live in some com­fort when he should die. Late in life he had in­sured his life for eight hun­dred pounds; and to that, and that on­ly, had he to trust for Mary’s fu­ture main­te­nance. How had it an­swered, then, this plan of let­ting her be un­known to, and un­dreamed of, by, those who were as near to her on her moth­er’s side as he was on the fa­ther’s? On that side, though there had been ut­ter pover­ty, there was now ab­so­lute wealth.

But when he took her to him­self, had he not res­cued her from the very depths of the low­est mis­ery: from the degra­da­tion of the work­house; from the scorn of hon­est-​born char­ity-​chil­dren; from the low­est of the world’s low con­di­tions? Was she not now the ap­ple of his eye, his one great sovereign com­fort–his pride, his hap­pi­ness, his glo­ry? Was he to make her over, to make any por­tion of her over to oth­ers, if, by do­ing so, she might be able to share the wealth, as well as the coarse man­ners and un­couth so­ci­ety of her at present un­known con­nex­ions? He, who had nev­er wor­shipped wealth on his own be­half; he, who had scorned the idol of the gold, and had ev­er been teach­ing her to scorn it; was he now to show that his phi­los­ophy had all been false as soon as the temp­ta­tion to do so was put in his way?

But yet, what man would mar­ry this bas­tard child, with­out a six­pence, and bring not on­ly pover­ty, but ill blood al­so on his own chil­dren? It might be very well for him, Dr Thorne; for him whose ca­reer was made, whose name, at any rate, was his own; for him who had a fixed stand­ing-​ground in the world; it might be well for him to in­dulge in large views of a phi­los­ophy an­tag­onis­tic to the world’s prac­tice; but had he a right to do it for his niece? What man would mar­ry a girl so placed? For those among whom she might have le­git­imate­ly found a lev­el, ed­uca­tion had now ut­ter­ly un­fit­ted her. And then, he well knew that she would nev­er put out her hand in to­ken of love to any one with­out telling all she knew and all she sur­mised as to her own birth.

And that ques­tion of this evening; had it not been in­sti­gat­ed by some ap­peal on her part? Was there not al­ready with­in her breast some cause for dis­qui­etude which had made her so per­ti­na­cious? Why else had she told him then, for the first time, that she did not know where to rank her­self? If such an ap­peal had been made to her, it must have come from young Frank Gre­sham. What, in such case, would it be­hove him to do? Should he pack up his all, his lancet-​case, pes­tle and mor­tar, and seek anew fresh ground in a new world, leav­ing be­hind a huge tri­umph to those learned en­emies of his, Fill­grave, Cen­tu­ry, and Rerechild? Bet­ter that than re­main at Gre­shams­bury at the cost of the child’s heart and pride.

And so he walked slow­ly back­wards and for­wards through his gar­den, med­itat­ing these things painful­ly enough.