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A DISAPPOINTMENT.
I trust it will not be regarded as a sign of shallowness of nature that
I rose in the morning comparatively calm. Clara was to me as yet only
the type of general womanhood, around which the amorphous loves of my
manhood had begun to gather, not the one woman whom the individual man
in me had chosen and loved. How could I love that which I did not yet
know: she was but the heroine of my objective life, as projected from
me by my imagination--not the love of my being. Therefore, when the
wings of sleep had fanned the motes from my brain, I was cool enough,
notwithstanding an occasional tongue of indignant flame from the ashes
of last night's fire, to sit down to my books, and read with tolerable
attention my morning portion of Plato. But when I turned to my novel, I
found I was not master of the situation. My hero too was in love and in
trouble; and after I had written a sentence and a half, I found myself
experiencing the fate of Heine when he roused the Sphinx of past love
by reading his own old verses:--
Lebendig ward das Marmorbild,
Der Stein begann zu ächzen.
In a few moments I was pacing up and down the room, eager to burn my
moth-wings yet again in the old fire. And by the way, I cannot help
thinking that the moths enjoy their fate, and die in ecstasies. I was,
however, too shy to venture on a call that very morning: I should both
feel and look foolish. But there was no more work to be done then. I
hurried to the stable, saddled my mare, and set out for a gallop across
the farm, but towards the high road leading to Minstercombe, in the
opposite direction, that is, from the Hall, which I flattered myself
was to act in a strong-minded manner. There were several fences and
hedges between, but I cleared them all without discomfiture. The last
jump was into a lane. We, that is my mare and I, had scarcely alighted,
when my ears were invaded by a shout. The voice was the least welcome I
could have heard, that of Brotherton. I turned and saw him riding up
the hill, with a lady by his side.
'Hillo!' he cried, almost angrily, 'you don't deserve to have such a
cob.' (He would call her a cob.) 'You don't know-how to use her. To
jump her on to the hard like that!'
It was Clara with him!--on the steady stiff old brown horse! My first
impulse was to jump my mare over the opposite fence, and take no heed,
of them, but clearly it was not to be attempted, for the ground fell
considerably on the other side. My next thought was to ride away and
leave them. My third was one which some of my readers will judge
Quixotic, but I have a profound reverence for the Don--and that not
merely because I have so often acted as foolishly as he. This last I
proceeded to carry out, and lifting-my hat, rode to meet them. Taking
no notice whatever of Brotherton, I addressed Clara--in what I fancied
a distant and dignified manner, which she might, if she pleased,
attribute to the presence of her companion.
'Miss Coningham,' I said, 'will you allow me the honour of offering you
my mare? She will carry you better.'
'You are very kind, Mr Cumbermede,' she returned in a similar tone, but
with a sparkle in her eyes. 'I am greatly obliged to you. I cannot
pretend to prefer old crossbones to the beautiful creature which gave
me so much pleasure yesterday.'
I was off and by her side in a moment, helping her to dismount. I did
not even look at Brotherton, though I felt he was staring like an
equestrian statue. While I shifted the saddles Clara broke the silence,
which I was in too great an inward commotion to heed, by asking--
'What is the name of your beauty, Mr Cumbermede?'
'Lilith,' I answered.
'What a pretty name! I never heard it before. Is it after any one--any
public character, I mean?'
'Quite a public character,' I returned--'Adam's first wife.'
'I never heard he had two,' she rejoined, laughing.
'The Jews say he had. She is a demon now, and the pest of married women
and their babies,'
'What a horrible name to give your mare!'
'The name is pretty enough. And what does it matter what the woman was,
so long as she was beautiful.'
'I don't quite agree with you there,' she returned, with what I chose
to consider a forced laugh.
By this time her saddle was firm on Lilith, and in an instant she was
mounted. Brotherton moved to ride on, and the mare followed him. Clara
looked back.
'You will catch us up in a moment,' she said, possibly a little puzzled
between us.
I was busy tightening my girths, and fumbled over the job more than was
necessary. Brotherton was several yards ahead, and she was walking the
mare slowly after him. I made her no answer, but mounted, and rode in
the opposite direction; It was rude of course, but I did it. I could
not have gone with them, and was afraid, if I told her so, she would
dismount and refuse the mare.
In a tumult of feeling I rode on without looking behind me, careless
whither--how long I cannot tell, before I woke up to find I did not
know where I was. I must ride on till I came to some place I knew, or
met some one who could tell me. Lane led into lane, buried betwixt deep
banks and lofty hedges, or passing through small woods, until I
ascended a rising ground, whence I got a view of the country. At once
its features began to dawn upon me: I was close to the village of
Aldwick, where I had been at school, and in a few minutes I rode into
its wide straggling street. Not a mark of change had passed upon it.
There were the same dogs about the doors, and the same cats in the
windows. The very ferns in the chinks of the old draw-well appeared the
same; and the children had not grown an inch since first I drove into
the place marvelling at its wondrous activity.
The sun was hot, and my horse seemed rather tired. I was in no mood to
see any one, and besides had no pleasant recollections of my last visit
to Mr Elder, so I drew up at the door of the little inn, and having
sent my horse to the stable for an hour's rest and a feed of oats, went
into the sanded parlour, ordered a glass of ale, and sat staring at the
china shepherdesses on the chimney-piece. I see them now, the ugly
things, as plainly as if that had been an hour of the happiest
reflections. I thought I was miserable, but I know now that, although I
was much disappointed, and everything looked dreary and uninteresting
about me, I was a long way off misery. Indeed, the passing vision of a
neat unbonneted village girl on her way to the well was attractive
enough still to make me rise and go to the window. While watching, as
she wound up the long chain, for the appearance of the familiar mossy
bucket, dripping diamonds, as it gleamed out of the dark well into the
sudden sunlight, I heard the sound of horse's hoofs, and turned to see
what kind of apparition would come. Presently it appeared, and made
straight for the inn. The rider was Mr Coningham! I drew back to escape
his notice, but his quick eye had caught sight of me, for he came into
the room with outstretched hand.
'We are fated to meet, Mr Cumbermede,' he said. 'I only stopped to give
my horse some meal and water, and had no intention of dismounting. Ale?
I'll have a glass of ale too,' he added, ringing the bell. 'I think
I'll let him have a feed, and have a mouthful of bread and cheese
myself.'
He went out, and had I suppose gone to see that his horse had his
proper allowance of oats, for when he returned he said merrily:
'What have you done with my daughter, Mr Cumbermede?'
'Why should you think me responsible for her, Mr Conningham?' I asked,
attempting a smile.
No doubt he detected the attempt in the smile, for he looked at me with
a sharpened expression of the eyes, as he answered--still in a merry
tone--
'When I saw her last, she was mounted on your horse, and you were on
my father's. I find you still on my father's horse, and your own--with
the lady--nowhere. Have I made out a case of suspicion?'
'It is I who have cause of complaint,' I returned--'who have neither
lady nor mare--unless indeed you imagine I have in the case of the
latter made a good exchange.'
'Hardly that, I imagine, if yours is half so good as she looks. But,
seriously, have you seen Clara to-day?'
I told him the facts as lightly as I could. When I had finished, he
stared at me with an expression which for the moment I avoided
attempting to interpret.
'On horseback with Mr Brotherton?' he said, uttering the words as if
every syllable had been separately italicized.
'You will find it as I say,' I replied, feeling offended.
'My dear boy--excuse my freedom,' he returned--'I am nearly three times
your age--you do not imagine I doubt a hair's breadth of your
statement! But--the giddy goose!--how could you be so silly? Pardon me
again. Your unselfishness is positively amusing! To hand over your
horse to her, and then ride away all by yourself on that--respectable
stager!'
'Don't abuse the old horse,' I returned. 'He is respectable, and has
been more in his day.'
'Yes, yes. But for the life of me I cannot understand it. Mr
Cumbermede, I am sorry for you. I should not advise you to choose the
law for a profession. The man who does not regard his own rights will
hardly do for an adviser in the affairs of others.
'You were not going to consult me, Mr Coningham, were you?' I said, now
able at length to laugh without effort.
'Not quite that,' he returned, also laughing. 'But a right, you know,
is one of the most serious things in the world.'
It seemed irrelevant to the trifling character of the case. I could not
understand why he should regard the affair as of such importance.
'I have been in the way of thinking,' I said, 'that one of the
advantages of having rights was that you could part with them when you
pleased. You're not bound to insist on your rights, are you?'
'Certainly you would not subject yourself to a criminal action by
foregoing them, but you might suggest to your friends a commission of
lunacy. I see how it is. That is your uncle all over! He was never a
man of the world.'
'You are right there, Mr Coningham. It is the last epithet any one
would give my uncle.'
'And the first any one would give me, you imply, Mr Cumbermede.'
'I had no such intention,' I answered. 'That would have been rude.'
'Not in the least. I should have taken it as a compliment. The man
who does not care about his rights, depend upon it, will be made a tool
of by those that do. If he is not a spoon already, he will become one.
I shouldn't have iffed it at all if I hadn't known you.'
'And you don't want to be rude to me.'
'I don't. A little experience will set you all right; and that you
are in a fair chance of getting if you push your fortune as a literary
man. But I must be off. I hope we may have another chat before long.'
He finished his ale, rose, bade me good-bye, and went to the stable. As
soon as he was out of sight, I also mounted and rode homewards.
By the time I reached the gate of the park, my depression had nearly
vanished. The comforting power of sun and shadow, of sky and field, of
wind and motion, had restored me to myself. With a side glance at the
windows of the cottage as I passed, and the glimpse of a bright figure
seated in the drawing-room window, I made for the stable, and found my
Lilith waiting me. Once more I shifted my saddle, and rode home,
without even another glance at the window as I passed.
A day or two after, I received from Mr Coningham a ticket for the
county ball, accompanied by a kind note. I returned it at once with the
excuse that I feared incapacitating myself for work by dissipation.
Henceforward I avoided the park, and did not again see Clara before
leaving for London. I had a note from her, thanking me for Lilith, and
reproaching me for having left her to the company of Mr Brotherton,
which I thought cool enough, seeing they had set out together without
the slightest expectation of meeting me. I returned a civil answer, and
there was an end of it.
I must again say for myself that it was not mere jealousy of Brotherton
that led me to act as I did. I could not and would not get over the
contradiction between the way in which she had spoken of him, and the
way in which she spoke to him, followed by her accompanying him in
the long ride to which the state of my mare bore witness. I concluded
that, although she might mean no harm, she was not truthful. To talk of
a man with such contempt, and then behave to him with such frankness,
appeared to me altogether unjustifiable. At the same time their mutual
familiarity pointed to some foregone intimacy, in which, had I been so
inclined, I might have found some excuse for her, seeing she might have
altered her opinion of him, and might yet find it very difficult to
alter the tone of their intercourse.
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