There & Back, George MacDonald [early reader chapter books .TXT] 📗
- Author: George MacDonald
Book online «There & Back, George MacDonald [early reader chapter books .TXT] 📗». Author George MacDonald
/> "What do you mean by that? You will be talking! As if I didn't know I'd got to die, one day or another! What's that to me and Harry!"
"Then you think we're all going to cease and go out, like the clouds that are carried away and broken up by the wind?"
"I know nothing about it, and I don't care. Nothing's anything to me but Harry, and I shall never see my Harry again!-Heaven! Bah! What's heaven without Harry!"
"Nothing, of course! But don't you ever think of seeing him again?"
"What's the use! It's all a mockery! Where's the good of meeting when we shan't be human beings any more? If we're nothing but ghosts-if he's never to know me-if I'm never to feel him in my arms-ugh! it's all humbug! If he ever meant to give me back my Harry, why did he take him from me? If he didn't mean me to rage at losing him, why did he give him to me?"
"He gave you his brother at the same time, and you refused to love him: what if he took the one away until you should have learned to love the other?"
"I can't love him; I won't love him! He has his father to love him! He don't want my love! I haven't got it to give him! Harry took it with him! I hate Peter!-What are you doing there-laughing in your sleeve? Did you never see a woman cry?"
"I've seen many a woman cry, but never without my heart crying with her. You come to my church, and behave so badly I can scarce keep from crying for you. It half choked me last Sunday, to see you lying there with that horrid book in your hand, and the words of Christ in your ears!"
"I didn't heed them. It wasn't a horrid book!"
"It was a horrid book. You left it behind you, and I took it with me. I laid it on my study-table, and went out again. When I came home to dinner, my wife brought it to me and said, 'Oh, Tom, how can you read such books?' 'My dear,' I answered, 'I don't know what is in the book; I haven't read a word of it.'"
"And then you told her where you found it?"
"I did not."
"What did you do with it?"
"I said to her, 'If it's a bad book, here goes!' and threw it in the fire."
"Then I'm not to know the end of the story! But I can send to London for another copy! I'm much obliged to you, Mr. Wingfold, for destroying my property!-But you didn't tell her where you found it?"
"I did not. She never asked me."
Mrs. Wylder was silent. She seemed a little ashamed, perhaps a little softened. Wingfold bade her good-morning. She did not answer him.
CHAPTER XIX.
MRS. WYLDER AND BARBARA.
To make all this quite credible to a doubting reader, it would be necessary to tell Mrs. Wylder's history from girlhood. She had had a very defective education, and what there was of it was all for show. Then she was married far too young, and to a man unworthy of any good woman. She indeed was not a good woman, but she was capable of being made worse; and in the bush, where she passed years not a few, and in cities afterward, she met women and men more lawless yet than herself or her husband. Overbearing where her likings were concerned, and full of a certain generosity where but her interests were in question, the slackness of the social bonds in the colonies had favoured her abnormal development. It is difficult to say how much man or woman is the worse for doing, when freed from restraint, what he or she would have been glad to do before, but for the restraint. Many who go to the colonies, and there to the dogs, only show themselves such as they dared not appear at home: they step on a steeper slope, and arrive, not at the pit, for they were in that already, but at the bottom of it, so much the faster. There were, however, in Mrs. Wylder, lovely rudimentary remnants of a good breed. She inherited feelings which gave her a certain intermittent and fugitive dignity, of some service to others in her wilder times, and to herself when she came into contact with an older civilisation. She would occasionally do a right generous thing-not seldom give with a freedom and judge with a liberality which were mainly rooted in carelessness.
She had much confidence in her daughter; and it said well for the mother that, with all her experience, she yet had this confidence-and none the less that she had never taken pains to instruct her in what was becoming. The most she had done in this way was once to snatch from her hand and throw in the fire a novel she had herself, a moment before, finished with unquestioning acceptance. If she had found her behaving like some of her acquaintance to whose conduct she did not give a second thought, for her friends might do as they pleased so long as they did not offend her , she would certainly, in some of her moods at least, have killed her.
While compelled, from lack of service, to employ herself in house affairs, she neither ate nor drank more than seemed good for her; but as soon as she had but to live and be served, she began to counterbalance
ennui with self-indulgence, and continued to do so until the death of her boy, ever after which she had sought refuge from grief in narcotics. Possibly she would not have behaved as she did in church, but that her nervous being was a very sponge for morphia. Born to be a strong woman, she was a slave to her impulses, and, one of the weakest of her kind, went into a rage at the least show of opposition.
Scarcely had Mr. Wingfold left the room, when in came Barbara in her riding-habit, with the glow of joyous motion upon her face, for she had just ridden from Mortgrange.
"How do you do, mamma?" she said, but did not come within a couple of yards of her. "I've had such a ride-as straight as any crow could fly, between the two stations! I never could hit the line before. But I got a country-fellow to point me out a landmark or two, and here I am in just half the time I should have taken by the road! Such jumps!"
"You're a madcap!" said her mother. "You'll be brought home on a shutter some day! Mark my words, Bab! You'll see!-or at least I shall; you'll be past seeing! But it don't matter; it's what we're made for! Die or be killed, it's all one! I don't care!"
"I do though, mamma! I don't want to be killed just yet-and I don't mean to be! But I must have a second horse! I begin to suspect Miss Brown of treating me like a child. She takes care of me! I mean to let her see what I can do if she's up to it!"
"You'll do nothing of the kind! I'll have her shot if you go after any of your old pranks! And, while I think of it, Bab-your father has set his heart on your marrying Mr. Lestrange: I can see it perfectly, and I won't have it! If I hear of anything of that sort between you, I'll set a heavy foot on it.-How long have you been there this time?"
"A week.-But why shouldn't I marry Mr. Lestrange if I like?"
"Because your father has set his heart on it, I tell you! Isn't that enough, you tiresome little wretch? I will not have it-not if you break your heart over it!-There!"
Barbara burst out in a laugh that rang like a bronze bell.
"Break my heart for Mr. Lestrange! There's not a man in the world I would break my little finger for! But my heart! that is too funny! You needn't be uneasy, mamma; I don't like Arthur Lestrange one bit, and I wouldn't marry him if you and papa too wanted me. Oh, such a proper young man! He doesn't think me fit company for his sister!"
"He said so! and you didn't give him a cut over the eyes with your whip? My God!"
"Gracious, no! He never says anything half so amusing! He's scorchingly polite! I would sooner fall in love with the bookbinder!"
"The bookbinder? Who's that? You mean the tutor, I suppose! I'm not up to the slang of this old brute of a country!"
"No, mamma; there is a man binding-or mending rather, the books in the library. He's going to teach me to shoe Miss Brown! Papa wouldn't like me to marry a blacksmith-I mean a bookbinder-would he?"
"Certainly not."
"Then you would, mamma?" said Bab demurely, with two catherine-wheels of fun in her downcast eyes.
"If you go to do anything mad now, I'll-"
"Don't strain your innocent invention, mammy! I think I'll take Mr. Lestrange! Better anger one than both of you!"
"Tease me any more with your nonsense, and I'll set your father on you! Be off with you!"
CHAPTER XX.
BARBARA AND HER CRITICS.
While the two talked in the same pulverous fashion, the words came very differently from the two mouths. In the speech of the mother was more than a tone of the vulgarity of a conscious right to lay down the law, of the rudeness born of feeling above obedience and incapable of error-a rudeness identical with that of the typical vulgar duchess; the daughter's tone was playful, but dainty in its playfulness, and not without a certain unconscious dignity; her lawlessness was the freedom of the bird that cannot trespass, not that of the quadruped forcing its way. Her almost baby-like cheeks, her musical voice clear of any strain of sorrow, her quick relations with the whole world of things, her grace, more child-like than womanly, whether she stood or sat or moved about, all indicated a simple, fearless, true and trusting nature. Everybody at Mortgrange liked her; nearly everybody at Mortgrange had some different fault to find with her; all agreed that she wanted taming-except sir Wilton, who allowed the wildness, but would not hear of the taming. The hour of the morning or the night at which she would not go wandering alone about the park, or even outside it, had not yet been discovered.
"Why don't you look better after your friend, Theo?" said her father one day when Barbara's chair was empty at dinner-with his cold incisive voice, a little rasping now that the clutch of age's hand was beginning to close on his throat.
"She doesn't mind me, papa," Theodora answered. "Do say something to her, mamma!"
"'Tis not my business to reform other people's children," lady Ann returned.
"I find her exceedingly original!" remarked the baronet.
"In her manners, certainly," responded his lady.
"I find them perfect. Their very audacity renders them faultless. And the charm is that she does not even suspect herself audacious."
"That is her charm, I confess," responded Arthur; "but it is a dangerous one, and may one day cause her to be sadly misunderstood."
"A London drawing-room is your high court of parliament, Arthur!" said his father.
"Miss Wylder, with all her sweetness," remarked
"Then you think we're all going to cease and go out, like the clouds that are carried away and broken up by the wind?"
"I know nothing about it, and I don't care. Nothing's anything to me but Harry, and I shall never see my Harry again!-Heaven! Bah! What's heaven without Harry!"
"Nothing, of course! But don't you ever think of seeing him again?"
"What's the use! It's all a mockery! Where's the good of meeting when we shan't be human beings any more? If we're nothing but ghosts-if he's never to know me-if I'm never to feel him in my arms-ugh! it's all humbug! If he ever meant to give me back my Harry, why did he take him from me? If he didn't mean me to rage at losing him, why did he give him to me?"
"He gave you his brother at the same time, and you refused to love him: what if he took the one away until you should have learned to love the other?"
"I can't love him; I won't love him! He has his father to love him! He don't want my love! I haven't got it to give him! Harry took it with him! I hate Peter!-What are you doing there-laughing in your sleeve? Did you never see a woman cry?"
"I've seen many a woman cry, but never without my heart crying with her. You come to my church, and behave so badly I can scarce keep from crying for you. It half choked me last Sunday, to see you lying there with that horrid book in your hand, and the words of Christ in your ears!"
"I didn't heed them. It wasn't a horrid book!"
"It was a horrid book. You left it behind you, and I took it with me. I laid it on my study-table, and went out again. When I came home to dinner, my wife brought it to me and said, 'Oh, Tom, how can you read such books?' 'My dear,' I answered, 'I don't know what is in the book; I haven't read a word of it.'"
"And then you told her where you found it?"
"I did not."
"What did you do with it?"
"I said to her, 'If it's a bad book, here goes!' and threw it in the fire."
"Then I'm not to know the end of the story! But I can send to London for another copy! I'm much obliged to you, Mr. Wingfold, for destroying my property!-But you didn't tell her where you found it?"
"I did not. She never asked me."
Mrs. Wylder was silent. She seemed a little ashamed, perhaps a little softened. Wingfold bade her good-morning. She did not answer him.
CHAPTER XIX.
MRS. WYLDER AND BARBARA.
To make all this quite credible to a doubting reader, it would be necessary to tell Mrs. Wylder's history from girlhood. She had had a very defective education, and what there was of it was all for show. Then she was married far too young, and to a man unworthy of any good woman. She indeed was not a good woman, but she was capable of being made worse; and in the bush, where she passed years not a few, and in cities afterward, she met women and men more lawless yet than herself or her husband. Overbearing where her likings were concerned, and full of a certain generosity where but her interests were in question, the slackness of the social bonds in the colonies had favoured her abnormal development. It is difficult to say how much man or woman is the worse for doing, when freed from restraint, what he or she would have been glad to do before, but for the restraint. Many who go to the colonies, and there to the dogs, only show themselves such as they dared not appear at home: they step on a steeper slope, and arrive, not at the pit, for they were in that already, but at the bottom of it, so much the faster. There were, however, in Mrs. Wylder, lovely rudimentary remnants of a good breed. She inherited feelings which gave her a certain intermittent and fugitive dignity, of some service to others in her wilder times, and to herself when she came into contact with an older civilisation. She would occasionally do a right generous thing-not seldom give with a freedom and judge with a liberality which were mainly rooted in carelessness.
She had much confidence in her daughter; and it said well for the mother that, with all her experience, she yet had this confidence-and none the less that she had never taken pains to instruct her in what was becoming. The most she had done in this way was once to snatch from her hand and throw in the fire a novel she had herself, a moment before, finished with unquestioning acceptance. If she had found her behaving like some of her acquaintance to whose conduct she did not give a second thought, for her friends might do as they pleased so long as they did not offend her , she would certainly, in some of her moods at least, have killed her.
While compelled, from lack of service, to employ herself in house affairs, she neither ate nor drank more than seemed good for her; but as soon as she had but to live and be served, she began to counterbalance
ennui with self-indulgence, and continued to do so until the death of her boy, ever after which she had sought refuge from grief in narcotics. Possibly she would not have behaved as she did in church, but that her nervous being was a very sponge for morphia. Born to be a strong woman, she was a slave to her impulses, and, one of the weakest of her kind, went into a rage at the least show of opposition.
Scarcely had Mr. Wingfold left the room, when in came Barbara in her riding-habit, with the glow of joyous motion upon her face, for she had just ridden from Mortgrange.
"How do you do, mamma?" she said, but did not come within a couple of yards of her. "I've had such a ride-as straight as any crow could fly, between the two stations! I never could hit the line before. But I got a country-fellow to point me out a landmark or two, and here I am in just half the time I should have taken by the road! Such jumps!"
"You're a madcap!" said her mother. "You'll be brought home on a shutter some day! Mark my words, Bab! You'll see!-or at least I shall; you'll be past seeing! But it don't matter; it's what we're made for! Die or be killed, it's all one! I don't care!"
"I do though, mamma! I don't want to be killed just yet-and I don't mean to be! But I must have a second horse! I begin to suspect Miss Brown of treating me like a child. She takes care of me! I mean to let her see what I can do if she's up to it!"
"You'll do nothing of the kind! I'll have her shot if you go after any of your old pranks! And, while I think of it, Bab-your father has set his heart on your marrying Mr. Lestrange: I can see it perfectly, and I won't have it! If I hear of anything of that sort between you, I'll set a heavy foot on it.-How long have you been there this time?"
"A week.-But why shouldn't I marry Mr. Lestrange if I like?"
"Because your father has set his heart on it, I tell you! Isn't that enough, you tiresome little wretch? I will not have it-not if you break your heart over it!-There!"
Barbara burst out in a laugh that rang like a bronze bell.
"Break my heart for Mr. Lestrange! There's not a man in the world I would break my little finger for! But my heart! that is too funny! You needn't be uneasy, mamma; I don't like Arthur Lestrange one bit, and I wouldn't marry him if you and papa too wanted me. Oh, such a proper young man! He doesn't think me fit company for his sister!"
"He said so! and you didn't give him a cut over the eyes with your whip? My God!"
"Gracious, no! He never says anything half so amusing! He's scorchingly polite! I would sooner fall in love with the bookbinder!"
"The bookbinder? Who's that? You mean the tutor, I suppose! I'm not up to the slang of this old brute of a country!"
"No, mamma; there is a man binding-or mending rather, the books in the library. He's going to teach me to shoe Miss Brown! Papa wouldn't like me to marry a blacksmith-I mean a bookbinder-would he?"
"Certainly not."
"Then you would, mamma?" said Bab demurely, with two catherine-wheels of fun in her downcast eyes.
"If you go to do anything mad now, I'll-"
"Don't strain your innocent invention, mammy! I think I'll take Mr. Lestrange! Better anger one than both of you!"
"Tease me any more with your nonsense, and I'll set your father on you! Be off with you!"
CHAPTER XX.
BARBARA AND HER CRITICS.
While the two talked in the same pulverous fashion, the words came very differently from the two mouths. In the speech of the mother was more than a tone of the vulgarity of a conscious right to lay down the law, of the rudeness born of feeling above obedience and incapable of error-a rudeness identical with that of the typical vulgar duchess; the daughter's tone was playful, but dainty in its playfulness, and not without a certain unconscious dignity; her lawlessness was the freedom of the bird that cannot trespass, not that of the quadruped forcing its way. Her almost baby-like cheeks, her musical voice clear of any strain of sorrow, her quick relations with the whole world of things, her grace, more child-like than womanly, whether she stood or sat or moved about, all indicated a simple, fearless, true and trusting nature. Everybody at Mortgrange liked her; nearly everybody at Mortgrange had some different fault to find with her; all agreed that she wanted taming-except sir Wilton, who allowed the wildness, but would not hear of the taming. The hour of the morning or the night at which she would not go wandering alone about the park, or even outside it, had not yet been discovered.
"Why don't you look better after your friend, Theo?" said her father one day when Barbara's chair was empty at dinner-with his cold incisive voice, a little rasping now that the clutch of age's hand was beginning to close on his throat.
"She doesn't mind me, papa," Theodora answered. "Do say something to her, mamma!"
"'Tis not my business to reform other people's children," lady Ann returned.
"I find her exceedingly original!" remarked the baronet.
"In her manners, certainly," responded his lady.
"I find them perfect. Their very audacity renders them faultless. And the charm is that she does not even suspect herself audacious."
"That is her charm, I confess," responded Arthur; "but it is a dangerous one, and may one day cause her to be sadly misunderstood."
"A London drawing-room is your high court of parliament, Arthur!" said his father.
"Miss Wylder, with all her sweetness," remarked
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