<p><SPAN name="c81" id="c81"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER LXXXI.</h3>
<h4>MR. GLASCOCK IS MASTER.<br/> </h4>
<p><ANTIMG class="left" src="images/ch81a.jpg" width-obs="310" alt="Illustration" />
Caroline Spalding, when she received Nora's letter, was not disposed
to give much weight to it. She declared to herself that the girl's
unpremeditated expression of opinion was worth more than her studied
words. But she was not the less grateful or the less loving towards
her new friend. She thought how nice it would be to have Nora at that
splendid abode in England of which she had heard so much,—but she
thought also that in that splendid abode she herself ought never to
have part or share. If it were the case that this were an unfitting
match, it was clearly her duty to decide that there should be no
marriage. Nora had been quite right in bidding her speak to Mr.
Glascock himself, and to Mr. Glascock she would go. But it was very
difficult for her to determine on the manner in which she would
discuss the subject with him. She thought that she could be firm if
her mind were once made up. She believed that perhaps she was by
nature more firm than he. In all their intercourse together he had
ever yielded to her; and though she had been always pleased and
grateful, there had grown upon her an idea that he was perhaps too
easy,—that he was a man as to whom it was necessary that they who
loved him should see that he was not led away by weakness into folly.
But she would want to learn something from him before her decision
was finally reached, and in this she foresaw a great difficulty. In
her trouble she went to her usual counsellor,—the Republican
Browning. In such an emergency she could hardly have done worse.
"Wally," she said, "we talk about England, and Italy, and France, as
though we knew all about them; but how hard it is to realise the
difference between one's own country and others."</p>
<p>"We can at least learn a great deal that is satisfactory," said
Wallachia. "About one out of every five Italians can read a book,
about two out of every five Englishmen can read a book. Out of every
five New Englanders four and four-fifths can read a book. I guess
that is knowing a good deal."</p>
<p>"I don't mean in statistics."</p>
<p>"I cannot conceive how you are to learn anything about any country
except by statistics. I have just discovered that the number of
illegitimate <span class="nowrap">children—"</span></p>
<p>"Oh, Wally, I can't talk about that,—not now at least. What I cannot
realise is this,—what sort of a life it is that they will lead at
Monkhams."</p>
<p>"Plenty to eat and drink, I guess; and you'll always have to go round
in fine clothes."</p>
<p>"And that will be all?"</p>
<p>"No;—not all. There will be carriages and horses, and all manner of
people there who won't care much about you. If he is firm,—very
firm;—if he have that firmness which one does not often meet, even
in an American man, he will be able, after a while, to give you a
position as an English woman of rank." It is to be feared that
Wallachia Petrie had been made aware of Caroline's idea as to Mr.
Glascock's want of purpose.</p>
<p>"And that will be all?"</p>
<p>"If you have a baby, they'll let you go and see it two or three times
a day. I don't suppose you will be allowed to nurse it, because they
never do in England. You have read what the Saturday Review says. In
every other respect the Saturday Review has been the falsest of all
false periodicals, but I guess it has been pretty true in what it has
said about English women."</p>
<p>"I wish I knew more about it really."</p>
<p>"When a man has to leap through a window in the dark, Caroline, of
course he doubts whether the feather bed said to be below will be
soft enough for him."</p>
<p>"I shouldn't fear the leap for myself, if it wouldn't hurt him. Do
you think it possible that society can be so formed that a man should
lose caste because he doesn't marry just one of his own set?"</p>
<p>"It has been so all over the world, my dear. If like to like is to be
true anywhere, it should be true in marriage."</p>
<p>"Yes;—but with a difference. He and I are like to like. We come of
the same race, we speak the same language, we worship the same God,
we have the same ideas of culture and of pleasures. The difference is
one that is not patent to the eye or to the ear. It is a difference
of accidental incident, not of nature or of acquirement."</p>
<p>"I guess you would find, Caroline, that a jury of English matrons
sworn to try you fairly, would not find you to be entitled to come
among them as one of themselves."</p>
<p>"And how will that affect him?"</p>
<p>"Less powerfully than many others, because he is not impassioned. He
is, perhaps—lethargic."</p>
<p>"No, Wally, he is not lethargic."</p>
<p>"If you ask me I must speak. It would harass some men almost to
death; it will not do so with him. He would probably find his
happiness best in leaving his old country and coming among your
people."</p>
<p>The idea of Mr. Glascock,—the future Lord Peterborough,—leaving
England, abandoning Monkhams, deserting his duty in the House of
Lords, and going away to live in an American town, in order that he
might escape the miseries which his wife had brought upon him in his
own country, was more than Caroline could bear. She knew that, at any
rate, it would not come to that. The lord of Monkhams would live at
Monkhams, though the heavens should fall—in regard to domestic
comforts. It was clear to Caroline that Wallachia Petrie had in truth
never brought home to her own imagination the position of an English
peer. "I don't think you understand the people at all," she said
angrily.</p>
<p>"You think that you can understand them better because you are
engaged to this man!" said Miss Petrie, with well-pronounced irony.
"You have found generally that when the sun shines in your eyes your
sight is improved by it! You think that the love-talk of a few weeks
gives clearer instruction than the laborious reading of many volumes
and thoughtful converse with thinking persons! I hope that you may
find it so, Caroline." So saying Wallachia Petrie walked off in great
dudgeon.</p>
<p>Miss Petrie, not having learned from her many volumes and her much
converse with thoughtful persons to read human nature aright, was
convinced by this conversation that her friend Caroline was blind to
all results, and was determined to go on with this dangerous
marriage, having the rays of that sun of Monkhams so full upon her
eyes that she could not see at all. She was specially indignant at
finding that her own words had no effect. But, unfortunately, her
words had had much effect; and Caroline, though she had contested her
points, had done so only with the intention of producing her Mentor's
admonitions. Of course it was out of the question that Mr. Glascock
should go and live in Providence, Rhode Island, from which thriving
town Caroline Spalding had come; but, because that was impossible, it
was not the less probable that he might be degraded and made
miserable in his own home. That suggested jury of British matrons was
a frightful conclave to contemplate, and Caroline was disposed to
believe that the verdict given in reference to herself would be
adverse to her. So she sat and meditated, and spoke not a word
further to any one on the subject till she was alone with the man
that she loved.</p>
<p>Mr. Spalding at this time inhabited the ground floor of a large
palace in the city, from which there was access to a garden which at
this period of the year was green, bright, and shady, and which as
being in the centre of a city was large and luxurious. From one end
of the house there projected a covered terrace, or loggia, in which
there were chairs and tables, sculptured ornaments, busts, and old
monumental relics let into the wall in profusion. It was half chamber
and half garden,—such an adjunct to a house as in our climate would
give only an idea of cold, rheumatism, and a false romance, but under
an Italian sky, is a luxury daily to be enjoyed during most months of
the year. Here Mr. Glascock and Caroline had passed many hours,—and
here they were now seated, late in the evening, while all others of
the family were away. As far as regarded the rooms occupied by the
American Minister, they had the house and garden to themselves, and
there never could come a time more appropriate for the saying of a
thing difficult to be said. Mr. Glascock had heard from his father's
physician, and had said that it was nearly certain now that he need
not go down to Naples again before his marriage. Caroline was
trembling, not knowing how to speak, not knowing how to begin;—but
resolved that the thing should be done. "He will never know you,
Carry," said Mr. Glascock. "It is, perhaps, hardly a sorrow to me,
but it is a regret."</p>
<p>"It would have been a sorrow perhaps to him had he been able to know
me," said she, taking the opportunity of rushing at her subject.</p>
<p>"Why so? Of all human beings he was the softest-hearted."</p>
<p>"Not softer-hearted than you, Charles. But soft hearts have to be
hardened."</p>
<p>"What do you mean? Am I becoming obdurate?"</p>
<p>"I am, Charles," she said. "I have got something to say to you. What
will your uncles and aunts and your mother's relations say of me when
they see me at Monkhams?"</p>
<p>"They will swear to me that you are charming; and then,—when my back
is turned,—they'll pick you to pieces a little among themselves. I
believe that is the way of the world, and I don't suppose that we are
to do better than others."</p>
<p>"And if you had married an English girl, a Lady Augusta
Somebody,—would they pick her to pieces?"</p>
<p>"I guess they would, as you say."</p>
<p>"Just the same?"</p>
<p>"I don't think anybody escapes, as far as I can see. But that won't
prevent their becoming your bosom friends in a few weeks time."</p>
<p>"No one will say that you have been wrong to marry an American girl?"</p>
<p>"Now, Carry, what is the meaning of all this?"</p>
<p>"Do you know any man in your position who ever did marry an American
girl;—any man of your rank in England?" Mr. Glascock began to think
of the case, and could not at the moment remember any instance.
"Charles, I do not think you ought to be the first."</p>
<p>"And yet somebody must be first, if the thing is ever to be
done;—and I am too old to wait on the chance of being the second."</p>
<p>She felt that at the rate she was now progressing she would only run
from one little suggestion to another, and that he, either wilfully
or in sheer simplicity, would take such suggestions simply as jokes;
and she was aware that she lacked the skill to bring the conversation
round gradually to the point which she was bound to reach. She must
make another dash, let it be ever so sudden. Her mode of doing so
would be crude, ugly,—almost vulgar she feared; but she would attain
her object and say what she had to say. When once she had warmed
herself with the heat which argument would produce, then, she was
pretty sure, she would find herself at least as strong as he. "I
don't know that the thing ought to be done at all," she said. During
the last moment or two he had put his arm round her waist; and she,
not choosing to bid him desist from embracing her, but unwilling in
her present mood to be embraced, got up and stood before him. "I have
thought, and thought, and thought, and feel that it should not be
done. In marriage, like should go to like." She despised herself for
using Wallachia's words, but they fitted in so usefully, that she
could not refrain from them. "I was wrong not to know it before, but
it is better to know it now, than not to have known it till too late.
Everything that I hear and see tells me that it would be so. If you
were simply an Englishman, I would go anywhere with you; but I am not
fit to be the wife of an English lord. The time would come when I
should be a disgrace to you, and then I should die."</p>
<p>"I think I should go near dying myself," said he, "if you were a
disgrace to me." He had not risen from his chair, and sat calmly
looking up into her face.</p>
<p>"We have made a mistake, and let us unmake it," she continued. "I
will always be your friend. I will correspond with you. I will come
and see your wife."</p>
<p>"That will be very kind!"</p>
<p>"Charles, if you laugh at me, I shall be angry with you. It is right
that you should look to your future life, as it is right that I
should do so also. Do you think that I am joking? Do you suppose that
I do not mean it?"</p>
<p>"You have taken an extra dose this morning of Wallachia Petrie, and
of course you mean it."</p>
<p>"If you think that I am speaking her mind and not my own, you do not
know me."</p>
<p>"And what is it you propose?" he said, still keeping his seat and
looking calmly up into her face.</p>
<p>"Simply that our engagement should be over."</p>
<p>"And why?"</p>
<p>"Because it is not a fitting one for you to have made. I did not
understand it before, but now I do. It will not be good for you to
marry an American girl. It will not add to your happiness, and may
destroy it. I have learned, at last, to know how much higher is your
position than mine."</p>
<p>"And I am to be supposed to know nothing about it?"</p>
<p>"Your fault is only this,—that you have been too generous. I can be
generous also."</p>
<p>"Now, look here, Caroline, you must not be angry with me if on such a
subject I speak plainly. You must not even be angry if I laugh a
little."</p>
<p>"Pray do not laugh at me!—not now."</p>
<p>"I must a little, Carry. Why am I to be supposed to be so ignorant of
what concerns my own happiness and my own duties? If you will not sit
down, I will get up, and we will take a turn together." He rose from
his seat, but they did not leave the covered terrace. They moved on
to the extremity, and then he stood hemming her in against a marble
table in the corner. "In making this rather wild proposition, have
you considered me at all?"</p>
<p>"I have endeavoured to consider you, and you only."</p>
<p>"And how have you done it? By the aid of some misty, far-fetched
ideas respecting English society, for which you have no basis except
your own dreams,—and by the fantasies of a rabid enthusiast."</p>
<p>"She is not rabid," said Caroline earnestly; "other people think just
the same."</p>
<p>"My dear, there is only one person whose thinking on this subject is
of any avail, and I am that person. Of course, I can't drag you into
church to be married, but practically you can not help yourself from
being taken there now. As there need be no question about our
marriage,—which is a thing as good as
<span class="nowrap">done—"</span></p>
<p>"It is not done at all," said Caroline.</p>
<p>"I feel quite satisfied you will not jilt me, and as I shall insist
on having the ceremony performed, I choose to regard it as a
certainty. Passing that by, then, I will go on to the results. My
uncles, and aunts, and cousins, and the people you talk of, were very
reasonable folk when I last saw them, and quite sufficiently alive to
the fact that they had to regard me as the head of their family. I do
not doubt that we shall find them equally reasonable when we get
home; but should they be changed, should there be any sign shewn that
my choice of a wife had occasioned displeasure,—such displeasure
would not affect you."</p>
<p>"But it would affect you."</p>
<p>"Not at all. In my own house I am master,—and I mean to continue to
be so. You will be mistress there, and the only fear touching such a
position is that it may be recognised by others too strongly. You
have nothing to fear, Carry."</p>
<p>"It is of you I am thinking."</p>
<p>"Nor have I. What if some old women, or even some young women, should
turn up their noses at the wife I have chosen, because she has not
been chosen from among their own countrywomen, is that to be a cause
of suffering to us? Can not we rise above that,—lasting as it would
do for a few weeks, a month or two perhaps,—say a year,—till my
Caroline shall have made herself known? I think that we are strong
enough to live down a trouble so light." He had come close to her as
he was speaking, and had again put his arm round her waist. She tried
to escape from his embrace,—not with persistency, not with the
strength which always suffices for a woman when the embrace is in
truth a thing to be avoided, but clutching at his fingers with hers,
pressing them rather than loosening their grasp. "No, Carry," he
continued; "we have got to go through with it now, and we will try
and make the best of it. You may trust me that we shall not find it
difficult,—not, at least, on the ground of your present fears. I can
bear a heavier burden than you will bring upon me."</p>
<p>"I know that I ought to prove to you that I am right," she said,
still struggling with his hand.</p>
<p>"And I know that you can prove nothing of the kind. Dearest, it is
fixed between us now, and do not let us be so silly as to raise
imaginary difficulties. Of course you would have to marry me, even if
there were cause for such fears. If there were any great cause, still
the game would be worth the candle. There could be no going back, let
the fear be what it might. But there need be no fear if you will only
love me." She felt that he was altogether too strong for her,—that
she had mistaken his character in supposing that she could be more
firm than he. He was so strong that he treated her almost as a
child;—and yet she loved him infinitely the better for so treating
her. Of course, she knew now that her objection, whether true or
unsubstantial, could not avail. As he stood with his arm round her,
she was powerless to contradict him in anything. She had so far
acknowledged this that she no longer struggled with him, but allowed
her hand to remain quietly within his. If there was no going back
from this bargain that had been made,—why, then, there was no need
for combating. And when he stooped over and kissed her lips, she had
not a word to say. "Be good to me," he said, "and tell me that I am
right."</p>
<p>"You must be master, I suppose, whether you are right or wrong. A man
always thinks himself entitled to his own way."</p>
<p>"Why, yes. When he has won the battle, he claims his captive. Now,
the truth is this, I have won the battle, and your friend, Miss
Petrie, has lost it. I hope she will understand that she has been
beaten at last out of the field." As he said this, he heard a step
behind them, and turning round saw Wallachia there almost before he
could drop his arm.</p>
<p>"I am sorry that I have intruded on you," she said very grimly.</p>
<p>"Not in the least," said Mr. Glascock. "Caroline and I have had a
little dispute, but we have settled it without coming to blows."</p>
<p>"I do not suppose that an English gentleman ever absolutely strikes a
lady," said Wallachia Petrie.</p>
<p>"Not except on strong provocation," said Mr. Glascock. "In reference
to wives, a stick is allowed as big as your thumb."</p>
<p>"I have heard that it is so by the laws of England," said Wallachia.</p>
<p>"How can you be so ridiculous, Wally!" said Caroline. "There is
nothing that you would not believe."</p>
<p>"I hope that it may never be true in your case," said Wallachia.</p>
<p>A couple of days after this Miss Spalding found that it was
absolutely necessary that she should explain the circumstances of her
position to Nora. She had left Nora with the purpose of performing a
very high-minded action, of sacrificing herself for the sake of her
lover, of giving up all her golden prospects, and of becoming once
again the bosom friend of Wallachia Petrie, with this simple
consolation for her future life,—that she had refused to marry an
English nobleman because the English nobleman's condition was
unsuited to her. It would have been an episode in female life in
which pride might be taken;—but all that was now changed. She had
made her little attempt,—had made it, as she felt, in a very languid
manner, and had found herself treated as a child for doing so. Of
course she was happy in her ill success; of course she would have
been broken-hearted had she succeeded. But, nevertheless, she was
somewhat lowered in her own esteem, and it was necessary that she
should acknowledge the truth to the friend whom she had consulted. A
day or two had passed before she found herself alone with Nora, but
when she did so she confessed her failure at once.</p>
<p>"You told him all, then?" said Nora.</p>
<p>"Oh yes, I told him all. That is, I could not really tell him. When
the moment came I had no words."</p>
<p>"And what did he say?"</p>
<p>"He had words enough. I never knew him to be eloquent before."</p>
<p>"He can speak out if he likes," said Nora.</p>
<p>"So I have found,—with a vengeance. Nobody was ever so put down as I
was. Don't you know that there are times when it does not seem to be
worth your while to put out your strength against an adversary? So it
was with him. He just told me that he was my master, and that I was
to do as he bade me."</p>
<p>"And what did you say?"</p>
<p>"I promised to be a good girl," said Caroline, "and not to pretend to
have any opinion of my own ever again. And so we kissed, and were
friends."</p>
<p>"I dare say there was a kiss, my dear."</p>
<p>"Of course there was;—and he held me in his arms, and comforted me,
and told me how to behave;—just as you would do a little girl. It's
all over now, of course; and if there be a mistake, it is his fault.
I feel that all responsibility is gone from myself, and that for all
the rest of my life I have to do just what he tells me."</p>
<p>"And what says the divine Wallachia?"</p>
<p>"Poor Wally! She says nothing, but she thinks that I am a castaway
and a recreant. I am a recreant, I know;—but yet I think that I was
right. I know I could not help myself."</p>
<p>"Of course you were right, my dear," said the sage Nora. "If you had
the notion in your head, it was wise to get rid of it; but I knew how
it would be when you spoke to him."</p>
<p>"You were not so weak when he came to you."</p>
<p>"That was altogether another thing. It was not arranged in heaven
that I was to become his captive."</p>
<p>After that Wallachia Petrie never again tried her influence on her
former friend, but admitted to herself that the evil was done, and
that it could not be remedied. According to her theory of life,
Caroline Spalding had been wrong, and weak,—had shewn herself to be
comfort-loving and luxuriously-minded, had looked to get her
happiness from soft effeminate pleasures rather than from rational
work and the useful, independent exercise of her own intelligence. In
the privacy of her little chamber Wallachia Petrie shed,—not
absolute tears,—but many tearful thoughts over her friend. It was to
her a thing very terrible that the chosen one of her heart should
prefer the career of an English lord's wife to that of an American
citizeness, with all manner of capability for female voting, female
speech-making, female poetising, and, perhaps, female political
action before her. It was a thousand pities! "You may take a horse to
water,"—said Wallachia to herself, thinking of the ever-freshly
springing fountain of her own mind, at which Caroline Spalding would
always have been made welcome freely to quench her thirst,—"but you
cannot make him drink if he be not athirst." In the future she would
have no friend. Never again would she subject herself to the disgrace
of such a failure. But the sacrifice was to be made, and she knew
that it was bootless to waste her words further on Caroline Spalding.
She left Florence before the wedding, and returned alone to the land
of liberty. She wrote a letter to Caroline explaining her conduct,
and Caroline Spalding shewed the letter to her husband,—as one that
was both loving and eloquent.</p>
<p>"Very loving and very eloquent," he said. "But, nevertheless, one
does think of sour grapes."</p>
<p>"There I am sure you wrong her," said Caroline.</p>
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