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<h2> CHAPTER LI </h2>
<h3> A VISIT FROM THE COUNSELLOR </h3>
<p>Now while I was riding home that evening, with a tender conscience about
Ruth, although not a wounded one, I guessed but little that all my
thoughts were needed much for my own affairs. So however it proved to be;
for as I came in, soon after dark, my sister Eliza met me at the corner of
the cheese-room, and she said, 'Don't go in there, John,' pointing to
mother's room; 'until I have had a talk with you.'</p>
<p>'In the name of Moses,' I inquired, having picked up that phrase at
Dulverton; 'what are you at about me now? There is no peace for a quiet
fellow.'</p>
<p>'It is nothing we are at,' she answered; 'neither may you make light of
it. It is something very important about Mistress Lorna Doone.'</p>
<p>'Let us have it at once,' I cried; 'I can bear anything about Lorna,
except that she does not care for me.'</p>
<p>'It has nothing to do with that, John. And I am quite sure that you never
need fear anything of that sort. She perfectly wearies me sometimes,
although her voice is so soft and sweet, about your endless perfections.'</p>
<p>'Bless her little heart!' I said; 'the subject is inexhaustible.'</p>
<p>'No doubt,' replied Lizzie, in the driest manner; 'especially to your
sisters. However this is no time to joke. I fear you will get the worst of
it, John. Do you know a man of about Gwenny's shape, nearly as broad as he
is long, but about six times the size of Gwenny, and with a length of
snow-white hair, and a thickness also; as the copses were last winter. He
never can comb it, that is quite certain, with any comb yet invented.'</p>
<p>'Then you go and offer your services. There are few things you cannot
scarify. I know the man from your description, although I have never seen
him. Now where is my Lorna?'</p>
<p>'Your Lorna is with Annie, having a good cry, I believe; and Annie too
glad to second her. She knows that this great man is here, and knows that
he wants to see her. But she begged to defer the interview, until dear
John's return.'</p>
<p>'What a nasty way you have of telling the very commonest piece of news!' I
said, on purpose to pay her out. 'What man will ever fancy you, you
unlucky little snapper? Now, no more nursery talk for me. I will go and
settle this business. You had better go and dress your dolls; if you can
give them clothes unpoisoned.' Hereupon Lizzie burst into a perfect roar
of tears; feeling that she had the worst of it. And I took her up, and
begged her pardon; although she scarcely deserved it; for she knew that I
was out of luck, and she might have spared her satire.</p>
<p>I was almost sure that the man who was come must be the Counsellor
himself; of whom I felt much keener fear than of his son Carver. And
knowing that his visit boded ill to me and Lorna, I went and sought my
dear; and led her with a heavy heart, from the maiden's room to mother's,
to meet our dreadful visitor.</p>
<p>Mother was standing by the door, making curtseys now and then, and
listening to a long harangue upon the rights of state and land, which the
Counsellor (having found that she was the owner of her property, and knew
nothing of her title to it) was encouraged to deliver it. My dear mother
stood gazing at him, spell-bound by his eloquence, and only hoping that he
would stop. He was shaking his hair upon his shoulders, in the power of
his words, and his wrath at some little thing, which he declared to be
quite illegal.</p>
<p>Then I ventured to show myself, in the flesh, before him; although he
feigned not to see me; but he advanced with zeal to Lorna; holding out
both hands at once.</p>
<p>'My darling child, my dearest niece; how wonderfully well you look!
Mistress Ridd, I give you credit. This is the country of good things. I
never would have believed our Queen could have looked so royal. Surely of
all virtues, hospitality is the finest, and the most romantic. Dearest
Lorna, kiss your uncle; it is quite a privilege.'</p>
<p>'Perhaps it is to you, sir,' said Lorna, who could never quite check her
sense of oddity; 'but I fear that you have smoked tobacco, which spoils
reciprocity.'</p>
<p>'You are right, my child. How keen your scent is! It is always so with us.
Your grandfather was noted for his olfactory powers. Ah, a great loss,
dear Mrs. Ridd, a terrible loss to this neighbourhood! As one of our great
writers says—I think it must be Milton—"We ne'er shall look
upon his like again."'</p>
<p>'With your good leave sir,' I broke in, 'Master Milton could never have
written so sweet and simple a line as that. It is one of the great
Shakespeare.'</p>
<p>'Woe is me for my neglect!' said the Counsellor, bowing airily; 'this must
be your son, Mistress Ridd, the great John, the wrestler. And one who
meddles with the Muses! Ah, since I was young, how everything is changed,
madam! Except indeed the beauty of women, which seems to me to increase
every year.' Here the old villain bowed to my mother; and she blushed, and
made another curtsey, and really did look very nice.</p>
<p>'Now though I have quoted the poets amiss, as your son informs me (for
which I tender my best thanks, and must amend my reading), I can hardly be
wrong in assuming that this young armiger must be the too attractive
cynosure to our poor little maiden. And for my part, she is welcome to
him. I have never been one of those who dwell upon distinctions of rank,
and birth, and such like; as if they were in the heart of nature, and must
be eternal. In early youth, I may have thought so, and been full of that
little pride. But now I have long accounted it one of the first axioms of
political economy—you are following me, Mistress Ridd?'</p>
<p>'Well, sir, I am doing my best; but I cannot quite keep up with you.'</p>
<p>'Never mind, madam; I will be slower. But your son's intelligence is so
quick—'</p>
<p>'I see, sir; you thought that mine must be. But no; it all comes from his
father, sir. His father was that quick and clever—'</p>
<p>'Ah, I can well suppose it, madam. And a credit he is to both of you. Now,
to return to our muttons—a figure which you will appreciate—I
may now be regarded, I think, as this young lady's legal guardian;
although I have not had the honour of being formally appointed such. Her
father was the eldest son of Sir Ensor Doone; and I happened to be the
second son; and as young maidens cannot be baronets, I suppose I am "Sir
Counsellor." Is it so, Mistress Ridd, according to your theory of
genealogy?'</p>
<p>'I am sure I don't know, sir,' my mother answered carefully; 'I know not
anything of that name, sir, except in the Gospel of Matthew: but I see not
why it should be otherwise.'</p>
<p>'Good, madam! I may look upon that as your sanction and approval: and the
College of Heralds shall hear of it. And in return, as Lorna's guardian, I
give my full and ready consent to her marriage with your son, madam.'</p>
<p>'Oh, how good of you, sir, how kind! Well, I always did say, that the
learnedest people were, almost always, the best and kindest, and the most
simple-hearted.'</p>
<p>'Madam, that is a great sentiment. What a goodly couple they will be! and
if we can add him to our strength—'</p>
<p>'Oh no, sir, oh no!' cried mother: 'you really must not think of it. He
has always been brought up so honest—'</p>
<p>'Hem! that makes a difference. A decided disqualification for domestic
life among the Doones. But, surely, he might get over those prejudices,
madam?'</p>
<p>'Oh no, sir! he never can: he never can indeed. When he was only that
high, sir, he could not steal even an apple, when some wicked boys tried
to mislead him.'</p>
<p>'Ah,' replied the Counsellor, shaking his white head gravely; 'then I
greatly fear that his case is quite incurable. I have known such cases;
violent prejudice, bred entirely of education, and anti-economical to the
last degree. And when it is so, it is desperate: no man, after imbibing
ideas of that sort, can in any way be useful.'</p>
<p>'Oh yes, sir, John is very useful. He can do as much work as three other
men; and you should see him load a sledd, sir.'</p>
<p>'I was speaking, madam, of higher usefulness,—power of the brain and
heart. The main thing for us upon earth is to take a large view of things.
But while we talk of the heart, what is my niece Lorna doing, that she
does not come and thank me, for my perhaps too prompt concession to her
youthful fancies? Ah, if I had wanted thanks, I should have been more
stubborn.'</p>
<p>Lorna, being challenged thus, came up and looked at her uncle, with her
noble eyes fixed full upon his, which beneath his white eyebrows
glistened, like dormer windows piled with snow.</p>
<p>'For what am I to thank you, uncle?'</p>
<p>'My dear niece, I have told you. For removing the heaviest obstacle, which
to a mind so well regulated could possibly have existed, between your
dutiful self and the object of your affections.'</p>
<p>'Well, uncle, I should be very grateful, if I thought that you did so from
love of me; or if I did not know that you have something yet concealed
from me.'</p>
<p>'And my consent,' said the Counsellor, 'is the more meritorious, the more
liberal, frank, and candid, in the face of an existing fact, and a very
clearly established one; which might have appeared to weaker minds in the
light of an impediment; but to my loftier view of matrimony seems quite a
recommendation.'</p>
<p>'What fact do you mean, sir? Is it one that I ought to know?'</p>
<p>'In my opinion it is, good niece. It forms, to my mind, so fine a basis
for the invariable harmony of the matrimonial state. To be brief—as
I always endeavour to be, without becoming obscure—you two young
people (ah, what a gift is youth! one can never be too thankful for it)
you will have the rare advantage of commencing married life, with a
subject of common interest to discuss, whenever you weary of—well,
say of one another; if you can now, by any means, conceive such a
possibility. And perfect justice meted out: mutual goodwill resulting,
from the sense of reciprocity.'</p>
<p>'I do not understand you, sir. Why can you not say what you mean, at
once?'</p>
<p>'My dear child, I prolong your suspense. Curiosity is the most powerful of
all feminine instincts; and therefore the most delightful, when not
prematurely satisfied. However, if you must have my strong realities, here
they are. Your father slew dear John's father, and dear John's father slew
yours.'</p>
<p>Having said thus much, the Counsellor leaned back upon his chair, and
shaded his calm white-bearded eyes from the rays of our tallow candles. He
was a man who liked to look, rather than to be looked at. But Lorna came
to me for aid; and I went up to Lorna and mother looked at both of us.</p>
<p>Then feeling that I must speak first (as no one would begin it), I took my
darling round the waist, and led her up to the Counsellor; while she tried
to bear it bravely; yet must lean on me, or did.</p>
<p>'Now, Sir Counsellor Doone,' I said, with Lorna squeezing both my hands, I
never yet knew how (considering that she was walking all the time, or
something like it); 'you know right well, Sir Counsellor, that Sir Ensor
Doone gave approval.' I cannot tell what made me think of this: but so it
came upon me.</p>
<p>'Approval to what, good rustic John? To the slaughter so reciprocal?'</p>
<p>'No, sir, not to that; even if it ever happened; which I do not believe.
But to the love betwixt me and Lorna; which your story shall not break,
without more evidence than your word. And even so, shall never break; if
Lorna thinks as I do.'</p>
<p>The maiden gave me a little touch, as much as to say, 'You are right,
darling: give it to him, again, like that.' However, I held my peace, well
knowing that too many words do mischief.</p>
<p>Then mother looked at me with wonder, being herself too amazed to speak;
and the Counsellor looked, with great wrath in his eyes, which he tried to
keep from burning.</p>
<p>'How say you then, John Ridd,' he cried, stretching out one hand, like
Elijah; 'is this a thing of the sort you love? Is this what you are used
to?'</p>
<p>'So please your worship,' I answered; 'no kind of violence can surprise
us, since first came Doones upon Exmoor. Up to that time none heard of
harm; except of taking a purse, maybe, or cutting a strange sheep's
throat. And the poor folk who did this were hanged, with some benefit of
clergy. But ever since the Doones came first, we are used to anything.'</p>
<p>'Thou varlet,' cried the Counsellor, with the colour of his eyes quite
changed with the sparkles of his fury; 'is this the way we are to deal
with such a low-bred clod as thou? To question the doings of our people,
and to talk of clergy! What, dream you not that we could have clergy, and
of the right sort, too, if only we cared to have them? Tush! Am I to spend
my time arguing with a plough-tail Bob?'</p>
<p>'If your worship will hearken to me,' I answered very modestly, not
wishing to speak harshly, with Lorna looking up at me; 'there are many
things that might be said without any kind of argument, which I would
never wish to try with one of your worship's learning. And in the first
place it seems to me that if our fathers hated one another bitterly, yet
neither won the victory, only mutual discomfiture; surely that is but a
reason why we should be wiser than they, and make it up in this generation
by goodwill and loving'—</p>
<p>'Oh, John, you wiser than your father!' mother broke upon me here; 'not
but what you might be as wise, when you come to be old enough.'</p>
<p>'Young people of the present age,' said the Counsellor severely, 'have no
right feeling of any sort, upon the simplest matter. Lorna Doone, stand
forth from contact with that heir of parricide; and state in your own
mellifluous voice, whether you regard this slaughter as a pleasant
trifle.'</p>
<p>'You know, without any words of mine,' she answered very softly, yet not
withdrawing from my hand, 'that although I have been seasoned well to
every kind of outrage, among my gentle relatives, I have not yet so purely
lost all sense of right and wrong as to receive what you have said, as
lightly as you declared it. You think it a happy basis for our future
concord. I do not quite think that, my uncle; neither do I quite believe
that a word of it is true. In our happy valley, nine-tenths of what is
said is false; and you were always wont to argue that true and false are
but a blind turned upon a pivot. Without any failure of respect for your
character, good uncle, I decline politely to believe a word of what you
have told me. And even if it were proved to me, all I can say is this, if
my John will have me, I am his for ever.'</p>
<p>This long speech was too much for her; she had overrated her strength
about it, and the sustenance of irony. So at last she fell into my arms,
which had long been waiting for her; and there she lay with no other
sound, except a gurgling in her throat.</p>
<p>'You old villain,' cried my mother, shaking her fist at the Counsellor,
while I could do nothing else but hold, and bend across, my darling, and
whisper to deaf ears; 'What is the good of the quality; if this is all
that comes of it? Out of the way! You know the words that make the deadly
mischief; but not the ways that heal them. Give me that bottle, if hands
you have; what is the use of Counsellors?'</p>
<p>I saw that dear mother was carried away; and indeed I myself was something
like it; with the pale face upon my bosom, and the heaving of the heart,
and the heat and cold all through me, as my darling breathed or lay.
Meanwhile the Counsellor stood back, and seemed a little sorry; although
of course it was not in his power to be at all ashamed of himself.</p>
<p>'My sweet love, my darling child,' our mother went on to Lorna, in a way
that I shall never forget, though I live to be a hundred; 'pretty pet, not
a word of it is true, upon that old liar's oath; and if every word were
true, poor chick, you should have our John all the more for it. You and
John were made by God and meant for one another, whatever falls between
you. Little lamb, look up and speak: here is your own John and I; and the
devil take the Counsellor.'</p>
<p>I was amazed at mother's words, being so unlike her; while I loved her all
the more because she forgot herself so. In another moment in ran Annie, ay
and Lizzie also, knowing by some mystic sense (which I have often noticed,
but never could explain) that something was astir, belonging to the world
of women, yet foreign to the eyes of men. And now the Counsellor, being
well-born, although such a heartless miscreant, beckoned to me to come
away; which I, being smothered with women, was only too glad to do, as
soon as my own love would let go of me.</p>
<p>'That is the worst of them,' said the old man; when I had led him into our
kitchen, with an apology at every step, and given him hot schnapps and
water, and a cigarro of brave Tom Faggus: 'you never can say much, sir, in
the way of reasoning (however gently meant and put) but what these women
will fly out. It is wiser to put a wild bird in a cage, and expect him to
sit and look at you, and chirp without a feather rumpled, than it is to
expect a woman to answer reason reasonably.' Saying this, he looked at his
puff of smoke as if it contained more reason.</p>
<p>'I am sure I do not know, sir,' I answered according to a phrase which has
always been my favourite, on account of its general truth: moreover, he
was now our guest, and had right to be treated accordingly: 'I am, as you
see, not acquainted with the ways of women, except my mother and sisters.'</p>
<p>'Except not even them, my son, said the Counsellor, now having finished
his glass, without much consultation about it; 'if you once understand
your mother and sisters—why you understand the lot of them.'</p>
<p>He made a twist in his cloud of smoke, and dashed his finger through it,
so that I could not follow his meaning, and in manners liked not to press
him.</p>
<p>'Now of this business, John,' he said, after getting to the bottom of the
second glass, and having a trifle or so to eat, and praising our
chimney-corner; 'taking you on the whole, you know, you are wonderfully
good people; and instead of giving me up to the soldiers, as you might
have done, you are doing your best to make me drunk.'</p>
<p>'Not at all, sir,' I answered; 'not at all, your worship. Let me mix you
another glass. We rarely have a great gentleman by the side of our embers
and oven. I only beg your pardon, sir, that my sister Annie (who knows
where to find all the good pans and the lard) could not wait upon you this
evening; and I fear they have done it with dripping instead, and in a pan
with the bottom burned. But old Betty quite loses her head sometimes, by
dint of over-scolding.'</p>
<p>'My son,' replied the Counsellor, standing across the front of the fire,
to prove his strict sobriety: 'I meant to come down upon you to-night; but
you have turned the tables upon me. Not through any skill on your part,
nor through any paltry weakness as to love (and all that stuff, which boys
and girls spin tops at, or knock dolls' noses together), but through your
simple way of taking me, as a man to be believed; combined with the
comfort of this place, and the choice tobacco and cordials. I have not
enjoyed an evening so much, God bless me if I know when!'</p>
<p>'Your worship,' said I, 'makes me more proud than I well know what to do
with. Of all the things that please and lead us into happy sleep at night,
the first and chiefest is to think that we have pleased a visitor.'</p>
<p>'Then, John, thou hast deserved good sleep; for I am not pleased easily.
But although our family is not so high now as it hath been, I have enough
of the gentleman left to be pleased when good people try me. My father,
Sir Ensor, was better than I in this great element of birth, and my son
Carver is far worse. Aetas parentum, what is it, my boy? I hear that you
have been at a grammar-school.'</p>
<p>'So I have, your worship, and at a very good one; but I only got far
enough to make more tail than head of Latin.'</p>
<p>'Let that pass,' said the Counsellor; 'John, thou art all the wiser.' And
the old man shook his hoary locks, as if Latin had been his ruin. I looked
at him sadly, and wondered whether it might have so ruined me, but for
God's mercy in stopping it.</p>
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