<h2><SPAN name="chap24"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXIV.<br/> M. DE BASSOMPIERRE.</h2>
<p>Those who live in retirement, whose lives have fallen amid the seclusion of
schools or of other walled-in and guarded dwellings, are liable to be suddenly
and for a long while dropped out of the memory of their friends, the denizens
of a freer world. Unaccountably, perhaps, and close upon some space of
unusually frequent intercourse—some congeries of rather exciting little
circumstances, whose natural sequel would rather seem to be the quickening than
the suspension of communication—there falls a stilly pause, a wordless
silence, a long blank of oblivion. Unbroken always is this blank; alike entire
and unexplained. The letter, the message once frequent, are cut off; the visit,
formerly periodical, ceases to occur; the book, paper, or other token that
indicated remembrance, comes no more.</p>
<p>Always there are excellent reasons for these lapses, if the hermit but knew
them. Though he is stagnant in his cell, his connections without are whirling
in the very vortex of life. That void interval which passes for him so slowly
that the very clocks seem at a stand, and the wingless hours plod by in the
likeness of tired tramps prone to rest at milestones—that same interval,
perhaps, teems with events, and pants with hurry for his friends.</p>
<p>The hermit—if he be a sensible hermit—will swallow his own
thoughts, and lock up his own emotions during these weeks of inward winter. He
will know that Destiny designed him to imitate, on occasion, the dormouse, and
he will be conformable: make a tidy ball of himself, creep into a hole of
life’s wall, and submit decently to the drift which blows in and soon
blocks him up, preserving him in ice for the season.</p>
<p>Let him say, “It is quite right: it ought to be so, since so it
is.” And, perhaps, one day his snow-sepulchre will open, spring’s
softness will return, the sun and south-wind will reach him; the budding of
hedges, and carolling of birds, and singing of liberated streams, will call him
to kindly resurrection. <i>Perhaps</i> this may be the case, perhaps not: the
frost may get into his heart and never thaw more; when spring comes, a crow or
a pie may pick out of the wall only his dormouse-bones. Well, even in that
case, all will be right: it is to be supposed he knew from the first he was
mortal, and must one day go the way of all flesh, “As well soon as
syne.”</p>
<p>Following that eventful evening at the theatre, came for me seven weeks as bare
as seven sheets of blank paper: no word was written on one of them; not a
visit, not a token.</p>
<p>About the middle of that time I entertained fancies that something had happened
to my friends at La Terrasse. The mid-blank is always a beclouded point for the
solitary: his nerves ache with the strain of long expectancy; the doubts
hitherto repelled gather now to a mass and—strong in
accumulation—roll back upon him with a force which savours of
vindictiveness. Night, too, becomes an unkindly time, and sleep and his nature
cannot agree: strange starts and struggles harass his couch: the sinister band
of bad dreams, with horror of calamity, and sick dread of entire desertion at
their head, join the league against him. Poor wretch! He does his best to bear
up, but he is a poor, pallid, wasting wretch, despite that best.</p>
<p>Towards the last of these long seven weeks I admitted, what through the other
six I had jealously excluded—the conviction that these blanks were
inevitable: the result of circumstances, the fiat of fate, a part of my
life’s lot and—above all—a matter about whose origin no
question must ever be asked, for whose painful sequence no murmur ever uttered.
Of course I did not blame myself for suffering: I thank God I had a truer sense
of justice than to fall into any imbecile extravagance of self-accusation; and
as to blaming others for silence, in my reason I well knew them blameless, and
in my heart acknowledged them so: but it was a rough and heavy road to travel,
and I longed for better days.</p>
<p>I tried different expedients to sustain and fill existence: I commenced an
elaborate piece of lace-work, I studied German pretty hard, I undertook a
course of regular reading of the driest and thickest books in the library; in
all my efforts I was as orthodox as I knew how to be. Was there error
somewhere? Very likely. I only know the result was as if I had gnawed a file to
satisfy hunger, or drank brine to quench thirst.</p>
<p>My hour of torment was the post-hour. Unfortunately, I knew it too well, and
tried as vainly as assiduously to cheat myself of that knowledge; dreading the
rack of expectation, and the sick collapse of disappointment which daily
preceded and followed upon that well-recognised ring.</p>
<p>I suppose animals kept in cages, and so scantily fed as to be always upon the
verge of famine, await their food as I awaited a letter. Oh!—to speak
truth, and drop that tone of a false calm which long to sustain, outwears
nature’s endurance—I underwent in those seven weeks bitter fears
and pains, strange inward trials, miserable defections of hope, intolerable
encroachments of despair. This last came so near me sometimes that her breath
went right through me. I used to feel it like a baleful air or sigh, penetrate
deep, and make motion pause at my heart, or proceed only under unspeakable
oppression. The letter—the well-beloved letter—would not come; and
it was all of sweetness in life I had to look for.</p>
<p>In the very extremity of want, I had recourse again, and yet again, to the
little packet in the case—the five letters. How splendid that month
seemed whose skies had beheld the rising of these five stars! It was always at
night I visited them, and not daring to ask every evening for a candle in the
kitchen, I bought a wax taper and matches to light it, and at the study-hour
stole up to the dormitory and feasted on my crust from the Barmecide’s
loaf. It did not nourish me: I pined on it, and got as thin as a shadow:
otherwise I was not ill.</p>
<p>Reading there somewhat late one evening, and feeling that the power to read was
leaving me—for the letters from incessant perusal were losing all sap and
significance: my gold was withering to leaves before my eyes, and I was
sorrowing over the disillusion—suddenly a quick tripping foot ran up the
stairs. I knew Ginevra Fanshawe’s step: she had dined in town that
afternoon; she was now returned, and would come here to replace her shawl,
&c. in the wardrobe.</p>
<p>Yes: in she came, dressed in bright silk, with her shawl falling from her
shoulders, and her curls, half-uncurled in the damp of night, drooping careless
and heavy upon her neck. I had hardly time to recasket my treasures and lock
them up when she was at my side her humour seemed none of the best.</p>
<p>“It has been a stupid evening: they are stupid people,” she began.</p>
<p>“Who? Mrs. Cholmondeley? I thought you always found her house
charming?”</p>
<p>“I have not been to Mrs. Cholmondeley’s.”</p>
<p>“Indeed! Have you made new acquaintance?”</p>
<p>“My uncle de Bassompierre is come.”</p>
<p>“Your uncle de Bassompierre! Are you not glad?—I thought he was a
favourite.”</p>
<p>“You thought wrong: the man is odious; I hate him.”</p>
<p>“Because he is a foreigner? or for what other reason of equal
weight?”</p>
<p>“He is not a foreigner. The man is English enough, goodness knows; and
had an English name till three or four years ago; but his mother was a
foreigner, a de Bassompierre, and some of her family are dead and have left him
estates, a title, and this name: he is quite a great man now.”</p>
<p>“Do you hate him for that reason?”</p>
<p>“Don’t I know what mamma says about him? He is not my own uncle,
but married mamma’s sister. Mamma detests him; she says he killed aunt
Ginevra with unkindness: he looks like a bear. Such a dismal evening!”
she went on. “I’ll go no more to his big hotel. Fancy me walking
into a room alone, and a great man fifty years old coming forwards, and after a
few minutes’ conversation actually turning his back upon me, and then
abruptly going out of the room. Such odd ways! I daresay his conscience smote
him, for they all say at home I am the picture of aunt Ginevra. Mamma often
declares the likeness is quite ridiculous.”</p>
<p>“Were you the only visitor?”</p>
<p>“The only visitor? Yes; then there was missy, my cousin: little spoiled,
pampered thing.”</p>
<p>“M. de Bassompierre has a daughter?”</p>
<p>“Yes, yes: don’t tease one with questions. Oh, dear! I am so
tired.”</p>
<p>She yawned. Throwing herself without ceremony on my bed she added, “It
seems Mademoiselle was nearly crushed to a jelly in a hubbub at the theatre
some weeks ago.”</p>
<p>“Ah! indeed. And they live at a large hotel in the Rue Crécy?”</p>
<p>“Justement. How do <i>you</i> know?”</p>
<p>“I have been there.”</p>
<p>“Oh, you have? Really! You go everywhere in these days. I suppose Mother
Bretton took you. She and Esculapius have the <i>entrée</i> of the de
Bassompierre apartments: it seems ‘my son John’ attended missy on
the occasion of her accident—Accident? Bah! All affectation! I
don’t think she was squeezed more than she richly deserves for her airs.
And now there is quite an intimacy struck up: I heard something about
‘auld lang syne,’ and what not. Oh, how stupid they all
were!”</p>
<p>“<i>All!</i> You said you were the only visitor.”</p>
<p>“Did I? You see one forgets to particularize an old woman and her
boy.”</p>
<p>“Dr. and Mrs. Bretton were at M. de Bassompierre’s this
evening?”</p>
<p>“Ay, ay! as large as life; and missy played the hostess. What a conceited
doll it is!”</p>
<p>Soured and listless, Miss Fanshawe was beginning to disclose the causes of her
prostrate condition. There had been a retrenchment of incense, a diversion or a
total withholding of homage and attention coquetry had failed of effect, vanity
had undergone mortification. She lay fuming in the vapours.</p>
<p>“Is Miss de Bassompierre quite well now?” I asked.</p>
<p>“As well as you or I, no doubt; but she is an affected little thing, and
gave herself invalid airs to attract medical notice. And to see the old dowager
making her recline on a couch, and ‘my son John’ prohibiting
excitement, etcetera—faugh! the scene was quite sickening.”</p>
<p>“It would not have been so if the object of attention had been changed:
if you had taken Miss de Bassompierre’s place.”</p>
<p>“Indeed! I hate ‘my son John!’”</p>
<p>“‘My son John!’—whom do you indicate by that name? Dr.
Bretton’s mother never calls him so.”</p>
<p>“Then she ought. A clownish, bearish John he is.”</p>
<p>“You violate the truth in saying so; and as the whole of my patience is
now spun off the distaff, I peremptorily desire you to rise from that bed, and
vacate this room.”</p>
<p>“Passionate thing! Your face is the colour of a coquelicot. I wonder what
always makes you so mighty testy à l’endroit du gros Jean? ‘John
Anderson, my Joe, John!’ Oh, the distinguished name!”</p>
<p>Thrilling with exasperation, to which it would have been sheer folly to have
given vent—for there was no contending with that unsubstantial feather,
that mealy-winged moth—I extinguished my taper, locked my bureau, and
left her, since she would not leave me. Small-beer as she was, she had turned
insufferably acid.</p>
<p>The morrow was Thursday and a half-holiday. Breakfast was over; I had withdrawn
to the first classe. The dreaded hour, the post-hour, was nearing, and I sat
waiting it, much as a ghost-seer might wait his spectre. Less than ever was a
letter probable; still, strive as I would, I could not forget that it was
possible. As the moments lessened, a restlessness and fear almost beyond the
average assailed me. It was a day of winter east wind, and I had now for some
time entered into that dreary fellowship with the winds and their changes, so
little known, so incomprehensible to the healthy. The north and east owned a
terrific influence, making all pain more poignant, all sorrow sadder. The south
could calm, the west sometimes cheer: unless, indeed, they brought on their
wings the burden of thunder-clouds, under the weight and warmth of which all
energy died.</p>
<p>Bitter and dark as was this January day, I remember leaving the classe, and
running down without bonnet to the bottom of the long garden, and then
lingering amongst the stripped shrubs, in the forlorn hope that the
postman’s ring might occur while I was out of hearing, and I might thus
be spared the thrill which some particular nerve or nerves, almost gnawed
through with the unremitting tooth of a fixed idea, were becoming wholly unfit
to support. I lingered as long as I dared without fear of attracting attention
by my absence. I muffled my head in my apron, and stopped my ears in terror of
the torturing clang, sure to be followed by such blank silence, such barren
vacuum for me. At last I ventured to re-enter the first classe, where, as it
was not yet nine o’clock, no pupils had been admitted. The first thing
seen was a white object on my black desk, a white, flat object. The post had,
indeed, arrived; by me unheard. Rosine had visited my cell, and, like some
angel, had left behind her a bright token of her presence. That shining thing
on the desk was indeed a letter, a real letter; I saw so much at the distance
of three yards, and as I had but one correspondent on earth, from that one it
must come. He remembered me yet. How deep a pulse of gratitude sent new life
through my heart.</p>
<p>Drawing near, bending and looking on the letter, in trembling but almost
certain hope of seeing a known hand, it was my lot to find, on the contrary, an
autograph for the moment deemed unknown—a pale female scrawl, instead of
a firm, masculine character. I then thought fate was <i>too</i> hard for me,
and I said, audibly, “This is cruel.”</p>
<p>But I got over that pain also. Life is still life, whatever its pangs: our eyes
and ears and their use remain with us, though the prospect of what pleases be
wholly withdrawn, and the sound of what consoles be quite silenced.</p>
<p>I opened the billet: by this time I had recognised its handwriting as perfectly
familiar. It was dated “La Terrasse,” and it ran thus:—</p>
<p class="letter">
“DEAR LUCY,—It occurs to me to inquire what you have been doing
with yourself for the last month or two? Not that I suspect you would have the
least difficulty in giving an account of your proceedings. I daresay you have
been just as busy and as happy as ourselves at La Terrasse. As to Graham, his
professional connection extends daily: he is so much sought after, so much
engaged, that I tell him he will grow quite conceited. Like a right good
mother, as I am, I do my best to keep him down: no flattery does he get from
me, as you know. And yet, Lucy, he is a fine fellow: his mother’s heart
dances at the sight of him. After being hurried here and there the whole day,
and passing the ordeal of fifty sorts of tempers, and combating a hundred
caprices, and sometimes witnessing cruel sufferings—perhaps,
occasionally, as I tell him, inflicting them—at night he still comes home
to me in such kindly, pleasant mood, that really, I seem to live in a sort of
moral antipodes, and on these January evenings my day rises when other
people’s night sets in.<br/>
“Still he needs keeping in order, and correcting, and repressing, and I
do him that good service; but the boy is so elastic there is no such thing as
vexing him thoroughly. When I think I have at last driven him to the sullens,
he turns on me with jokes for retaliation: but you know him and all his
iniquities, and I am but an elderly simpleton to make him the subject of this
epistle.<br/>
“As for me, I have had my old Bretton agent here on a visit, and have
been plunged overhead and ears in business matters. I do so wish to regain for
Graham at least some part of what his father left him. He laughs to scorn my
anxiety on this point, bidding me look and see how he can provide for himself
and me too, and asking what the old lady can possibly want that she has not;
hinting about sky-blue turbans; accusing me of an ambition to wear diamonds,
keep livery servants, have an hotel, and lead the fashion amongst the English
clan in Villette.<br/>
“Talking of sky-blue turbans, I wish you had been with us the other
evening. He had come in really tired, and after I had given him his tea, he
threw himself into my chair with his customary presumption. To my great
delight, he dropped asleep. (You know how he teases me about being drowsy; I,
who never, by any chance, close an eye by daylight.) While he slept, I thought
he looked very bonny, Lucy: fool as I am to be so proud of him; but who can
help it? Show me his peer. Look where I will, I see nothing like him in
Villette. Well, I took it into my head to play him a trick: so I brought out
the sky-blue turban, and handling it with gingerly precaution, I managed to
invest his brows with this grand adornment. I assure you it did not at all
misbecome him; he looked quite Eastern, except that he is so fair. Nobody,
however, can accuse him of having red hair <i>now</i>—it is genuine
chestnut—a dark, glossy chestnut; and when I put my large cashmere about
him, there was as fine a young bey, dey, or pacha improvised as you would wish
to see.<br/>
“It was good entertainment; but only half-enjoyed, since I was alone: you
should have been there.<br/>
“In due time my lord awoke: the looking-glass above the fireplace soon
intimated to him his plight: as you may imagine, I now live under threat and
dread of vengeance.<br/>
“But to come to the gist of my letter. I know Thursday is a half-holiday
in the Rue Fossette: be ready, then, by five in the afternoon, at which hour I
will send the carriage to take you out to La Terrasse. Be sure to come: you may
meet some old acquaintance. Good-by, my wise, dear, grave little
god-daughter.—Very truly yours,</p>
<p class="right">
“LOUISA BRETTON.”</p>
<p>Now, a letter like that sets one to rights! I might still be sad after reading
that letter, but I was more composed; not exactly cheered, perhaps, but
relieved. My friends, at least, were well and happy: no accident had occurred
to Graham; no illness had seized his mother—calamities that had so long
been my dream and thought. Their feelings for me too were—as they had
been. Yet, how strange it was to look on Mrs. Bretton’s seven weeks and
contrast them with my seven weeks! Also, how very wise it is in people placed
in an exceptional position to hold their tongues and not rashly declare how
such position galls them! The world can understand well enough the process of
perishing for want of food: perhaps few persons can enter into or follow out
that of going mad from solitary confinement. They see the long-buried prisoner
disinterred, a maniac or an idiot!—how his senses left him—how his
nerves, first inflamed, underwent nameless agony, and then sunk to
palsy—is a subject too intricate for examination, too abstract for
popular comprehension. Speak of it! you might almost as well stand up in an
European market-place, and propound dark sayings in that language and mood
wherein Nebuchadnezzar, the imperial hypochondriac, communed with his baffled
Chaldeans. And long, long may the minds to whom such themes are no
mystery—by whom their bearings are sympathetically seized—be few in
number, and rare of rencounter. Long may it be generally thought that physical
privations alone merit compassion, and that the rest is a figment. When the
world was younger and haler than now, moral trials were a deeper mystery still:
perhaps in all the land of Israel there was but one Saul—certainly but
one David to soothe or comprehend him.</p>
<p class="p2">
The keen, still cold of the morning was succeeded, later in the day, by a sharp
breathing from Russian wastes: the cold zone sighed over the temperate zone,
and froze it fast. A heavy firmament, dull, and thick with snow, sailed up from
the north, and settled over expectant Europe. Towards afternoon began the
descent. I feared no carriage would come, the white tempest raged so dense and
wild. But trust my godmother! Once having asked, she would have her guest.
About six o’clock I was lifted from the carriage over the already
blocked-up front steps of the château, and put in at the door of La Terrasse.</p>
<p>Running through the vestibule, and up-stairs to the drawing-room, there I found
Mrs. Bretton—a summer-day in her own person. Had I been twice as cold as
I was, her kind kiss and cordial clasp would have warmed me. Inured now for so
long a time to rooms with bare boards, black benches, desks, and stoves, the
blue saloon seemed to me gorgeous. In its Christmas-like fire alone there was a
clear and crimson splendour which quite dazzled me.</p>
<p>When my godmother had held my hand for a little while, and chatted with me, and
scolded me for having become thinner than when she last saw me, she professed
to discover that the snow-wind had disordered my hair, and sent me up-stairs to
make it neat and remove my shawl.</p>
<p>Repairing to my own little sea-green room, there also I found a bright fire,
and candles too were lit: a tall waxlight stood on each side the great looking
glass; but between the candles, and before the glass, appeared something
dressing itself—an airy, fairy thing—small, slight, white—a
winter spirit.</p>
<p>I declare, for one moment I thought of Graham and his spectral illusions. With
distrustful eye I noted the details of this new vision. It wore white,
sprinkled slightly with drops of scarlet; its girdle was red; it had something
in its hair leafy, yet shining—a little wreath with an evergreen gloss.
Spectral or not, here truly was nothing frightful, and I advanced.</p>
<p>Turning quick upon me, a large eye, under long lashes, flashed over me, the
intruder: the lashes were as dark as long, and they softened with their
pencilling the orb they guarded.</p>
<p>“Ah! you are come!” she breathed out, in a soft, quiet voice, and
she smiled slowly, and gazed intently.</p>
<p>I knew her now. Having only once seen that sort of face, with that cast of fine
and delicate featuring, I could not but know her.</p>
<p>“Miss de Bassompierre,” I pronounced.</p>
<p>“No,” was the reply, “not Miss de Bassompierre for
<i>you!</i>” I did not inquire who then she might be, but waited
voluntary information.</p>
<p>“You are changed, but still you are yourself,” she said,
approaching nearer. “I remember you well—your countenance, the
colour of your hair, the outline of your face….”</p>
<p>I had moved to the fire, and she stood opposite, and gazed into me; and as she
gazed, her face became gradually more and more expressive of thought and
feeling, till at last a dimness quenched her clear vision.</p>
<p>“It makes me almost cry to look so far back,” said she: “but
as to being sorry, or sentimental, don’t think it: on the contrary, I am
quite pleased and glad.”</p>
<p>Interested, yet altogether at fault, I knew not what to say. At last I
stammered, “I think I never met you till that night, some weeks ago, when
you were hurt…?”</p>
<p>She smiled. “You have forgotten then that I have sat on your knee, been
lifted in your arms, even shared your pillow? You no longer remember the night
when I came crying, like a naughty little child as I was, to your bedside, and
you took me in. You have no memory for the comfort and protection by which you
soothed an acute distress? Go back to Bretton. Remember Mr. Home.”</p>
<p>At last I saw it all. “And you are little Polly?”</p>
<p>“I am Paulina Mary Home de Bassompierre.”</p>
<p>How time can change! Little Polly wore in her pale, small features, her fairy
symmetry, her varying expression, a certain promise of interest and grace; but
Paulina Mary was become beautiful—not with the beauty that strikes the
eye like a rose—orbed, ruddy, and replete; not with the plump, and pink,
and flaxen attributes of her blond cousin Ginevra; but her seventeen years had
brought her a refined and tender charm which did not lie in complexion, though
hers was fair and clear; nor in outline, though her features were sweet, and
her limbs perfectly turned; but, I think, rather in a subdued glow from the
soul outward. This was not an opaque vase, of material however costly, but a
lamp chastely lucent, guarding from extinction, yet not hiding from worship, a
flame vital and vestal. In speaking of her attractions, I would not exaggerate
language; but, indeed, they seemed to me very real and engaging. What though
all was on a small scale, it was the perfume which gave this white violet
distinction, and made it superior to the broadest camelia—the fullest
dahlia that ever bloomed.</p>
<p>“Ah! and you remember the old time at Bretton?”</p>
<p>“Better,” said she, “better, perhaps, than you. I remember it
with minute distinctness: not only the time, but the days of the time, and the
hours of the days.”</p>
<p>“You must have forgotten some things?”</p>
<p>“Very little, I imagine.”</p>
<p>“You were then a little creature of quick feelings: you must, long ere
this, have outgrown the impressions with which joy and grief, affection and
bereavement, stamped your mind ten years ago.”</p>
<p>“You think I have forgotten whom I liked, and in what degree I liked them
when a child?”</p>
<p>“The sharpness must be gone—the point, the poignancy—the deep
imprint must be softened away and effaced?”</p>
<p>“I have a good memory for those days.”</p>
<p>She looked as if she had. Her eyes were the eyes of one who can remember; one
whose childhood does not fade like a dream, nor whose youth vanish like a
sunbeam. She would not take life, loosely and incoherently, in parts, and let
one season slip as she entered on another: she would retain and add; often
review from the commencement, and so grow in harmony and consistency as she
grew in years. Still I could not quite admit the conviction that <i>all</i> the
pictures which now crowded upon me were vivid and visible to her. Her fond
attachments, her sports and contests with a well-loved playmate, the patient,
true devotion of her child’s heart, her fears, her delicate reserves, her
little trials, the last piercing pain of separation…. I retraced these things,
and shook my head incredulous. She persisted. “The child of seven years
lives yet in the girl of seventeen,” said she.</p>
<p>“You used to be excessively fond of Mrs. Bretton,” I remarked,
intending to test her. She set me right at once.</p>
<p>“Not <i>excessively</i> fond,” said she; “I liked her: I
respected her as I should do now: she seems to me very little altered.”</p>
<p>“She is not much changed,” I assented.</p>
<p>We were silent a few minutes. Glancing round the room she said, “There
are several things here that used to be at Bretton! I remember that pincushion
and that looking-glass.”</p>
<p>Evidently she was not deceived in her estimate of her own memory; not, at
least, so far.</p>
<p>“You think, then, you would have known Mrs. Bretton?” I went on.</p>
<p>“I perfectly remembered her; the turn of her features, her olive
complexion, and black hair, her height, her walk, her voice.”</p>
<p>“Dr. Bretton, of course,” I pursued, “would be out of the
question: and, indeed, as I saw your first interview with him, I am aware that
he appeared to you as a stranger.”</p>
<p>“That first night I was puzzled,” she answered.</p>
<p>“How did the recognition between him and your father come about?”</p>
<p>“They exchanged cards. The names Graham Bretton and Home de Bassompierre
gave rise to questions and explanations. That was on the second day; but before
then I was beginning to know something.”</p>
<p>“How—know something?”</p>
<p>“Why,” she said, “how strange it is that most people seem so
slow to feel the truth—not to see, but <i>feel</i>! When Dr. Bretton had
visited me a few times, and sat near and talked to me; when I had observed the
look in his eyes, the expression about his mouth, the form of his chin, the
carriage of his head, and all that we <i>do</i> observe in persons who approach
us—how could I avoid being led by association to think of Graham Bretton?
Graham was slighter than he, and not grown so tall, and had a smoother face,
and longer and lighter hair, and spoke—not so deeply—more like a
girl; but yet <i>he</i> is Graham, just as <i>I</i> am little Polly, or you are
Lucy Snowe.”</p>
<p>I thought the same, but I wondered to find my thoughts hers: there are certain
things in which we so rarely meet with our double that it seems a miracle when
that chance befalls.</p>
<p>“You and Graham were once playmates.”</p>
<p>“And do you remember that?” she questioned in her turn.</p>
<p>“No doubt he will remember it also,” said I.</p>
<p>“I have not asked him: few things would surprise me so much as to find
that he did. I suppose his disposition is still gay and careless?”</p>
<p>“Was it so formerly? Did it so strike you? Do you thus remember
him?”</p>
<p>“I scarcely remember him in any other light. Sometimes he was studious;
sometimes he was merry: but whether busy with his books or disposed for play,
it was chiefly the books or game he thought of; not much heeding those with
whom he read or amused himself.”</p>
<p>“Yet to you he was partial.”</p>
<p>“Partial to me? Oh, no! he had other playmates—his school-fellows;
I was of little consequence to him, except on Sundays: yes, he was kind on
Sundays. I remember walking with him hand-in-hand to St. Mary’s, and his
finding the places in my prayer-book; and how good and still he was on Sunday
evenings! So mild for such a proud, lively boy; so patient with all my blunders
in reading; and so wonderfully to be depended on, for he never spent those
evenings from home: I had a constant fear that he would accept some invitation
and forsake us; but he never did, nor seemed ever to wish to do it. Thus, of
course, it can be no more. I suppose Sunday will now be Dr. Bretton’s
dining-out day….?”</p>
<p>“Children, come down!” here called Mrs. Bretton from below. Paulina
would still have lingered, but I inclined to descend: we went down.</p>
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