 Chapter 25 of the Professor In two months more, Francis had fulfilled the time of mourning for her aunt. One January morning, the first of the New Year holidays, I went in a fiac accompanied only by Monsieur Fandenhouten to the Rue Notre-Dame au Neige, and having alighted alone and walked upstairs, I found Francis apparently waiting for me, dressed in a style scarcely appropriate to that cold, bright, frosty day. Never till now had I seen her retired in any other than black or sad-coloured stuff, and there she stood by the window, clad all in white, and white for the most diaphanous texture. Her array was very simple to be sure, but it looked imposing and festal because it was so clear, full and floating. A veil shadowed her head and hung below her knee. A little wreath of pink flowers fastened it to her thickly-tressed Grecian plat, and thence it fell softly on each side of her face. Singular to state, she was or had been crying. When I asked her if she were ready, she said, Yes, Monsieur, with something very like a checked sob. And when I took a shawl which lay on the table and folded it round her, not only did tear after tear course unbidden down her cheek, but she shook to my ministration like a reed. I said I was sorry to see her in such low spirits, and requested to be allowed an insight into the origin thereof. She only said it was impossible to help it. And then, voluntarily though, hurriedly putting her hand into mine, accompanied me out of the room, and ran downstairs with a quick, uncertain step, like one who was eager to get some formidable piece of business over. I put her into the fiac. Monsieur Fandenhouten received her and seated her beside himself. We drove all together to the Protestant chapel, went through a certain service in the common prayer book, and she and I came out married. Monsieur Fandenhouten had given the bride away. We took no bridal trip, our modesty screened by the peaceful obscurity of our station and the pleasant isolation of our circumstances did not exact that additional precaution. We repaired at once to a small house I had taken in the Foghawk nearest to that part of the city where the scene of our avocations lay. Three or four hours after the wedding ceremony, Francis divested off her bridal snow and attired in a pretty lilac gown of warmer materials, a pecan black silk apron, and a lace collar with some finishing decoration of lilac ribbon, was kneeling on the carpet of a neatly furnished though not spacious parlor, arranging on the shelves of a chiffonnière some books which I handed to her from the table. It was snowing fast out of doors. The afternoon had turned out wild and cold. The leaden sky seemed full of drifts and the street was already ankle deep in the white downfall. Our fire burned bright. Our new habitation looked brilliantly clean and fresh. The furniture was all arranged and there were but some articles of glass, china, books etc to put in order. Francis found in this business occupation till tea time and then after I had distinctly instructed her how to make a cup of tea in rational English style, and after she had got over the dismay occasioned by seeing such an extravagant amount of material put into the pot, she administered to me a proper British repast, at which there wanted neither candies nor urn, fire lights nor comfort. Our week's holiday glided by and we readdressed ourselves to labour. Both my wife and I began in good earnest with the notion that we were working people destined to earn our bread by exertion and that of the most assiduous kind. Our days were thoroughly occupied. We used to part every morning at eight o'clock and not meet again till five p.m. but into what sweet rest did the turmoil of each busy day decline. Looking down the vista of memory I see the evenings passed in that little parlor like a long string of rubies circling the dusk brow of the past. Unvaried were they as each cut gem and like each gem brilliant and burning. A year and a half passed. One morning it was a fete and we had the day to ourselves. Francis said to me with a suddenness peculiar to her when she had been thinking long on a subject and at last having come to a conclusion wished to test its soundness by the touchstone of my judgment. I don't work enough. What now demanded I looking up from my coffee which I had been deliberately stirring while enjoying in anticipation a walk I proposed to take with Francis that fine summer day. It was June to a certain farmhouse in the country where we were to dine. What now and I saw at once in the serious ardour of her face a project of vital importance. I am not satisfied returned she. You are now earning eight thousand francs a year. It was true my efforts punctuality the fame of my pupils progress the publicity of my station had so far helped me on while I am still at my miserable twelve hundred francs. I can do better and I will. You work as long and as diligently as I do Francis. Yes, Monsieur, but I'm not working in the right way and I am convinced of it. You wish to change. You have a plan for progress in your mind. Go and put on your bonnet and while we take our walk you shall tell me of it. Yes, Monsieur. She went as docile as a well trained child. She was a curious mixture of tractability and firmness. I sat thinking about her and wondering what her plan could be when she re-entered. Monsieur, I have given Mini, our bun, leave to go out too. I did it so very fine. So will you be kind enough to lock the door and take the key with you. Kiss me, Mrs. Crimsworth, was my not very apposite reply. But she looked so engaging in her light-sum address and little cottage bonnet, and her manner in speaking to me was then, as always, so unaffectedly and suavely respectful that my heart expanded at the sight of her, and a kiss seemed necessary to content its importunity. There, Monsieur. Why do you always call me Monsieur? Say, William, I cannot pronounce your W. Besides, Monsieur belongs to you. I like it best. Mini, having departed in clean cap and smart shawl, we too set out, leaving the house solitary and silent. Silent at least, but for the ticking of the clock. We were soon clear of Brussels. The fields received us, and then the lanes, remote from carriage-resounding Chaussée. Air-long we came upon a nook so rural, green, and secluded it might have been a spot in some pastoral English province. A bank of short and mossy grass under a hawthorn offered a seat too tempting to be declined. We took it, and when we had admired and examined some English-looking wild flowers growing at our feet, I recalled Francis' attention and my own to the topic touched on at breakfast. What was her plan? A natural one, the next step to be mounted by us, or at least by her, if she wanted to rise in her profession. She proposed to begin a school. We already had the means for commencing on a careful scale having lived greatly within our income. We possessed too by this time an extensive and eligible connection in the sense advantageous to our business. For though our circle of visiting acquaintance continued as limited as ever, we were now widely known in schools and families as teachers. When Francis had developed her plan, she intimated in some closing sentences her hopes for the future. If we only had good health and tolerable success, we might, she was sure, in time realize an independency, and that perhaps before we were too old to enjoy it, then both she and I would rest, and what was to hinder us from going to live in England? England was still her promised land. I put it on the land. I put no obstacle in her way, raised no objection. I knew she was not one who could live quiescent and inactive, or even comparatively inactive. Duties she must have to fulfill, and important duties, work to do, and exciting absorbing profitable work. Strong faculties stirred in her frame, and they demanded full nourishment, free exercise. Mine was not the hand ever to starve or cramp them. No, I delighted in offering them sustenance, and in clearing them wider space for action. You have conceived a plan, Francis said I, and a good plan, executed. You have my free consent, and wherever and whenever my assistance is wanted, ask, and you shall have. Francis's eyes thanked me almost with tears, just a sparkle or two soon brushed away. She possessed herself of my hand, too, and held it for some time very close clasped in both her own, but she said no more than, thank you, monsieur. We passed a divine day, and came home late, lighted by a full summer moon. Ten years rushed now upon me with dusty, vibrating, unresting wings. Years of bustle, action, unslacked endeavour. Years in which I and my wife, having launched ourselves in the full career of progress, as progress whirls on in European capitals, scarcely new repose, were strangest to amusement, never thought of indulgence, and yet as our course ran side by side, as we marched hand in hand, we neither murmured, repented, nor faltered. Hope indeed cheered us, health kept us up, harmony of thought indeed smoothed many difficulties, and finally, success bestowed every now and then, encouraging reward on diligence. Our school became one of the most popular in Brussels, and as by degrees we raised our terms and elevated our system of education, our choice of pupils grew more select, and at length included the children of the best families in Belgium. We had too an excellent connection in England, first opened by the unsolicited recommendation of Mr. Hunneston, who having been over and having abused me for my prosperity in set terms, went back, and soon after sent a leash of young, blankshire heiresses, his cousins, as he said, to be polished off by Mrs. Crimsworth. As to this same Mrs. Crimsworth, in one sense she was become another woman, though in another she remained unchanged. So different was she under different circumstances, I seemed to possess two wives. The faculties of her nature already disclosed when I married her remained fresh and fair, but other faculties shot up strong, branched out broad, and quite altered the external character of the plant. Firmness, activity, and enterprise covered with grave foliage, poetic feeling, and fervour. But these flowers were still there, preserved pure and dewy under the umbridge of later growth and hardier nature. Perhaps only I in the world knew the secret of their existence, but to me they were ever ready to yield an exquisite fragrance, and present a beauty as chaste as radiant. In the daytime my house and establishment were conducted by Madame the Directoress, a stately and elegant woman, bearing much anxious thought on her large brow, much calculated dignity in her serious mean. Immediately after breakfast I used to part with this lady. I went to my college, she to her schoolroom. Returning for an hour in the course of the day, I found her always in class, intently occupied. Silence, industry, observance, attending on her presence. When not actually teaching, she was overlooking and guiding by eye and gesture. She then appeared vigilant and solicitous. When communicating instruction, her aspect was more animated. She seemed to feel a certain enjoyment in the occupation. The language in which she addressed her pupils, though simple and unpretending, was never trite or dry. She did not speak from routine formulas. She made her own phrases as she went on, and very nervous and impressive phrases they frequently were. Often when elucidating favorite points of history or geography, she would wax genuinely eloquent in her earnestness. Her pupils, or at least the elder and more intelligent amongst them, recognized well the language of a superior mind. They felt, too, and some of them received the impression of elevated sentiments. There was little fondling between mistress and girls, but some of Frances' pupils in time learned to love her sincerely, and all of them beheld her with respect. Her general demeanour towards them was serious, sometimes benignant when they pleased her with their progress and attention, always scrupulously refined and considerate. In cases where reproof or punishment was called for, she was usually forebearing enough. But if any took advantage of that forbearance, which sometimes happened, a sharp, sudden and lightning-like severity taught the culprit the extent of the mistake committed. Sometimes a gleam of tenderness softened her eyes and manner. But this was rare, only when a pupil was sick or when it pined after home, or in the case of some little motherless child, or of one much poorer than its companions, whose scanty wardrobe and mean appointments brought on it the contempt of the jewelled young countesses and silk-clad misses. Over such feeble fledglings the directorist spread a wing of kindliest protection. It was to their bedside she came at night to tuck them warmly in. It was after them she looked in winter to see that they always had a comfortable seat by the stove. It was they who by turns were summoned to the salon to receive some little dole of cake or fruit, to sit on a footstool at the fireside, to enjoy home comforts and almost home liberty for an evening together, to be spoken to gently and softly, comforted, encouraged, cherished. And when bedtime came, dismissed with a kiss of true tenderness. As to Julia and Georgiana G, daughters of an English baronet, as to Mademoiselle Matilde, heiress of a Belgian count, and sundry other children of patrician race, the directorist was careful of them as of the others, anxious for their progress as for that of the rest. But it never seemed to enter her head to distinguish them by a mark of preference. One girl of noble blood she loved dearly, a young Irish baroness, Lady Catherine. But it was for her enthusiastic heart and clever head, for her generosity and her genius, the title and rank went for nothing. My afternoons were spent also in college, with the exception of an hour that my wife daily exacted of me for her establishment, and with which she would not dispense. She said that I must spend that time amongst her pupils to learn their characters, to be au courant with everything that was passing in the house, to become interested in what interested her, to be able to give her my opinion on knotty points when she required it, and this she did constantly, never allowing my interest in the pupils to fall asleep, and never making any change of importance without my cognizance and consent. She delighted to sit by me when I gave my lessons, lessons in literature. Her hands folded on her knee, the most fixedly attentive of any present. She rarely addressed me in class, when she did it was with an air of marked deference. It was her pleasure, her joy to make me still the master in all things. At six o'clock p.m. my daily labour ceased. I then came home, for my home was my heaven. Ever at that hour, as I entered our private sitting-room, the lady directoress vanished from before my eyes, and Francis Henri, my own little lace-mender, was magically restored to my arms. Much disappointed she would have been if her master had not been as constant to the trist as herself, and if his truthful kiss had not been prompt to answer her soft, bonsoir, monsieur. Talk French to me, she would, and many a punishment she has had for her willfulness. I fear the choice of chastisement must have been injudicious, for instead of correcting the fault, it seemed to encourage its renewal. Our evenings were our own. That recreation was necessary to refresh our strength for the discharge of our duties. Sometimes we spent them all in conversation, and my young Genovese, now that she was thoroughly accustomed to her English professor, now that she loved him too absolutely to fear him much, reposed in him a confidence so unlimited that topics of conversation could no more be wanting with him than subjects for communion with her own heart. In those moments, happy as a bird with its mate, she would show me what she had of vivacity, of mirth, of originality in her well-doubbed nature. She would show to some stores of railery, of malice, and would vex teas peak me sometimes about what she called my bizarrerie anglaise, my caprice insulaire, with a wild and witty wickedness that made a perfect white demon of her while it lasted. This was rare, however, and the elfish freak was always short, sometimes when driven a little hard in the war of words, for her tongue did ample justice to the pith, the point, the delicacy of her native French, in which language she always attacked me, I used to turn upon her with my old decision, and arrest bodily the sprite that teased me. Vane idea, no sooner had I grasped hand or arm than the elf was gone, the provocative smile quenched in the expressive brown eyes, and array of gentle homage shone under the lids in its place. I had seized a mere vexing fairy and found a submissive and supplicating little mortal woman in my arms. Then I made her get a book and read English to me for an hour by way of penance. I frequently dosed her with Wordsworth in this way, and Wordsworth steadied her soon. She had a difficulty in comprehending his deep serene and sober mind. His language, too, was not facile to her. She had to ask questions to sue her explanations, to be like a child and a novice, and to acknowledge me as her senior and director. Her instinct instantly penetrated and possessed the meaning of more ardent and imaginative writers. Byron excited her. Scott, she loved. Wordsworth only she puzzled at, wondered over, and hesitated to pronounce an opinion upon. But whether she read to me or talked with me, whether she teased me in French or entreated me in English, whether she gested with wit or inquired with deference, narrated with interest, or listened with attention, whether she smiled at me or on me, always at nine o'clock I was left abandoned. She would extricate herself from my arms, quit by side, take her lamp, and be gone. Her mission was upstairs. I have followed her sometimes and watched her. First she opened the door of the Doctoire, the pupil's chamber. Noiselessly, she glided up the long room between the two rows of white beds, surveyed all the sleepers. If any were wakeful, and especially if any were sad, spoke to them and soothed them. Stood some minutes to ascertain that all was safe and tranquil. Trimmed the watch light which burned in the apartment all night, then withdrew, closing the door behind her without sound. Thence she glided to our own chamber. It had a little cabinet within, as she sought. There too appeared a bed, but one, and not a very small one. Her face, the night I followed and observed her, changed as she approached this tiny couch. From grave it warmed to earnest. She shaded with one hand the lamp she held in the other. She bent above the pillow and hung over a child asleep. It slumber, that evening at least, and usually, I believe, was sound and calm. No tear wet its dark eyelashes. No fever heated its round cheek. No ill dream discomposed its budding features. Frances gazed. She did not smile, and yet the deepest delight filled flushed her face, feeling pleasurable, powerful, worked in her whole frame, which still was motionless. I saw indeed her heart heave. Her lips were a little apart. Her breathing grew somewhat hurried. The child smiled. Then at last the mother smiled too, and said in low soliloquy, God bless my little son. She stooped closer over him, breathed the softest of kisses on his brow, covered his minute hand with hers, and at last started up and came away. I regained the parlour before her. Entering it two minutes later, she said quietly as she put down her extinguished lamp. Victor rests well, he smiled in sleep. He has your smile, monsieur. The said Victor was, of course, her own boy, born in the third year of our marriage. His Christian name had been given him in honour of Monsieur Fandenhouten, who continued always our trusty and well-beloved friend. Francis was then a good and dear wife to me, because I was to her a good, just, and faithful husband. What she would have been had she married a harsh, envious, careless man. A profligate, a prodigal, a drunkard, or a tyrant is another question, and one which I once propounded to her. Her answer, given after some reflection, was, I should have tried to endure the evil or cure it for a while, and when I found it intolerable and incurable, I should have left my torturer suddenly and silently. And if law or might had forced you back again, what to a drunkard, a profligate, a selfish spendthrift, an unjust fool? Yes, I would have gone back, again assured myself whether or not his vice and my misery were capable of remedy, and if not, have left him again, and if again forced to return and compel to abide. I don't know, she said hastily, why do you ask me, monsieur? I would have an answer, because I saw a strange kind of spirit in her eye whose voice I determined to waken. Monsieur, if a wise nature loathes that of the man she is wedded to, marriage must be slavery. Against slavery all right thinkers revolt, and though torture be the price of resistance, torture must be dared. Though the only roads of freedom lie to the gates of death, those gates must be passed, for freedom is indispensable. Then, monsieur, I would resist as far as my strength permitted. When that strength failed, I should be sure of a refuge. Death would certainly screen me both from bad laws and their consequences. Voluntary death, Francis. End of Chapter 25, Part 1 Chapter 25, Part 2 No, monsieur, I'd have courage to live out every throw of anguish fate assigned me, and principle to contend for justice and liberty to the last. I see you would have made no patient grizzle, and now supposing fate had merely assigned you the lot of an old maid, what then? How would you have liked celibacy? Not much, certainly. An old maid's life must doubtless be void and vapid, her heart strained and empty. Had I been an old maid, I should have spent existence in efforts to fill the void and ease the aching. I should have probably failed and died weary and disappointed, despised and of no account, like other single women. But I'm not an old maid, she added quickly. I should have been, though, but for my master. I should never have suited any man but Professor Crimseworth. No other gentleman, French, English or Belgian would have thought me amiable or handsome. And I doubt whether I should have cared for the approbation of many others if I could have obtained it. Now I have been Professor Crimseworth's wife eight years, and what is he in my eyes? Is he honourable, beloved? She stopped, her voice was cut off, her eyes suddenly suffused. She and I were standing side by side. She threw her arms round me and strained me to her heart with passionate earnestness. The energy of her whole being glowed in her dark and then dilated eye, and crimsoned her animated cheek. Her look and movement were like inspiration. In one there was such a flash, in the other such a power. Half an hour afterwards, when she had become calm, I asked where all that wild vigor was gone which had transformed her air while, and made her glance so thrilling and ardent, her action so rapid and strong. She looked down, smiling softly and passively. I cannot tell where it is gone, Monsieur, said she, but I know that whenever it is wanted it will come back again. Behold us now at the close of the ten years, and we have realised an independency. The rapidity with which we attained this end had its origin in three reasons. Firstly, we worked so hard for it. Secondly, we had no encumbrances to delay success. Thirdly, as soon as we had capital to invest, two well-skilled councillors, one in Belgium, one in England, Viz Fandenhouten and Hunston, gave us each a word of advice as to the sort of investment to be chosen. The suggestion made was judicious, and being promptly acted on the result proved gainful. I need not say how gainful. I communicated details to Messe's Fandenhouten and Hunston. Nobody else can be interested in hearing them. Accounts being wound up and our professional connection disposed of, we both agreed that as Mammon was not our master nor his service, that in which we desired to spend our lives, as our desires were temperate and our habits unostentatious, we now had abundance to live on, abundance to leave our boy, and should besides, always have a balance on hand, which properly managed by right sympathy and unselfish activity might help philanthropy in her enterprises and put solace into the hand of charity. To England, we now resolved to take wing. We arrived there safely. Francis realised the dream of her lifetime. We spent a whole summer and autumn in travelling from end to end of the British Isles, and afterwards passed a winter in London. Then we thought it high time to fix our residence. My heart yearned towards my native county of Blankshire, and it is in Blankshire I now live. It is in the library of my own home I am now writing. That home lies amid a sequestered and rather hilly region, 30 miles removed from X. A region whose verdure, the smoke of mills has not yet solid, whose water still run pure, whose swells of moorland preserve in some ferny glens that lie between them, the very primal wildness of nature, her moss, her bracken, her bluebells, her scents of reed and heather, her free and fresh breezes. My house is a picturesque and not too spacious dwelling with low and long windows, a trellis and leaf veiled porch over the front door, just now on this summer evening looking like an arch of roses and ivy. The garden is chiefly laid out in lawn, formed of the sod of the hills, with herbage short and soft as moss, full of its own peculiar flowers, tiny and star-like, embedded in the minute embroidery of their fine foliage. At the bottom of the sloping garden there is a wicket, which opens upon a lane as green as the lawn, very long, shady and little frequented. On the turf of this lane generally appear the first daisies of spring, hence its name, Daisy Lane, saving also as a distinction to the house. It terminates, the lane I mean, in a valley full of wood, which wood, chiefly oak and beech, spreads shadowy about the viscinage of a very old mansion, one of the Elizabethan structures, much larger as well as more antique than Daisy Lane. The property and residents of an individual familiar both to me and to the reader. Yes, in Hunston Wood, for so are those glades and that grey building with many gables and more chimneys named, abides York Hunston, still unmarried. Never, I suppose, having yet found his ideal, though I know at least a score of young ladies within a circuit of forty miles who would be willing to assist him in the search. The estate fell to him by the death of his father five years since. He has given up trade after having made by it sufficient to pay off some encumbrances by which the family heritage was burdened. I say he abides here, but I do not think he is resident above five months out of the twelve. He wanders from land to land and spends some part of each winter in town. He frequently brings visitors with him when he comes to Blankshire, and these visitors are often foreigners. Sometimes he has a German metavisition, sometimes a French savant. He had once a dissatisfied and savage-looking Italian who neither sang nor played, and a whom Francis affirmed that he had too l'air d'un conspirateur. What English guests Hunston invites are all either men of Birmingham or Manchester, hard men seemingly knit up in one's thought, whose talk is of free trade. The foreign visitors too are politicians. They take a wider theme, European progress, the spread of liberal sentiments over the continent. On their mental tablets the names of Russia, Austria and the Pope are inscribed in red ink. I have heard some of them talk vigorous sense. Yea, I have been present at polyglot discussions in the old oak-clined dining room at Hunston Wood, where a singular insight was given of the sentiments entertained by resolute minds respecting old northern despotisms and old southern superstitions. Also, I have heard much twaddle, announced chiefly in French and Deutsch, but let that pass. Hunston himself tolerated the driveling theorists. With the practical men he seemed leagueed hand and heart. When Hunston is staying alone at the wood, which seldom happens, he generally finds his way two or three times a week to Dady Lane. He has a philanthropic motive for coming to smoke his cigar in our porch on summer evenings. He says he does it to kill the earwigs amongst the roses, with which insects, but for his benevolent fumigations, he intimates we should certainly be overrun. On wet days, too, we are almost sure to see him. According to him, it gets on time to work me into lunacy by treading on my mental corns, or to force from Mrs. Krimsworth revelations of the dragon within her by insulting the memory of Hawfer and Tell. We also go frequently to Hunston Wood, and both I and Francis Relisher visit there highly. If there are other guests, their characters are an interesting study. Their conversation is exciting and strange. The absence of all local narrowness, both in the host and his chosen society, gives a metropolitan, almost a cosmopolitan, freedom and largeness to the talk. Hunston himself is a polite man in his own house. He has, when he chooses to employ it, an inexhaustible power of entertaining guests. His very mansion, too, is interesting. The rooms look storied. The passage is legendary. The low-ceiling chambers, with their long rows of diamond-pained lattices, have an old world haunted there. In his travels he has collected stores of Articles of Vertu, which are well and tastefully disposed in his panelled or tapestryed rooms. I have seen there one or two pictures and one or two pieces of statuary, which many an aristocratic connoisseur might have envied. When I and Francis have dined and spent an evening with Hunston, he often walks home with us. His wood is large and some of the timber is old and of huge growth. There are winding ways in it which pursued through glade and break make the walk back to Daisy Lane a somewhat long one. Many a time when we've had the benefit of a full moon and when the night has been mild and barmy, when moreover a certain nightingale has been singing and a certain stream hid in alders has lent the song a soft accompaniment, the remote church bell of the one hamlet in a district of ten miles has told midnight ere the lord of the woods left us at our porch. Free-flowing was his talk at such hours and far more quiet and gentle than in the daytime and before numbers. He would then forget politics and discussion and would dwell on the past times of his house, on his family history, on himself and on his own feelings. Subjects each and all invested with a peculiar zest for they were each and all unique. One glorious night in June after I'd been taunting him about his ideal bride and asking him when she would come and graft her foreign beauty on the old Hunston oak, he answered suddenly, you call her ideal but see here is a shadow and there cannot be a shadow without a substance. He had led us from the depth of the winding way into a glade from whence the beaches withdrew leaving it open to the sky. An unclouded moon poured her light into this glade and Hunston held out under her beam a ivory miniature. Francis with eagerness examined it first and she gave it to me still however pushing a little face close to mine and seeking in my eyes what I thought of the portrait. I thought it represented a very handsome and very individual looking female face with as he had once said straight and harmonious features. It was dark, the hair raven black swept not only from the brow but from the temples seemed thrust away carelessly as if such beauty dispensed with and they despised arrangement. The Italian eye looked straight into you and an independent determined eye it was. The mouth was as firm as fine, the chin ditto. On the back of the miniature was gilded Lucia. That is a real head was my conclusion. Hunston smiled I think so he replied always real in Lucia and she was somebody would have liked to marry but could not. I should certainly have liked to marry her and that I have not done so is a proof that I could not. He repossessed himself of the miniature now again in Francis's hand and put it away. What do you think of it? He asked of my wife as he buttoned his coat over it. I am sure Lucia once wore chains and broke them was the strange answer. I do not mean matrimonial chains she added correcting herself as if she feared misinterpretation but social chains of some sort. The face is that of one who has made an effort and a successful and triumphant effort to rest some vigorous and valued faculty from insupportable constraint. And when Lucia's faculty got free I am certain it spread wide pinions and carried her higher than she hesitated. Then what? Demanded Hunston. Then Le Corvinos permitted you to follow. I think you grow spiteful impertinent. Lucia has trodden the stage continued Francis. You never seriously thought of marrying her. You admired her originality, her fearlessness, her energy of body and mind. You delighted in her talents whatever that was whether song, dance, or dramatic representation. You worshipped her beauty which was of the sort after your own heart but I am sure she filled a sphere from whence you would never have thought of taking a wife. Ingenious remarked Hunston whether true or not is another question. Meantime don't you feel your little lamp of a spirit wax very pale besides such a Girondolle as Lucia's? Yes. Candid at least and the Professor will soon be dissatisfied with the dim light you give. Will you, monsieur? My sight was always too weak to endure a blaze Francis and we had now reached the wicked. I said a few pages back that this is a sweet summer evening. It is. There has been a series of lovely days and this is the loveliest. The hay is just carried from my fields. Its perfume still lingers in the air. Francis proposed to me an hour or two since to take tea out on the lawn. I see the round table loaded with china placed under a certain beach. Hunston is expected. Nay, I hear he has come. There is his voice laying down the lawn at some point with authority. That of Francis replied, she opposes him, of course. They are disputing about Victor of whom Hunston affirms that his mother is making a milk-sob. Mrs. Crimsworth retaliates. Better a thousand times he should become a milk-sob than what he, Hunston, calls a fine lad. And moreover she says that if Hunston were to become a fixture in the neighbourhood, and were not a mere comet coming and going, no one knows how, when, where or why. She should be quite uneasy till she had got Victor away to a school at least a hundred miles off. For that with his mutinous maxims and unpractical dogmas he would ruin a score of children. I have a word to say of Victor ere I shut this manuscript in my desk, but it must be a brief one, for I hear the tinkle of silver on porcelain. Victor is as little of a pretty child as I am of a handsome man or his mother of a fine woman. He is pale and spare, with large eyes, as dark as those of Francis, and as deeply set as mine. His shape is symmetrical enough but slight, his health is good. I never saw a child smile less than he does, nor one who knits such a formidable brow when sitting over a book that interests him, or while listening to tales of adventure, peril, or wonder, narrated by his mother, Hunston, or myself. But though still he is not unhappy, though serious, not morose, he has a susceptibility to pleasurable sensations almost too keen for its amounts to enthusiasm. He learned to read in the old-fashioned way out of a spelling book at his mother's knee, and as he got on without driving by that method she thought it unnecessary to buy him ivory letters or to try any of the other inducements to learning now deemed indispensable. When he could read he became a glutton of books and is so still. His toys have been few, and he has never wanted more. For those he possesses he seems to have contracted a partiality amounting to affection. This feeling directed towards one or two living animals of the house strengthens almost to a passion. Mr. Hunston gave him a mastiff cub, which he called York after the donor. It grew to a superb dog whose fierceness, however, was much modified by the companionship and caresses of its young master. He would go nowhere, do nothing without York. York lay at his feet while he learned his lessons, played with him in the garden, walked with him in the lane and wood, sat near his chair at meals, was fed always by his own hand was the first thing he sought in the morning the last he left at night. York accompanied Mr. Hunston one day to X and was bitten in the street by a dog in a rapid state. As soon as Hunston had brought him home and had informed me of the circumstance I went into the yard and shot him where he lay licking his wound. He was dead in an instant. He had not seen me level the gun I stood behind him. I had scarcely been ten minutes in the house when my ear was struck with sounds of anguish. I repaired to the yard once more for they proceeded thence. Victor was kneeling beside his dead mastiff, bent over it embracing its bull-like neck and lost in a passion of the wildest woe. He saw me. Oh, papa, I'll never forgive you. I'll never forgive you," was his exclamation. You shot York. I saw it from the window. I never believed you could be so cruel. I can love you no more. I had much adieu to explain to him with a steady voice the stern necessity of the deed. He still, with that inconsolable and bitter accent which I cannot render, but which pierced my heart repeated, He might have been cured. You should have tried. You should have burnt the wound with a hot iron, or covered it with caustic. You gave no time. And now it is too late. He is dead. He sank fairly down on the senseless carcass. I waited patiently a long while till his grief had somewhat exhausted him. And then I lifted him in my arms and carried him to his mother, sure that she would comfort him best. She had witnessed the whole scene from a window. She would not come out for fear of increasing my difficulties by her emotion, but she was ready now to receive him. She took him to her kind heart and onto her gentle lap, consult him but with her lips, her eyes, her soft embrace for some time. And then, when his sobs diminished, told him that York had felt no pain in dying, and that if he had been left to expire naturally, his end would have been most horrible. Above all, she told him that I was not cruel, for that idea seemed to give exquisite pain to poor Victor. That it was my affection for York and him that which had made me act so, and as I was now almost heartbroken to see him weep thus bitterly. Victor would have been no true son of his father had these considerations, these reasons, breathed in so low, so sweet a tone, married to caretice, so benign, so tender, to look so inspired with pitying sympathy produced no effect on him. They did produce an effect. He grew calmer, rested his face on her shoulder, and lay still in her arms. Looking up shortly, he asked his mother to tell him over again what she had said about York having suffered no pain, and my not being cruel. The barmy words being repeated, he again pillowed his cheek on her breast, and was again tranquil. Some hours after he came to me in my library, asked if I forgave him and desired to be reconciled. I drew the lad to my side, and there I kept him a good while and had much talk with him, in the course of which he disclosed many points of feeling and thought I approved of in my son. I found it is true few elements of the good fellow or the fine fellow in him scant sparkles of the spirit which loves to flash over the wine cup, or which kindles the passions to a destroying fire. But I saw in the soil of his heart healthy and swelling germs of compassion, affection, fidelity. I discovered in the garden of his intellect a rich growth of wholesome principles, reason, justice, moral courage that promised, if not blighted, a fertile bearing. So I bestowed on his large forehead and on his cheek still pale with tears a proud and contented kiss, and sent him away comforted. Yet I saw him the next day, laid on the mound under which York had been buried, his face covered with his hands. He was melancholy for some weeks, and more than a year elapsed before he would listen to any proposal of having another dog. Victor learns fast. He must soon go to Eaton, where I suspect his first year or two will be utter wretchedness. To leave me, his mother, and his home will give his heart an agonized wrench. Then the fagging will not suit him. But emulation, first after knowledge, the glory of success, will stir and reward him in time. Meantime I feel in myself a strong repugnance to fix the hour which will uproot my sole olive branch, and transplant it far from me. And when I speak to Francis on the subject, I am heard with a kind of patient pain, as though I alluded to some fearful operation at which her nature shudders, that from which her fortitude will not permit her to recoil. The step must, however, be taken, and it shall be. For though Francis will not make a milksop of her son, she will accustom him to a style of treatment, a forbearance, a congenial tenderness he will meet with from none else. She sees, as I also see, a something in Victor's temper, a kind of electrical ardour and power which emits now and then ominous sparks. Hunston calls it his spirit, and says it should not be curbed. I call it the leaven of the offending Adam, and consider that it should be, if not whipped out of him, at least soundly disciplined, and that he will be cheap of any amount of either bodily or mental suffering which will ground him radically in the art of self-control. Francis gives this something in her son's marked character no name, but when it appears in the grinding of his teeth, in the glittering of his eye, in the fierce revolt of feeling against disappointment, mischance, sudden sorrow or supposed injustice, she folds him to her breast, or takes him to walk with her alone in the wood. Then she reasons with him like any philosopher, and to reason Victor is ever accessible. Then she looks at him with eyes of love, and by love Victor can be infallibly subjugated. But will reason or love be the weapons with which in future the world will meet his violence? Oh no, for that flash in his black eye, for that cloud on his bony brow, for that compression of his statuesque lips, the lad will someday get blows instead of blandishments, kicks instead of kisses. Then for the fit of mute fury which will sicken his body and madden his soul, then for the ordeal of merited and salutary suffering, out of which he will come my trust, a wiser and a better man. I see him now. He stands by Hunston, who is seated on the lawn under the beach. Hunston's hand rests on the boy's collar, and he is instilling God knows what principles into his ear. Victor looks well just now, for he listens with a sort of smiling interest. He never looked so like his mother as when he smiles. Pity the sunshine breaks out so rarely. Victor has a preference for Hunston, full as strong as I deem desirable, being considerably more potent, decided and indiscriminating than any I ever entertained for that personage myself. Francis too regards it with a sort of unexpressed anxiety. While his son leans on Hunston's knee or rests against his shoulder, she roves with restless movement round, like a dove guarding its young from a hovering hawk. She says she wishes Hunston had children of his own, for then he would better know the danger of inciting their pride and indulging their foibles. Francis approaches my library window, puts aside the honeysuckle which half covers it and tells me tea is ready. Seeing that I continue busy, she enters the room, comes near me quietly and puts her hand on my shoulder. Monsieur chop appliqué. I shall soon have done. She draws a chair near and sits down to wait till I have finished. Her presence is as pleasant to my mind as the perfume of the fresh hay and spicy flowers, as the glow of the westering sun, as the repose of the midsummer eve are to my senses. But Hunston comes, I hear his step, and there he is bending through the lattice, from which he has thrust away the woodbine with unsparing hand, disturbing two bees and a butterfly. Krimsworth, I say, Krimsworth, take that pen out of his handmistress and make him lift up his head. Well, Hunston, I hear you. I was at X yesterday. Your brother Ned is getting richer than creases by railway speculations. They call him in the Peace Hall a stag of ten. And I've heard from Brown, Monsieur and Madame Bandon Hooten and Jean-Baptiste Tocqueuf coming to see you next month. He mentions the pulleys, too. He says their domestic harmony is not the finest in the world, but in business they are doing all ne per mieux. Which circumstance, he concludes, will be a sufficient consolation to both, for any little crosses in the affections. Why don't you invite the pulleys to blankure, Krimsworth? I should so like to see your first flames, Oreid. Mistress, don't be jealous, but he loved that lady to distraction. I know it for a fact. Brown says she weighs twelve stones now. You see what you've lost, Mr. Professor. Now, Monsieur and Madame, if you don't come to tea, Victor and I will begin without you. Papa, come! End of Chapter 25, Part 2. Recording by Martin Geeson in Hazelmere Surrey. End of The Professor, by Charlotte Bronte.