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<h2> CHAPTER XXXVI </h2>
<h3> A SIMPLE QUESTION </h3>
<p>Now this account of what Jacob Rigg had seen and heard threw me into a
state of mind extremely unsatisfactory. To be in eager search of some
unknown person who had injured me inexpressibly, without any longing for
revenge on my part, but simply with a view to justice—this was a
very different thing from feeling that an unknown person was in quest of
me, with the horrible purpose of destroying me to insure his own wicked
safety.</p>
<p>At first I almost thought that he was welcome to do this; that such a life
as mine (if looked at from an outer point of view) was better to be died
than lived out. Also that there was nobody left to get any good out of all
that I could do; and even if I ever should succeed, truth would come out
of her tomb too late. And this began to make me cry, which I had long
given over doing, with no one to feel for the heart of it.</p>
<p>But a thing of this kind could not long endure; and as soon as the sun of
the morrow arose (or at least as soon as I was fit to see him), my view of
the world was quite different. Here was the merry brook, playing with the
morning, spread around with ample depth and rich retreat of meadows, and
often, after maze of leisure, hastening with a tinkle into shadowy delight
of trees. Here, as well, were happy lanes, and footpaths of a soft
content, unworn with any pressure of the price of time or business. None
of them knew (in spite, at flurried spots, of their own direction posts)
whence they were coming or whither going—only that here they lay,
between the fields or through them, like idle veins of earth, with
sometimes company of a man or boy, whistling to his footfall, or a singing
maid with a milking pail. And how ungrateful it would be to forget the
pleasant copses, in waves of deep green leafage flowing down and up the
channeled hills, waving at the wind to tints and tones of new refreshment,
and tempting idle folk to come and hear the hush, and see the twinkled
texture of pellucid gloom.</p>
<p>Much, however, as I loved to sit in places of this kind alone, for some
little time I feared to do so, after hearing the sexton's tale; for
Jacob's terror was so unfeigned (though his own life had not been
threatened) that, knowing as I did from Betsy's account, as well as his
own appearance, that he was not at all a nervous man, I could not help
sharing his vague alarm. It seemed so terrible that any one should come to
the graves of my sweet mother and her six harmless children, and, instead
of showing pity, as even a monster might have tried to do, should stand,
if not with threatening gestures, yet with a most hostile mien, and thirst
for the life of the only survivor—my poor self.</p>
<p>But terrible or not, the truth was so; and neither Betsy nor myself could
shake Mr. Rigg's conclusion. Indeed, he became more and more emphatic, in
reply to our doubts and mild suggestions, perhaps that his eyes had
deceived him, or perhaps that, taking a nap in the corner of the buttress,
he had dreamed at least a part of it. And Betsy, on the score of ancient
friendship and kind remembrance of his likings, put it to him in a gentle
way whether his knowledge of what Sally Mock had been, and the calumnies
she might have spoken of his beer (when herself, in the work-house,
deprived of it), might not have induced him to take a little more than
usual in going down so deep for her. But he answered, "No; it was nothing
of the sort. Deep he had gone, to the tiptoe of his fling; not from any
feeling of a wish to keep her down, but just because the parish paid, and
the parish would have measurement. And when that was on, he never brought
down more than the quart tin from the public; and never had none down
afterward. Otherwise the ground was so ticklish, that a man, working too
free, might stay down there. No, no! That idea was like one of Sally's
own. He just had his quart of Persfield ale—short measure, of
course, with a woman at the bar—and if that were enough to make a
man dream dreams, the sooner he dug his own grave, the better for all
connected with him."</p>
<p>We saw that we had gone too far in thinking of such a possibility; and if
Mr. Rigg had not been large-minded, as well as notoriously sober, Betsy
might have lost me all the benefit of his evidence by her London-bred
clumsiness with him. For it takes quite a different handling, and a
different mode of outset, to get on with the London working class and the
laboring kind of the country; or at least it seemed to me so.</p>
<p>Now my knowledge of Jacob Rigg was owing, as might be supposed, to Betsy
Strouss, who had taken the lead of me in almost every thing ever since I
brought her down from London. And now I was glad that, in one point at
least, her judgment had overruled mine—to wit, that my name and
parentage were as yet not generally known in the village. Indeed, only
Betsy herself and Jacob and a faithful old washer-woman, with no roof to
her mouth, were aware of me as Miss Castlewood. Not that I had taken any
other name—to that I would not stoop—but because the public,
of its own accord, paying attention to Betsy's style of addressing me,
followed her lead (with some little improvement), and was pleased to
entitle me "Miss Raumur."</p>
<p>Some question had been raised as to spelling me aright, till a man of
advanced intelligence proved to many eyes, and even several pairs of
spectacles (assembled in front of the blacksmith's shop), that no other
way could be right except that. For there it was in print, as any one able
might see, on the side of an instrument whose name and qualities were even
more mysterious than those in debate. Therefore I became "Miss Raumur;"
and a protest would have gone for nothing unless printed also. But it did
not behoove me to go to that expense, while it suited me very well to be
considered and pitied as a harmless foreigner—a being who on English
land may find some cause to doubt whether, even in his own country, a
prophet could be less thought of. And this large pity for me, as an
outlandish person, in the very spot where I was born, endowed me with
tenfold the privilege of the proudest native. For the natives of this
valley are declared to be of a different stock from those around them, not
of the common Wessex strain, but of Jutish or Danish origin. How that may
be I do not know; at any rate, they think well of themselves, and no doubt
they have cause to do so.</p>
<p>Moreover, they all were very kind to me, and their primitive ways amused
me, as soon as they had settled that I was a foreigner, equally beyond and
below inquiry. They told me that I was kindly welcome to stay there as
long as it pleased me; and knowing how fond I was of making pictures,
after beholding my drawing-book, every farmer among them gave me leave to
come into his fields, though he never had heard there was any thing there
worth painting.</p>
<p>When once there has been a deposit of idea in the calm deep eocene of
British rural mind, the impression will outlast any shallow deluge of the
noblest education. Shoxford had settled two points forever, without
troubling reason to come out of her way—first, that I was a foreign
young lady of good birth, manners, and money; second, and far more
important, I was here to write and paint a book about Shoxford. Not for
the money, of that I had no need (according to the congress at the
"Silver-edged Holly"), but for the praise and the knowledge of it, like,
and to make a talk among high people. But the elders shook their heads—as
I heard from Mr. Rigg, who hugged his knowledge proudly, and uttered dim
sayings of wisdom let forth at large usury: he did not mind telling me
that the old men shook their heads, for fear of my being a deal too young,
and a long sight too well favored (as any man might tell without his specs
on), for to write any book upon any subject yet, leave alone an old,
ancient town like theirs. However, there might be no harm in my trying,
and perhaps the school-master would cross out the bad language.</p>
<p>Thus for once fortune now was giving me good help, enabling me to go about
freely, and preventing (so far as I could see, at least) all danger of
discovery by my unknown foe. So here I resolved to keep my head-quarters,
dispensing, if it must be so, with Betsy's presence, and not even having
Mrs. Price to succeed her, unless my cousin should insist upon it. And
partly to dissuade him from that, and partly to hear his opinion of the
sexton's tale, I paid a flying visit to Lord Castlewood; while "Madam
Straw," as Betsy now was called throughout the village, remained behind at
Shoxford. For I long had desired to know a thing which I had not ventured
to ask my cousin—though I did ask Mr. Shovelin—whether my
father had intrusted him with the key of his own mysterious acts. I
scarcely knew whether it was proper even now to put this question to Lord
Castlewood; but even without doing so, I might get at the answer by
watching him closely while I told my tale. Not a letter had reached me
since I came to Shoxford, neither had I written any, except one to Uncle
Sam; and keeping to this excellent rule, I arrived at Castlewood without
notice.</p>
<p>In doing this I took no liberty, because full permission had been given me
about it; and indeed I had been expected there, as Stixon told me, some
days before. He added that his master was about as usual, but had shown
some uneasiness on my account, though the butler was all in the dark about
it, and felt it very hard after all these years, "particular, when he
could hardly help thinking that Mrs. Price—a new hand compared to
himself, not to speak of being a female—knowed all about it, and
were very aggravating. But there, he would say no more; he knew his place,
and he always had been valued in it, long afore Mrs. Price come up to the
bottom of his waistcoat."</p>
<p>My cousin received me with kindly warmth, and kissed me gently on the
forehead. "My dear, how very well you look!" he said. "Your native air has
agreed with you. I was getting, in my quiet way, rather sedulous and
self-reproachful about you. But you would have your own way, like a young
American; and it seems that you were right."</p>
<p>"It was quite right," I answered, with a hearty kiss, for I never could be
cold-natured; and this was my only one of near kin, so far, at least, as
my knowledge went. "I was quite right in going; and I have done good. At
any rate, I have found out something—something that may not be of
any kind of use; but still it makes me hope things."</p>
<p>With that, in as few words as ever I could use, I told Lord Castlewood the
whole of Jacob's tale, particularly looking at him all the while I spoke,
to settle in my own mind whether the idea of such a thing was new to him.
Concerning that, however, I could make out nothing. My cousin, at his time
of life, and after so much travelling, had much too large a share of mind
and long skill of experience for me to make any thing out of his face
beyond his own intention. And whether he had suspicion or not of any thing
at all like what I was describing, or any body having to do with it, was
more than I ever might have known, if I had not gathered up my courage and
put the question outright to him. I told him that if I was wrong in
asking, he was not to answer; but, right or wrong, ask him I must.</p>
<p>"The question is natural, and not at all improper," replied Lord
Castlewood, standing a moment for change of pain, which was all his
relief. "Indeed, I expected you to ask me that before. But, Erema, I have
also had to ask myself about it, whether I have any right to answer you.
And I have decided not to do so, unless you will pledge yourself to one
thing."</p>
<p>"I will pledge myself to any thing," I answered, rashly; "I do not care
what it is, if only to get at the bottom of this mystery."</p>
<p>"I scarcely think you will hold good to your words when you hear what you
have to promise. The condition upon which I tell you what I believe to be
the cause of all is, that you let things remain as they are, and keep
silence forever about them."</p>
<p>"Oh, you can not be so cruel, so atrocious!" I cried, in my bitter
disappointment. "What good would it be for me to know things thus, and let
the vile wrong continue? Surely you are not bound to lay on me a condition
so impossible?"</p>
<p>"After much consideration and strong wish to have it otherwise, I have
concluded that I am so bound."</p>
<p>"In duty to my father, or the family, or what? Forgive me for asking, but
it does seem so hard."</p>
<p>"It seems hard, my dear, and it is hard as well," he answered, very
gently, yet showing in his eyes and lips no chance of any yielding. "But
remember that I do not know, I only guess, the secret; and if you give the
pledge I speak of, you merely follow in your father's steps."</p>
<p>"Never," I replied, with as firm a face as his. "It may have been my
father's duty, or no doubt he thought it so; but it can not be mine,
unless I make it so by laying it on my honor. And I will not do that."</p>
<p>"Perhaps you are right; but, at any rate, remember that I have not tried
to persuade you. I wish to do what is for your happiness, Erema. And I
think that, on the whole, with your vigor and high spirit, you are better
as you are than if you had a knowledge which you could only brood over and
not use."</p>
<p>"I will find out the whole of it myself," I cried, for I could not repress
all excitement; "and then I need not brood over it, but may have it out
and get justice. In the wildest parts of America justice comes with
perseverance: am I to abjure it in the heart of England? Lord Castlewood,
which is first—justice or honor?"</p>
<p>"My cousin, you are fond of asking questions difficult to answer. Justice
and honor nearly always go together. When they do otherwise, honor stands
foremost, with people of good birth, at least."</p>
<p>"Then I will be a person of very bad birth. If they come into conflict in
my life, as almost every thing seems to do, my first thought shall be of
justice; and honor shall come in as its ornament afterward."</p>
<p>"Erema," said my cousin, "your meaning is good, and at your time of life
you can scarcely be expected to take a dispassionate view of things."</p>
<p>At first I felt almost as if I could hate a "dispassionate view of
things." Things are made to arouse our passion, so long as meanness and
villainy prevail; and if old men, knowing the balance of the world, can
contemplate them all "dispassionately," more clearly than any thing else,
to my mind, that proves the beauty of being young. I am sure that I never
was hot or violent—qualities which I especially dislike—but
still I would rather almost have those than be too philosophical. And now,
while I revered my father's cousin for his gentleness, wisdom, and
long-suffering, I almost longed to fly back to the Major, prejudiced,
peppery, and red-hot for justice, at any rate in all things that concerned
himself.</p>
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