12727 lines
678 KiB
Plaintext
12727 lines
678 KiB
Plaintext
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Wuthering Heights
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This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
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whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
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you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located
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before using this eBook.
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Title: Wuthering Heights
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Author: Emily Brontë
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Release date: December 1, 1996 [eBook #768]
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Most recently updated: January 18, 2022
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Language: English
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Credits: David Price
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WUTHERING HEIGHTS ***
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Wuthering Heights
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by Emily Brontë
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CHAPTER I
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1801—I have just returned from a visit to my landlord—the solitary
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neighbour that I shall be troubled with. This is certainly a beautiful
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country! In all England, I do not believe that I could have fixed on a
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situation so completely removed from the stir of society. A perfect
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misanthropist’s Heaven—and Mr. Heathcliff and I are such a suitable
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pair to divide the desolation between us. A capital fellow! He little
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imagined how my heart warmed towards him when I beheld his black eyes
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withdraw so suspiciously under their brows, as I rode up, and when his
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fingers sheltered themselves, with a jealous resolution, still further
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in his waistcoat, as I announced my name.
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“Mr. Heathcliff?” I said.
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A nod was the answer.
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“Mr. Lockwood, your new tenant, sir. I do myself the honour of calling
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as soon as possible after my arrival, to express the hope that I have
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not inconvenienced you by my perseverance in soliciting the occupation
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of Thrushcross Grange: I heard yesterday you had had some thoughts—”
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“Thrushcross Grange is my own, sir,” he interrupted, wincing. “I should
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not allow any one to inconvenience me, if I could hinder it—walk in!”
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The “walk in” was uttered with closed teeth, and expressed the
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sentiment, “Go to the Deuce!” even the gate over which he leant
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manifested no sympathising movement to the words; and I think that
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circumstance determined me to accept the invitation: I felt interested
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in a man who seemed more exaggeratedly reserved than myself.
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When he saw my horse’s breast fairly pushing the barrier, he did put
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out his hand to unchain it, and then sullenly preceded me up the
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causeway, calling, as we entered the court,—“Joseph, take Mr.
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Lockwood’s horse; and bring up some wine.”
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“Here we have the whole establishment of domestics, I suppose,” was the
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reflection suggested by this compound order. “No wonder the grass grows
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up between the flags, and cattle are the only hedge-cutters.”
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Joseph was an elderly, nay, an old man, very old, perhaps, though hale
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and sinewy. “The Lord help us!” he soliloquised in an undertone of
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peevish displeasure, while relieving me of my horse: looking, meantime,
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in my face so sourly that I charitably conjectured he must have need of
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divine aid to digest his dinner, and his pious ejaculation had no
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reference to my unexpected advent.
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Wuthering Heights is the name of Mr. Heathcliff’s dwelling. “Wuthering”
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being a significant provincial adjective, descriptive of the
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atmospheric tumult to which its station is exposed in stormy weather.
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Pure, bracing ventilation they must have up there at all times, indeed:
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one may guess the power of the north wind, blowing over the edge, by
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the excessive slant of a few stunted firs at the end of the house; and
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by a range of gaunt thorns all stretching their limbs one way, as if
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craving alms of the sun. Happily, the architect had foresight to build
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it strong: the narrow windows are deeply set in the wall, and the
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corners defended with large jutting stones.
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Before passing the threshold, I paused to admire a quantity of
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grotesque carving lavished over the front, and especially about the
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principal door; above which, among a wilderness of crumbling griffins
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and shameless little boys, I detected the date “1500,” and the name
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“Hareton Earnshaw.” I would have made a few comments, and requested a
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short history of the place from the surly owner; but his attitude at
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the door appeared to demand my speedy entrance, or complete departure,
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and I had no desire to aggravate his impatience previous to inspecting
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the penetralium.
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One step brought us into the family sitting-room, without any
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introductory lobby or passage: they call it here “the house”
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pre-eminently. It includes kitchen and parlour, generally; but I
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believe at Wuthering Heights the kitchen is forced to retreat
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altogether into another quarter: at least I distinguished a chatter of
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tongues, and a clatter of culinary utensils, deep within; and I
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observed no signs of roasting, boiling, or baking, about the huge
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fireplace; nor any glitter of copper saucepans and tin cullenders on
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the walls. One end, indeed, reflected splendidly both light and heat
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from ranks of immense pewter dishes, interspersed with silver jugs and
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tankards, towering row after row, on a vast oak dresser, to the very
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roof. The latter had never been under-drawn: its entire anatomy lay
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bare to an inquiring eye, except where a frame of wood laden with
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oatcakes and clusters of legs of beef, mutton, and ham, concealed it.
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Above the chimney were sundry villainous old guns, and a couple of
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horse-pistols: and, by way of ornament, three gaudily painted canisters
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disposed along its ledge. The floor was of smooth, white stone; the
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chairs, high-backed, primitive structures, painted green: one or two
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heavy black ones lurking in the shade. In an arch under the dresser
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reposed a huge, liver-coloured bitch pointer, surrounded by a swarm of
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squealing puppies; and other dogs haunted other recesses.
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The apartment and furniture would have been nothing extraordinary as
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belonging to a homely, northern farmer, with a stubborn countenance,
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and stalwart limbs set out to advantage in knee-breeches and gaiters.
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Such an individual seated in his arm-chair, his mug of ale frothing on
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the round table before him, is to be seen in any circuit of five or six
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miles among these hills, if you go at the right time after dinner. But
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Mr. Heathcliff forms a singular contrast to his abode and style of
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living. He is a dark-skinned gipsy in aspect, in dress and manners a
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gentleman: that is, as much a gentleman as many a country squire:
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rather slovenly, perhaps, yet not looking amiss with his negligence,
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because he has an erect and handsome figure; and rather morose.
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Possibly, some people might suspect him of a degree of under-bred
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pride; I have a sympathetic chord within that tells me it is nothing of
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the sort: I know, by instinct, his reserve springs from an aversion to
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showy displays of feeling—to manifestations of mutual kindliness. He’ll
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love and hate equally under cover, and esteem it a species of
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impertinence to be loved or hated again. No, I’m running on too fast: I
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bestow my own attributes over-liberally on him. Mr. Heathcliff may have
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entirely dissimilar reasons for keeping his hand out of the way when he
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meets a would-be acquaintance, to those which actuate me. Let me hope
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my constitution is almost peculiar: my dear mother used to say I should
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never have a comfortable home; and only last summer I proved myself
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perfectly unworthy of one.
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While enjoying a month of fine weather at the sea-coast, I was thrown
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into the company of a most fascinating creature: a real goddess in my
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eyes, as long as she took no notice of me. I “never told my love”
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vocally; still, if looks have language, the merest idiot might have
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guessed I was over head and ears: she understood me at last, and looked
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a return—the sweetest of all imaginable looks. And what did I do? I
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confess it with shame—shrunk icily into myself, like a snail; at every
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glance retired colder and farther; till finally the poor innocent was
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led to doubt her own senses, and, overwhelmed with confusion at her
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supposed mistake, persuaded her mamma to decamp.
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By this curious turn of disposition I have gained the reputation of
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deliberate heartlessness; how undeserved, I alone can appreciate.
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I took a seat at the end of the hearthstone opposite that towards which
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my landlord advanced, and filled up an interval of silence by
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attempting to caress the canine mother, who had left her nursery, and
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was sneaking wolfishly to the back of my legs, her lip curled up, and
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her white teeth watering for a snatch. My caress provoked a long,
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guttural gnarl.
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“You’d better let the dog alone,” growled Mr. Heathcliff in unison,
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checking fiercer demonstrations with a punch of his foot. “She’s not
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accustomed to be spoiled—not kept for a pet.” Then, striding to a side
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door, he shouted again, “Joseph!”
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Joseph mumbled indistinctly in the depths of the cellar, but gave no
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intimation of ascending; so his master dived down to him, leaving me
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_vis-à-vis_ the ruffianly bitch and a pair of grim shaggy sheep-dogs,
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who shared with her a jealous guardianship over all my movements. Not
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anxious to come in contact with their fangs, I sat still; but,
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imagining they would scarcely understand tacit insults, I unfortunately
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indulged in winking and making faces at the trio, and some turn of my
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physiognomy so irritated madam, that she suddenly broke into a fury and
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leapt on my knees. I flung her back, and hastened to interpose the
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table between us. This proceeding aroused the whole hive: half-a-dozen
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four-footed fiends, of various sizes and ages, issued from hidden dens
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to the common centre. I felt my heels and coat-laps peculiar subjects
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of assault; and parrying off the larger combatants as effectually as I
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could with the poker, I was constrained to demand, aloud, assistance
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from some of the household in re-establishing peace.
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Mr. Heathcliff and his man climbed the cellar steps with vexatious
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phlegm: I don’t think they moved one second faster than usual, though
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the hearth was an absolute tempest of worrying and yelping. Happily, an
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inhabitant of the kitchen made more dispatch; a lusty dame, with
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tucked-up gown, bare arms, and fire-flushed cheeks, rushed into the
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midst of us flourishing a frying-pan: and used that weapon, and her
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tongue, to such purpose, that the storm subsided magically, and she
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only remained, heaving like a sea after a high wind, when her master
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entered on the scene.
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“What the devil is the matter?” he asked, eyeing me in a manner that I
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could ill endure after this inhospitable treatment.
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“What the devil, indeed!” I muttered. “The herd of possessed swine
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could have had no worse spirits in them than those animals of yours,
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sir. You might as well leave a stranger with a brood of tigers!”
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“They won’t meddle with persons who touch nothing,” he remarked,
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putting the bottle before me, and restoring the displaced table. “The
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dogs do right to be vigilant. Take a glass of wine?”
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“No, thank you.”
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“Not bitten, are you?”
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“If I had been, I would have set my signet on the biter.” Heathcliff’s
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countenance relaxed into a grin.
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“Come, come,” he said, “you are flurried, Mr. Lockwood. Here, take a
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little wine. Guests are so exceedingly rare in this house that I and my
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dogs, I am willing to own, hardly know how to receive them. Your
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health, sir?”
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I bowed and returned the pledge; beginning to perceive that it would be
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foolish to sit sulking for the misbehaviour of a pack of curs; besides,
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I felt loth to yield the fellow further amusement at my expense; since
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his humour took that turn. He—probably swayed by prudential
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consideration of the folly of offending a good tenant—relaxed a little
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in the laconic style of chipping off his pronouns and auxiliary verbs,
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and introduced what he supposed would be a subject of interest to me,—a
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discourse on the advantages and disadvantages of my present place of
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retirement. I found him very intelligent on the topics we touched; and
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before I went home, I was encouraged so far as to volunteer another
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visit to-morrow. He evidently wished no repetition of my intrusion. I
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shall go, notwithstanding. It is astonishing how sociable I feel myself
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compared with him.
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CHAPTER II
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Yesterday afternoon set in misty and cold. I had half a mind to spend
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it by my study fire, instead of wading through heath and mud to
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Wuthering Heights. On coming up from dinner, however, (N.B.—I dine
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between twelve and one o’clock; the housekeeper, a matronly lady, taken
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as a fixture along with the house, could not, or would not, comprehend
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my request that I might be served at five)—on mounting the stairs with
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this lazy intention, and stepping into the room, I saw a servant-girl
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on her knees surrounded by brushes and coal-scuttles, and raising an
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infernal dust as she extinguished the flames with heaps of cinders.
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This spectacle drove me back immediately; I took my hat, and, after a
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four-miles’ walk, arrived at Heathcliff’s garden-gate just in time to
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escape the first feathery flakes of a snow shower.
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On that bleak hill top the earth was hard with a black frost, and the
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air made me shiver through every limb. Being unable to remove the
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chain, I jumped over, and, running up the flagged causeway bordered
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with straggling gooseberry-bushes, knocked vainly for admittance, till
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my knuckles tingled and the dogs howled.
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“Wretched inmates!” I ejaculated, mentally, “you deserve perpetual
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isolation from your species for your churlish inhospitality. At least,
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I would not keep my doors barred in the day-time. I don’t care—I will
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get in!” So resolved, I grasped the latch and shook it vehemently.
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Vinegar-faced Joseph projected his head from a round window of the
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barn.
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“What are ye for?” he shouted. “T’ maister’s down i’ t’ fowld. Go round
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by th’ end o’ t’ laith, if ye went to spake to him.”
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“Is there nobody inside to open the door?” I hallooed, responsively.
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“There’s nobbut t’ missis; and shoo’ll not oppen ’t an ye mak’ yer
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flaysome dins till neeght.”
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“Why? Cannot you tell her whom I am, eh, Joseph?”
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“Nor-ne me! I’ll hae no hend wi’t,” muttered the head, vanishing.
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The snow began to drive thickly. I seized the handle to essay another
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trial; when a young man without coat, and shouldering a pitchfork,
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appeared in the yard behind. He hailed me to follow him, and, after
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marching through a wash-house, and a paved area containing a coal-shed,
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pump, and pigeon-cot, we at length arrived in the huge, warm, cheerful
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apartment where I was formerly received. It glowed delightfully in the
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radiance of an immense fire, compounded of coal, peat, and wood; and
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near the table, laid for a plentiful evening meal, I was pleased to
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observe the “missis,” an individual whose existence I had never
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previously suspected. I bowed and waited, thinking she would bid me
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take a seat. She looked at me, leaning back in her chair, and remained
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motionless and mute.
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“Rough weather!” I remarked. “I’m afraid, Mrs. Heathcliff, the door
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must bear the consequence of your servants’ leisure attendance: I had
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hard work to make them hear me.”
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She never opened her mouth. I stared—she stared also: at any rate, she
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kept her eyes on me in a cool, regardless manner, exceedingly
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embarrassing and disagreeable.
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“Sit down,” said the young man, gruffly. “He’ll be in soon.”
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I obeyed; and hemmed, and called the villain Juno, who deigned, at this
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second interview, to move the extreme tip of her tail, in token of
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owning my acquaintance.
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“A beautiful animal!” I commenced again. “Do you intend parting with
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the little ones, madam?”
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“They are not mine,” said the amiable hostess, more repellingly than
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Heathcliff himself could have replied.
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“Ah, your favourites are among these?” I continued, turning to an
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obscure cushion full of something like cats.
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“A strange choice of favourites!” she observed scornfully.
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Unluckily, it was a heap of dead rabbits. I hemmed once more, and drew
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closer to the hearth, repeating my comment on the wildness of the
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evening.
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“You should not have come out,” she said, rising and reaching from the
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chimney-piece two of the painted canisters.
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Her position before was sheltered from the light; now, I had a distinct
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view of her whole figure and countenance. She was slender, and
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apparently scarcely past girlhood: an admirable form, and the most
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exquisite little face that I have ever had the pleasure of beholding;
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small features, very fair; flaxen ringlets, or rather golden, hanging
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loose on her delicate neck; and eyes, had they been agreeable in
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expression, that would have been irresistible: fortunately for my
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susceptible heart, the only sentiment they evinced hovered between
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scorn and a kind of desperation, singularly unnatural to be detected
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there. The canisters were almost out of her reach; I made a motion to
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aid her; she turned upon me as a miser might turn if any one attempted
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to assist him in counting his gold.
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“I don’t want your help,” she snapped; “I can get them for myself.”
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“I beg your pardon!” I hastened to reply.
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“Were you asked to tea?” she demanded, tying an apron over her neat
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black frock, and standing with a spoonful of the leaf poised over the
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pot.
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“I shall be glad to have a cup,” I answered.
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“Were you asked?” she repeated.
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“No,” I said, half smiling. “You are the proper person to ask me.”
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She flung the tea back, spoon and all, and resumed her chair in a pet;
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her forehead corrugated, and her red under-lip pushed out, like a
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child’s ready to cry.
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Meanwhile, the young man had slung on to his person a decidedly shabby
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upper garment, and, erecting himself before the blaze, looked down on
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me from the corner of his eyes, for all the world as if there were some
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mortal feud unavenged between us. I began to doubt whether he were a
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servant or not: his dress and speech were both rude, entirely devoid of
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the superiority observable in Mr. and Mrs. Heathcliff; his thick brown
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curls were rough and uncultivated, his whiskers encroached bearishly
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over his cheeks, and his hands were embrowned like those of a common
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labourer: still his bearing was free, almost haughty, and he showed
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none of a domestic’s assiduity in attending on the lady of the house.
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In the absence of clear proofs of his condition, I deemed it best to
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abstain from noticing his curious conduct; and, five minutes
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afterwards, the entrance of Heathcliff relieved me, in some measure,
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from my uncomfortable state.
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“You see, sir, I am come, according to promise!” I exclaimed, assuming
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the cheerful; “and I fear I shall be weather-bound for half an hour, if
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you can afford me shelter during that space.”
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“Half an hour?” he said, shaking the white flakes from his clothes; “I
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wonder you should select the thick of a snow-storm to ramble about in.
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Do you know that you run a risk of being lost in the marshes? People
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familiar with these moors often miss their road on such evenings; and I
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can tell you there is no chance of a change at present.”
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“Perhaps I can get a guide among your lads, and he might stay at the
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Grange till morning—could you spare me one?”
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“No, I could not.”
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“Oh, indeed! Well, then, I must trust to my own sagacity.”
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“Umph!”
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“Are you going to mak’ the tea?” demanded he of the shabby coat,
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shifting his ferocious gaze from me to the young lady.
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“Is _he_ to have any?” she asked, appealing to Heathcliff.
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||
“Get it ready, will you?” was the answer, uttered so savagely that I
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started. The tone in which the words were said revealed a genuine bad
|
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nature. I no longer felt inclined to call Heathcliff a capital fellow.
|
||
When the preparations were finished, he invited me with—“Now, sir,
|
||
bring forward your chair.” And we all, including the rustic youth, drew
|
||
round the table: an austere silence prevailing while we discussed our
|
||
meal.
|
||
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||
I thought, if I had caused the cloud, it was my duty to make an effort
|
||
to dispel it. They could not every day sit so grim and taciturn; and it
|
||
was impossible, however ill-tempered they might be, that the universal
|
||
scowl they wore was their every-day countenance.
|
||
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||
“It is strange,” I began, in the interval of swallowing one cup of tea
|
||
and receiving another—“it is strange how custom can mould our tastes
|
||
and ideas: many could not imagine the existence of happiness in a life
|
||
of such complete exile from the world as you spend, Mr. Heathcliff;
|
||
yet, I’ll venture to say, that, surrounded by your family, and with
|
||
your amiable lady as the presiding genius over your home and heart—”
|
||
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||
“My amiable lady!” he interrupted, with an almost diabolical sneer on
|
||
his face. “Where is she—my amiable lady?”
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||
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||
“Mrs. Heathcliff, your wife, I mean.”
|
||
|
||
“Well, yes—oh, you would intimate that her spirit has taken the post of
|
||
ministering angel, and guards the fortunes of Wuthering Heights, even
|
||
when her body is gone. Is that it?”
|
||
|
||
Perceiving myself in a blunder, I attempted to correct it. I might have
|
||
seen there was too great a disparity between the ages of the parties to
|
||
make it likely that they were man and wife. One was about forty: a
|
||
period of mental vigour at which men seldom cherish the delusion of
|
||
being married for love by girls: that dream is reserved for the solace
|
||
of our declining years. The other did not look seventeen.
|
||
|
||
Then it flashed upon me—“The clown at my elbow, who is drinking his tea
|
||
out of a basin and eating his bread with unwashed hands, may be her
|
||
husband: Heathcliff junior, of course. Here is the consequence of being
|
||
buried alive: she has thrown herself away upon that boor from sheer
|
||
ignorance that better individuals existed! A sad pity—I must beware how
|
||
I cause her to regret her choice.” The last reflection may seem
|
||
conceited; it was not. My neighbour struck me as bordering on
|
||
repulsive; I knew, through experience, that I was tolerably attractive.
|
||
|
||
“Mrs. Heathcliff is my daughter-in-law,” said Heathcliff, corroborating
|
||
my surmise. He turned, as he spoke, a peculiar look in her direction: a
|
||
look of hatred; unless he has a most perverse set of facial muscles
|
||
that will not, like those of other people, interpret the language of
|
||
his soul.
|
||
|
||
“Ah, certainly—I see now: you are the favoured possessor of the
|
||
beneficent fairy,” I remarked, turning to my neighbour.
|
||
|
||
This was worse than before: the youth grew crimson, and clenched his
|
||
fist, with every appearance of a meditated assault. But he seemed to
|
||
recollect himself presently, and smothered the storm in a brutal curse,
|
||
muttered on my behalf: which, however, I took care not to notice.
|
||
|
||
“Unhappy in your conjectures, sir,” observed my host; “we neither of us
|
||
have the privilege of owning your good fairy; her mate is dead. I said
|
||
she was my daughter-in-law: therefore, she must have married my son.”
|
||
|
||
“And this young man is—”
|
||
|
||
“Not my son, assuredly.”
|
||
|
||
Heathcliff smiled again, as if it were rather too bold a jest to
|
||
attribute the paternity of that bear to him.
|
||
|
||
“My name is Hareton Earnshaw,” growled the other; “and I’d counsel you
|
||
to respect it!”
|
||
|
||
“I’ve shown no disrespect,” was my reply, laughing internally at the
|
||
dignity with which he announced himself.
|
||
|
||
He fixed his eye on me longer than I cared to return the stare, for
|
||
fear I might be tempted either to box his ears or render my hilarity
|
||
audible. I began to feel unmistakably out of place in that pleasant
|
||
family circle. The dismal spiritual atmosphere overcame, and more than
|
||
neutralised, the glowing physical comforts round me; and I resolved to
|
||
be cautious how I ventured under those rafters a third time.
|
||
|
||
The business of eating being concluded, and no one uttering a word of
|
||
sociable conversation, I approached a window to examine the weather. A
|
||
sorrowful sight I saw: dark night coming down prematurely, and sky and
|
||
hills mingled in one bitter whirl of wind and suffocating snow.
|
||
|
||
“I don’t think it possible for me to get home now without a guide,” I
|
||
could not help exclaiming. “The roads will be buried already; and, if
|
||
they were bare, I could scarcely distinguish a foot in advance.”
|
||
|
||
“Hareton, drive those dozen sheep into the barn porch. They’ll be
|
||
covered if left in the fold all night: and put a plank before them,”
|
||
said Heathcliff.
|
||
|
||
“How must I do?” I continued, with rising irritation.
|
||
|
||
There was no reply to my question; and on looking round I saw only
|
||
Joseph bringing in a pail of porridge for the dogs, and Mrs. Heathcliff
|
||
leaning over the fire, diverting herself with burning a bundle of
|
||
matches which had fallen from the chimney-piece as she restored the
|
||
tea-canister to its place. The former, when he had deposited his
|
||
burden, took a critical survey of the room, and in cracked tones grated
|
||
out—“Aw wonder how yah can faishion to stand thear i’ idleness un war,
|
||
when all on ’ems goan out! Bud yah’re a nowt, and it’s no use
|
||
talking—yah’ll niver mend o’yer ill ways, but goa raight to t’ divil,
|
||
like yer mother afore ye!”
|
||
|
||
I imagined, for a moment, that this piece of eloquence was addressed to
|
||
me; and, sufficiently enraged, stepped towards the aged rascal with an
|
||
intention of kicking him out of the door. Mrs. Heathcliff, however,
|
||
checked me by her answer.
|
||
|
||
“You scandalous old hypocrite!” she replied. “Are you not afraid of
|
||
being carried away bodily, whenever you mention the devil’s name? I
|
||
warn you to refrain from provoking me, or I’ll ask your abduction as a
|
||
special favour! Stop! look here, Joseph,” she continued, taking a long,
|
||
dark book from a shelf; “I’ll show you how far I’ve progressed in the
|
||
Black Art: I shall soon be competent to make a clear house of it. The
|
||
red cow didn’t die by chance; and your rheumatism can hardly be
|
||
reckoned among providential visitations!”
|
||
|
||
“Oh, wicked, wicked!” gasped the elder; “may the Lord deliver us from
|
||
evil!”
|
||
|
||
“No, reprobate! you are a castaway—be off, or I’ll hurt you seriously!
|
||
I’ll have you all modelled in wax and clay! and the first who passes
|
||
the limits I fix shall—I’ll not say what he shall be done to—but,
|
||
you’ll see! Go, I’m looking at you!”
|
||
|
||
The little witch put a mock malignity into her beautiful eyes, and
|
||
Joseph, trembling with sincere horror, hurried out, praying, and
|
||
ejaculating “wicked” as he went. I thought her conduct must be prompted
|
||
by a species of dreary fun; and, now that we were alone, I endeavoured
|
||
to interest her in my distress.
|
||
|
||
“Mrs. Heathcliff,” I said earnestly, “you must excuse me for troubling
|
||
you. I presume, because, with that face, I’m sure you cannot help being
|
||
good-hearted. Do point out some landmarks by which I may know my way
|
||
home: I have no more idea how to get there than you would have how to
|
||
get to London!”
|
||
|
||
“Take the road you came,” she answered, ensconcing herself in a chair,
|
||
with a candle, and the long book open before her. “It is brief advice,
|
||
but as sound as I can give.”
|
||
|
||
“Then, if you hear of me being discovered dead in a bog or a pit full
|
||
of snow, your conscience won’t whisper that it is partly your fault?”
|
||
|
||
“How so? I cannot escort you. They wouldn’t let me go to the end of the
|
||
garden wall.”
|
||
|
||
“_You_! I should be sorry to ask you to cross the threshold, for my
|
||
convenience, on such a night,” I cried. “I want you to _tell_ me my
|
||
way, not to _show_ it: or else to persuade Mr. Heathcliff to give me a
|
||
guide.”
|
||
|
||
“Who? There is himself, Earnshaw, Zillah, Joseph and I. Which would you
|
||
have?”
|
||
|
||
“Are there no boys at the farm?”
|
||
|
||
“No; those are all.”
|
||
|
||
“Then, it follows that I am compelled to stay.”
|
||
|
||
“That you may settle with your host. I have nothing to do with it.”
|
||
|
||
“I hope it will be a lesson to you to make no more rash journeys on
|
||
these hills,” cried Heathcliff’s stern voice from the kitchen entrance.
|
||
“As to staying here, I don’t keep accommodations for visitors: you must
|
||
share a bed with Hareton or Joseph, if you do.”
|
||
|
||
“I can sleep on a chair in this room,” I replied.
|
||
|
||
“No, no! A stranger is a stranger, be he rich or poor: it will not suit
|
||
me to permit any one the range of the place while I am off guard!” said
|
||
the unmannerly wretch.
|
||
|
||
With this insult my patience was at an end. I uttered an expression of
|
||
disgust, and pushed past him into the yard, running against Earnshaw in
|
||
my haste. It was so dark that I could not see the means of exit; and,
|
||
as I wandered round, I heard another specimen of their civil behaviour
|
||
amongst each other. At first the young man appeared about to befriend
|
||
me.
|
||
|
||
“I’ll go with him as far as the park,” he said.
|
||
|
||
“You’ll go with him to hell!” exclaimed his master, or whatever
|
||
relation he bore. “And who is to look after the horses, eh?”
|
||
|
||
“A man’s life is of more consequence than one evening’s neglect of the
|
||
horses: somebody must go,” murmured Mrs. Heathcliff, more kindly than I
|
||
expected.
|
||
|
||
“Not at your command!” retorted Hareton. “If you set store on him,
|
||
you’d better be quiet.”
|
||
|
||
“Then I hope his ghost will haunt you; and I hope Mr. Heathcliff will
|
||
never get another tenant till the Grange is a ruin,” she answered,
|
||
sharply.
|
||
|
||
“Hearken, hearken, shoo’s cursing on ’em!” muttered Joseph, towards
|
||
whom I had been steering.
|
||
|
||
He sat within earshot, milking the cows by the light of a lantern,
|
||
which I seized unceremoniously, and, calling out that I would send it
|
||
back on the morrow, rushed to the nearest postern.
|
||
|
||
“Maister, maister, he’s staling t’ lanthern!” shouted the ancient,
|
||
pursuing my retreat. “Hey, Gnasher! Hey, dog! Hey Wolf, holld him,
|
||
holld him!”
|
||
|
||
On opening the little door, two hairy monsters flew at my throat,
|
||
bearing me down, and extinguishing the light; while a mingled guffaw
|
||
from Heathcliff and Hareton put the copestone on my rage and
|
||
humiliation. Fortunately, the beasts seemed more bent on stretching
|
||
their paws, and yawning, and flourishing their tails, than devouring me
|
||
alive; but they would suffer no resurrection, and I was forced to lie
|
||
till their malignant masters pleased to deliver me: then, hatless and
|
||
trembling with wrath, I ordered the miscreants to let me out—on their
|
||
peril to keep me one minute longer—with several incoherent threats of
|
||
retaliation that, in their indefinite depth of virulency, smacked of
|
||
King Lear.
|
||
|
||
The vehemence of my agitation brought on a copious bleeding at the
|
||
nose, and still Heathcliff laughed, and still I scolded. I don’t know
|
||
what would have concluded the scene, had there not been one person at
|
||
hand rather more rational than myself, and more benevolent than my
|
||
entertainer. This was Zillah, the stout housewife; who at length issued
|
||
forth to inquire into the nature of the uproar. She thought that some
|
||
of them had been laying violent hands on me; and, not daring to attack
|
||
her master, she turned her vocal artillery against the younger
|
||
scoundrel.
|
||
|
||
“Well, Mr. Earnshaw,” she cried, “I wonder what you’ll have agait next?
|
||
Are we going to murder folk on our very door-stones? I see this house
|
||
will never do for me—look at t’ poor lad, he’s fair choking! Wisht,
|
||
wisht; you mun’n’t go on so. Come in, and I’ll cure that: there now,
|
||
hold ye still.”
|
||
|
||
With these words she suddenly splashed a pint of icy water down my
|
||
neck, and pulled me into the kitchen. Mr. Heathcliff followed, his
|
||
accidental merriment expiring quickly in his habitual moroseness.
|
||
|
||
I was sick exceedingly, and dizzy, and faint; and thus compelled
|
||
perforce to accept lodgings under his roof. He told Zillah to give me a
|
||
glass of brandy, and then passed on to the inner room; while she
|
||
condoled with me on my sorry predicament, and having obeyed his orders,
|
||
whereby I was somewhat revived, ushered me to bed.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER III
|
||
|
||
|
||
While leading the way upstairs, she recommended that I should hide the
|
||
candle, and not make a noise; for her master had an odd notion about
|
||
the chamber she would put me in, and never let anybody lodge there
|
||
willingly. I asked the reason. She did not know, she answered: she had
|
||
only lived there a year or two; and they had so many queer goings on,
|
||
she could not begin to be curious.
|
||
|
||
Too stupefied to be curious myself, I fastened my door and glanced
|
||
round for the bed. The whole furniture consisted of a chair, a
|
||
clothes-press, and a large oak case, with squares cut out near the top
|
||
resembling coach windows. Having approached this structure, I looked
|
||
inside, and perceived it to be a singular sort of old-fashioned couch,
|
||
very conveniently designed to obviate the necessity for every member of
|
||
the family having a room to himself. In fact, it formed a little
|
||
closet, and the ledge of a window, which it enclosed, served as a
|
||
table.
|
||
|
||
I slid back the panelled sides, got in with my light, pulled them
|
||
together again, and felt secure against the vigilance of Heathcliff,
|
||
and every one else.
|
||
|
||
The ledge, where I placed my candle, had a few mildewed books piled up
|
||
in one corner; and it was covered with writing scratched on the paint.
|
||
This writing, however, was nothing but a name repeated in all kinds of
|
||
characters, large and small—_Catherine Earnshaw_, here and there varied
|
||
to _Catherine Heathcliff_, and then again to _Catherine Linton_.
|
||
|
||
In vapid listlessness I leant my head against the window, and continued
|
||
spelling over Catherine Earnshaw—Heathcliff—Linton, till my eyes
|
||
closed; but they had not rested five minutes when a glare of white
|
||
letters started from the dark, as vivid as spectres—the air swarmed
|
||
with Catherines; and rousing myself to dispel the obtrusive name, I
|
||
discovered my candle-wick reclining on one of the antique volumes, and
|
||
perfuming the place with an odour of roasted calf-skin.
|
||
|
||
I snuffed it off, and, very ill at ease under the influence of cold and
|
||
lingering nausea, sat up and spread open the injured tome on my knee.
|
||
It was a Testament, in lean type, and smelling dreadfully musty: a
|
||
fly-leaf bore the inscription—“Catherine Earnshaw, her book,” and a
|
||
date some quarter of a century back.
|
||
|
||
I shut it, and took up another and another, till I had examined all.
|
||
Catherine’s library was select, and its state of dilapidation proved it
|
||
to have been well used, though not altogether for a legitimate purpose:
|
||
scarcely one chapter had escaped a pen-and-ink commentary—at least the
|
||
appearance of one—covering every morsel of blank that the printer had
|
||
left. Some were detached sentences; other parts took the form of a
|
||
regular diary, scrawled in an unformed, childish hand. At the top of an
|
||
extra page (quite a treasure, probably, when first lighted on) I was
|
||
greatly amused to behold an excellent caricature of my friend
|
||
Joseph,—rudely, yet powerfully sketched. An immediate interest kindled
|
||
within me for the unknown Catherine, and I began forthwith to decipher
|
||
her faded hieroglyphics.
|
||
|
||
“An awful Sunday,” commenced the paragraph beneath. “I wish my father
|
||
were back again. Hindley is a detestable substitute—his conduct to
|
||
Heathcliff is atrocious—H. and I are going to rebel—we took our
|
||
initiatory step this evening.
|
||
|
||
“All day had been flooding with rain; we could not go to church, so
|
||
Joseph must needs get up a congregation in the garret; and, while
|
||
Hindley and his wife basked downstairs before a comfortable fire—doing
|
||
anything but reading their Bibles, I’ll answer for it—Heathcliff,
|
||
myself, and the unhappy ploughboy were commanded to take our
|
||
prayer-books, and mount: we were ranged in a row, on a sack of corn,
|
||
groaning and shivering, and hoping that Joseph would shiver too, so
|
||
that he might give us a short homily for his own sake. A vain idea! The
|
||
service lasted precisely three hours; and yet my brother had the face
|
||
to exclaim, when he saw us descending, ‘What, done already?’ On Sunday
|
||
evenings we used to be permitted to play, if we did not make much
|
||
noise; now a mere titter is sufficient to send us into corners.
|
||
|
||
“‘You forget you have a master here,’ says the tyrant. ‘I’ll demolish
|
||
the first who puts me out of temper! I insist on perfect sobriety and
|
||
silence. Oh, boy! was that you? Frances darling, pull his hair as you
|
||
go by: I heard him snap his fingers.’ Frances pulled his hair heartily,
|
||
and then went and seated herself on her husband’s knee, and there they
|
||
were, like two babies, kissing and talking nonsense by the hour—foolish
|
||
palaver that we should be ashamed of. We made ourselves as snug as our
|
||
means allowed in the arch of the dresser. I had just fastened our
|
||
pinafores together, and hung them up for a curtain, when in comes
|
||
Joseph, on an errand from the stables. He tears down my handiwork,
|
||
boxes my ears, and croaks:
|
||
|
||
“‘T’ maister nobbut just buried, and Sabbath not o’ered, und t’ sound
|
||
o’ t’ gospel still i’ yer lugs, and ye darr be laiking! Shame on ye!
|
||
sit ye down, ill childer! there’s good books eneugh if ye’ll read ’em:
|
||
sit ye down, and think o’ yer sowls!’
|
||
|
||
“Saying this, he compelled us so to square our positions that we might
|
||
receive from the far-off fire a dull ray to show us the text of the
|
||
lumber he thrust upon us. I could not bear the employment. I took my
|
||
dingy volume by the scroop, and hurled it into the dog-kennel, vowing I
|
||
hated a good book. Heathcliff kicked his to the same place. Then there
|
||
was a hubbub!
|
||
|
||
“‘Maister Hindley!’ shouted our chaplain. ‘Maister, coom hither! Miss
|
||
Cathy’s riven th’ back off “Th’ Helmet o’ Salvation,” un’ Heathcliff’s
|
||
pawsed his fit into t’ first part o’ “T’ Brooad Way to Destruction!”
|
||
It’s fair flaysome that ye let ’em go on this gait. Ech! th’ owd man
|
||
wad ha’ laced ’em properly—but he’s goan!’
|
||
|
||
“Hindley hurried up from his paradise on the hearth, and seizing one of
|
||
us by the collar, and the other by the arm, hurled both into the
|
||
back-kitchen; where, Joseph asseverated, ‘owd Nick’ would fetch us as
|
||
sure as we were living: and, so comforted, we each sought a separate
|
||
nook to await his advent. I reached this book, and a pot of ink from a
|
||
shelf, and pushed the house-door ajar to give me light, and I have got
|
||
the time on with writing for twenty minutes; but my companion is
|
||
impatient, and proposes that we should appropriate the dairywoman’s
|
||
cloak, and have a scamper on the moors, under its shelter. A pleasant
|
||
suggestion—and then, if the surly old man come in, he may believe his
|
||
prophecy verified—we cannot be damper, or colder, in the rain than we
|
||
are here.”
|
||
|
||
* * * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
I suppose Catherine fulfilled her project, for the next sentence took
|
||
up another subject: she waxed lachrymose.
|
||
|
||
“How little did I dream that Hindley would ever make me cry so!” she
|
||
wrote. “My head aches, till I cannot keep it on the pillow; and still I
|
||
can’t give over. Poor Heathcliff! Hindley calls him a vagabond, and
|
||
won’t let him sit with us, nor eat with us any more; and, he says, he
|
||
and I must not play together, and threatens to turn him out of the
|
||
house if we break his orders. He has been blaming our father (how dared
|
||
he?) for treating H. too liberally; and swears he will reduce him to
|
||
his right place—”
|
||
|
||
* * * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
I began to nod drowsily over the dim page: my eye wandered from
|
||
manuscript to print. I saw a red ornamented title—“Seventy Times Seven,
|
||
and the First of the Seventy-First. A Pious Discourse delivered by the
|
||
Reverend Jabez Branderham, in the Chapel of Gimmerden Sough.” And while
|
||
I was, half-consciously, worrying my brain to guess what Jabez
|
||
Branderham would make of his subject, I sank back in bed, and fell
|
||
asleep. Alas, for the effects of bad tea and bad temper! What else
|
||
could it be that made me pass such a terrible night? I don’t remember
|
||
another that I can at all compare with it since I was capable of
|
||
suffering.
|
||
|
||
I began to dream, almost before I ceased to be sensible of my locality.
|
||
I thought it was morning; and I had set out on my way home, with Joseph
|
||
for a guide. The snow lay yards deep in our road; and, as we floundered
|
||
on, my companion wearied me with constant reproaches that I had not
|
||
brought a pilgrim’s staff: telling me that I could never get into the
|
||
house without one, and boastfully flourishing a heavy-headed cudgel,
|
||
which I understood to be so denominated. For a moment I considered it
|
||
absurd that I should need such a weapon to gain admittance into my own
|
||
residence. Then a new idea flashed across me. I was not going there: we
|
||
were journeying to hear the famous Jabez Branderham preach, from the
|
||
text—“Seventy Times Seven;” and either Joseph, the preacher, or I had
|
||
committed the “First of the Seventy-First,” and were to be publicly
|
||
exposed and excommunicated.
|
||
|
||
We came to the chapel. I have passed it really in my walks, twice or
|
||
thrice; it lies in a hollow, between two hills: an elevated hollow,
|
||
near a swamp, whose peaty moisture is said to answer all the purposes
|
||
of embalming on the few corpses deposited there. The roof has been kept
|
||
whole hitherto; but as the clergyman’s stipend is only twenty pounds
|
||
per annum, and a house with two rooms, threatening speedily to
|
||
determine into one, no clergyman will undertake the duties of pastor:
|
||
especially as it is currently reported that his flock would rather let
|
||
him starve than increase the living by one penny from their own
|
||
pockets. However, in my dream, Jabez had a full and attentive
|
||
congregation; and he preached—good God! what a sermon; divided into
|
||
_four hundred and ninety_ parts, each fully equal to an ordinary
|
||
address from the pulpit, and each discussing a separate sin! Where he
|
||
searched for them, I cannot tell. He had his private manner of
|
||
interpreting the phrase, and it seemed necessary the brother should sin
|
||
different sins on every occasion. They were of the most curious
|
||
character: odd transgressions that I never imagined previously.
|
||
|
||
Oh, how weary I grew. How I writhed, and yawned, and nodded, and
|
||
revived! How I pinched and pricked myself, and rubbed my eyes, and
|
||
stood up, and sat down again, and nudged Joseph to inform me if he
|
||
would _ever_ have done. I was condemned to hear all out: finally, he
|
||
reached the “_First of the Seventy-First_.” At that crisis, a sudden
|
||
inspiration descended on me; I was moved to rise and denounce Jabez
|
||
Branderham as the sinner of the sin that no Christian need pardon.
|
||
|
||
“Sir,” I exclaimed, “sitting here within these four walls, at one
|
||
stretch, I have endured and forgiven the four hundred and ninety heads
|
||
of your discourse. Seventy times seven times have I plucked up my hat
|
||
and been about to depart—Seventy times seven times have you
|
||
preposterously forced me to resume my seat. The four hundred and
|
||
ninety-first is too much. Fellow-martyrs, have at him! Drag him down,
|
||
and crush him to atoms, that the place which knows him may know him no
|
||
more!”
|
||
|
||
“_Thou art the Man!_” cried Jabez, after a solemn pause, leaning over
|
||
his cushion. “Seventy times seven times didst thou gapingly contort thy
|
||
visage—seventy times seven did I take counsel with my soul—Lo, this is
|
||
human weakness: this also may be absolved! The First of the
|
||
Seventy-First is come. Brethren, execute upon him the judgment written.
|
||
Such honour have all His saints!”
|
||
|
||
With that concluding word, the whole assembly, exalting their pilgrim’s
|
||
staves, rushed round me in a body; and I, having no weapon to raise in
|
||
self-defence, commenced grappling with Joseph, my nearest and most
|
||
ferocious assailant, for his. In the confluence of the multitude,
|
||
several clubs crossed; blows, aimed at me, fell on other sconces.
|
||
Presently the whole chapel resounded with rappings and counter
|
||
rappings: every man’s hand was against his neighbour; and Branderham,
|
||
unwilling to remain idle, poured forth his zeal in a shower of loud
|
||
taps on the boards of the pulpit, which responded so smartly that, at
|
||
last, to my unspeakable relief, they woke me. And what was it that had
|
||
suggested the tremendous tumult? What had played Jabez’s part in the
|
||
row? Merely the branch of a fir-tree that touched my lattice as the
|
||
blast wailed by, and rattled its dry cones against the panes! I
|
||
listened doubtingly an instant; detected the disturber, then turned and
|
||
dozed, and dreamt again: if possible, still more disagreeably than
|
||
before.
|
||
|
||
This time, I remembered I was lying in the oak closet, and I heard
|
||
distinctly the gusty wind, and the driving of the snow; I heard, also,
|
||
the fir bough repeat its teasing sound, and ascribed it to the right
|
||
cause: but it annoyed me so much, that I resolved to silence it, if
|
||
possible; and, I thought, I rose and endeavoured to unhasp the
|
||
casement. The hook was soldered into the staple: a circumstance
|
||
observed by me when awake, but forgotten. “I must stop it,
|
||
nevertheless!” I muttered, knocking my knuckles through the glass, and
|
||
stretching an arm out to seize the importunate branch; instead of
|
||
which, my fingers closed on the fingers of a little, ice-cold hand!
|
||
|
||
The intense horror of nightmare came over me: I tried to draw back my
|
||
arm, but the hand clung to it, and a most melancholy voice sobbed,
|
||
|
||
“Let me in—let me in!”
|
||
|
||
“Who are you?” I asked, struggling, meanwhile, to disengage myself.
|
||
|
||
“Catherine Linton,” it replied, shiveringly (why did I think of
|
||
_Linton_? I had read _Earnshaw_ twenty times for Linton)—“I’m come
|
||
home: I’d lost my way on the moor!”
|
||
|
||
As it spoke, I discerned, obscurely, a child’s face looking through the
|
||
window. Terror made me cruel; and, finding it useless to attempt
|
||
shaking the creature off, I pulled its wrist on to the broken pane, and
|
||
rubbed it to and fro till the blood ran down and soaked the bedclothes:
|
||
still it wailed, “Let me in!” and maintained its tenacious gripe,
|
||
almost maddening me with fear.
|
||
|
||
“How can I!” I said at length. “Let _me_ go, if you want me to let you
|
||
in!”
|
||
|
||
The fingers relaxed, I snatched mine through the hole, hurriedly piled
|
||
the books up in a pyramid against it, and stopped my ears to exclude
|
||
the lamentable prayer.
|
||
|
||
I seemed to keep them closed above a quarter of an hour; yet, the
|
||
instant I listened again, there was the doleful cry moaning on!
|
||
|
||
“Begone!” I shouted. “I’ll never let you in, not if you beg for twenty
|
||
years.”
|
||
|
||
“It is twenty years,” mourned the voice: “twenty years. I’ve been a
|
||
waif for twenty years!”
|
||
|
||
Thereat began a feeble scratching outside, and the pile of books moved
|
||
as if thrust forward.
|
||
|
||
I tried to jump up; but could not stir a limb; and so yelled aloud, in
|
||
a frenzy of fright.
|
||
|
||
To my confusion, I discovered the yell was not ideal: hasty footsteps
|
||
approached my chamber door; somebody pushed it open, with a vigorous
|
||
hand, and a light glimmered through the squares at the top of the bed.
|
||
I sat shuddering, yet, and wiping the perspiration from my forehead:
|
||
the intruder appeared to hesitate, and muttered to himself.
|
||
|
||
At last, he said, in a half-whisper, plainly not expecting an answer,
|
||
|
||
“Is any one here?”
|
||
|
||
I considered it best to confess my presence; for I knew Heathcliff’s
|
||
accents, and feared he might search further, if I kept quiet.
|
||
|
||
With this intention, I turned and opened the panels. I shall not soon
|
||
forget the effect my action produced.
|
||
|
||
Heathcliff stood near the entrance, in his shirt and trousers; with a
|
||
candle dripping over his fingers, and his face as white as the wall
|
||
behind him. The first creak of the oak startled him like an electric
|
||
shock: the light leaped from his hold to a distance of some feet, and
|
||
his agitation was so extreme, that he could hardly pick it up.
|
||
|
||
“It is only your guest, sir,” I called out, desirous to spare him the
|
||
humiliation of exposing his cowardice further. “I had the misfortune to
|
||
scream in my sleep, owing to a frightful nightmare. I’m sorry I
|
||
disturbed you.”
|
||
|
||
“Oh, God confound you, Mr. Lockwood! I wish you were at the—” commenced
|
||
my host, setting the candle on a chair, because he found it impossible
|
||
to hold it steady. “And who showed you up into this room?” he
|
||
continued, crushing his nails into his palms, and grinding his teeth to
|
||
subdue the maxillary convulsions. “Who was it? I’ve a good mind to turn
|
||
them out of the house this moment!”
|
||
|
||
“It was your servant Zillah,” I replied, flinging myself on to the
|
||
floor, and rapidly resuming my garments. “I should not care if you did,
|
||
Mr. Heathcliff; she richly deserves it. I suppose that she wanted to
|
||
get another proof that the place was haunted, at my expense. Well, it
|
||
is—swarming with ghosts and goblins! You have reason in shutting it up,
|
||
I assure you. No one will thank you for a doze in such a den!”
|
||
|
||
“What do you mean?” asked Heathcliff, “and what are you doing? Lie down
|
||
and finish out the night, since you _are_ here; but, for Heaven’s sake!
|
||
don’t repeat that horrid noise: nothing could excuse it, unless you
|
||
were having your throat cut!”
|
||
|
||
“If the little fiend had got in at the window, she probably would have
|
||
strangled me!” I returned. “I’m not going to endure the persecutions of
|
||
your hospitable ancestors again. Was not the Reverend Jabez Branderham
|
||
akin to you on the mother’s side? And that minx, Catherine Linton, or
|
||
Earnshaw, or however she was called—she must have been a
|
||
changeling—wicked little soul! She told me she had been walking the
|
||
earth these twenty years: a just punishment for her mortal
|
||
transgressions, I’ve no doubt!”
|
||
|
||
Scarcely were these words uttered when I recollected the association of
|
||
Heathcliff’s with Catherine’s name in the book, which had completely
|
||
slipped from my memory, till thus awakened. I blushed at my
|
||
inconsideration: but, without showing further consciousness of the
|
||
offence, I hastened to add—“The truth is, sir, I passed the first part
|
||
of the night in—” Here I stopped afresh—I was about to say “perusing
|
||
those old volumes,” then it would have revealed my knowledge of their
|
||
written, as well as their printed, contents; so, correcting myself, I
|
||
went on—“in spelling over the name scratched on that window-ledge. A
|
||
monotonous occupation, calculated to set me asleep, like counting, or—”
|
||
|
||
“What _can_ you mean by talking in this way to _me!_” thundered
|
||
Heathcliff with savage vehemence. “How—how _dare_ you, under my
|
||
roof?—God! he’s mad to speak so!” And he struck his forehead with rage.
|
||
|
||
I did not know whether to resent this language or pursue my
|
||
explanation; but he seemed so powerfully affected that I took pity and
|
||
proceeded with my dreams; affirming I had never heard the appellation
|
||
of “Catherine Linton” before, but reading it often over produced an
|
||
impression which personified itself when I had no longer my imagination
|
||
under control. Heathcliff gradually fell back into the shelter of the
|
||
bed, as I spoke; finally sitting down almost concealed behind it. I
|
||
guessed, however, by his irregular and intercepted breathing, that he
|
||
struggled to vanquish an excess of violent emotion. Not liking to show
|
||
him that I had heard the conflict, I continued my toilette rather
|
||
noisily, looked at my watch, and soliloquised on the length of the
|
||
night: “Not three o’clock yet! I could have taken oath it had been six.
|
||
Time stagnates here: we must surely have retired to rest at eight!”
|
||
|
||
“Always at nine in winter, and rise at four,” said my host, suppressing
|
||
a groan: and, as I fancied, by the motion of his arm’s shadow, dashing
|
||
a tear from his eyes. “Mr. Lockwood,” he added, “you may go into my
|
||
room: you’ll only be in the way, coming downstairs so early: and your
|
||
childish outcry has sent sleep to the devil for me.”
|
||
|
||
“And for me, too,” I replied. “I’ll walk in the yard till daylight, and
|
||
then I’ll be off; and you need not dread a repetition of my intrusion.
|
||
I’m now quite cured of seeking pleasure in society, be it country or
|
||
town. A sensible man ought to find sufficient company in himself.”
|
||
|
||
“Delightful company!” muttered Heathcliff. “Take the candle, and go
|
||
where you please. I shall join you directly. Keep out of the yard,
|
||
though, the dogs are unchained; and the house—Juno mounts sentinel
|
||
there, and—nay, you can only ramble about the steps and passages. But,
|
||
away with you! I’ll come in two minutes!”
|
||
|
||
I obeyed, so far as to quit the chamber; when, ignorant where the
|
||
narrow lobbies led, I stood still, and was witness, involuntarily, to a
|
||
piece of superstition on the part of my landlord which belied, oddly,
|
||
his apparent sense. He got on to the bed, and wrenched open the
|
||
lattice, bursting, as he pulled at it, into an uncontrollable passion
|
||
of tears. “Come in! come in!” he sobbed. “Cathy, do come. Oh, do—_once_
|
||
more! Oh! my heart’s darling! hear me _this_ time, Catherine, at last!”
|
||
The spectre showed a spectre’s ordinary caprice: it gave no sign of
|
||
being; but the snow and wind whirled wildly through, even reaching my
|
||
station, and blowing out the light.
|
||
|
||
There was such anguish in the gush of grief that accompanied this
|
||
raving, that my compassion made me overlook its folly, and I drew off,
|
||
half angry to have listened at all, and vexed at having related my
|
||
ridiculous nightmare, since it produced that agony; though _why_ was
|
||
beyond my comprehension. I descended cautiously to the lower regions,
|
||
and landed in the back-kitchen, where a gleam of fire, raked compactly
|
||
together, enabled me to rekindle my candle. Nothing was stirring except
|
||
a brindled, grey cat, which crept from the ashes, and saluted me with a
|
||
querulous mew.
|
||
|
||
Two benches, shaped in sections of a circle, nearly enclosed the
|
||
hearth; on one of these I stretched myself, and Grimalkin mounted the
|
||
other. We were both of us nodding ere any one invaded our retreat, and
|
||
then it was Joseph, shuffling down a wooden ladder that vanished in the
|
||
roof, through a trap: the ascent to his garret, I suppose. He cast a
|
||
sinister look at the little flame which I had enticed to play between
|
||
the ribs, swept the cat from its elevation, and bestowing himself in
|
||
the vacancy, commenced the operation of stuffing a three-inch pipe with
|
||
tobacco. My presence in his sanctum was evidently esteemed a piece of
|
||
impudence too shameful for remark: he silently applied the tube to his
|
||
lips, folded his arms, and puffed away. I let him enjoy the luxury
|
||
unannoyed; and after sucking out his last wreath, and heaving a
|
||
profound sigh, he got up, and departed as solemnly as he came.
|
||
|
||
A more elastic footstep entered next; and now I opened my mouth for a
|
||
“good-morning,” but closed it again, the salutation unachieved; for
|
||
Hareton Earnshaw was performing his orison _sotto voce_, in a series of
|
||
curses directed against every object he touched, while he rummaged a
|
||
corner for a spade or shovel to dig through the drifts. He glanced over
|
||
the back of the bench, dilating his nostrils, and thought as little of
|
||
exchanging civilities with me as with my companion the cat. I guessed,
|
||
by his preparations, that egress was allowed, and, leaving my hard
|
||
couch, made a movement to follow him. He noticed this, and thrust at an
|
||
inner door with the end of his spade, intimating by an inarticulate
|
||
sound that there was the place where I must go, if I changed my
|
||
locality.
|
||
|
||
It opened into the house, where the females were already astir; Zillah
|
||
urging flakes of flame up the chimney with a colossal bellows; and Mrs.
|
||
Heathcliff, kneeling on the hearth, reading a book by the aid of the
|
||
blaze. She held her hand interposed between the furnace-heat and her
|
||
eyes, and seemed absorbed in her occupation; desisting from it only to
|
||
chide the servant for covering her with sparks, or to push away a dog,
|
||
now and then, that snoozled its nose overforwardly into her face. I was
|
||
surprised to see Heathcliff there also. He stood by the fire, his back
|
||
towards me, just finishing a stormy scene with poor Zillah; who ever
|
||
and anon interrupted her labour to pluck up the corner of her apron,
|
||
and heave an indignant groan.
|
||
|
||
“And you, you worthless—” he broke out as I entered, turning to his
|
||
daughter-in-law, and employing an epithet as harmless as duck, or
|
||
sheep, but generally represented by a dash—. “There you are, at your
|
||
idle tricks again! The rest of them do earn their bread—you live on my
|
||
charity! Put your trash away, and find something to do. You shall pay
|
||
me for the plague of having you eternally in my sight—do you hear,
|
||
damnable jade?”
|
||
|
||
“I’ll put my trash away, because you can make me if I refuse,” answered
|
||
the young lady, closing her book, and throwing it on a chair. “But I’ll
|
||
not do anything, though you should swear your tongue out, except what I
|
||
please!”
|
||
|
||
Heathcliff lifted his hand, and the speaker sprang to a safer distance,
|
||
obviously acquainted with its weight. Having no desire to be
|
||
entertained by a cat-and-dog combat, I stepped forward briskly, as if
|
||
eager to partake the warmth of the hearth, and innocent of any
|
||
knowledge of the interrupted dispute. Each had enough decorum to
|
||
suspend further hostilities: Heathcliff placed his fists, out of
|
||
temptation, in his pockets; Mrs. Heathcliff curled her lip, and walked
|
||
to a seat far off, where she kept her word by playing the part of a
|
||
statue during the remainder of my stay. That was not long. I declined
|
||
joining their breakfast, and, at the first gleam of dawn, took an
|
||
opportunity of escaping into the free air, now clear, and still, and
|
||
cold as impalpable ice.
|
||
|
||
My landlord halloed for me to stop ere I reached the bottom of the
|
||
garden, and offered to accompany me across the moor. It was well he
|
||
did, for the whole hill-back was one billowy, white ocean; the swells
|
||
and falls not indicating corresponding rises and depressions in the
|
||
ground: many pits, at least, were filled to a level; and entire ranges
|
||
of mounds, the refuse of the quarries, blotted from the chart which my
|
||
yesterday’s walk left pictured in my mind. I had remarked on one side
|
||
of the road, at intervals of six or seven yards, a line of upright
|
||
stones, continued through the whole length of the barren: these were
|
||
erected and daubed with lime on purpose to serve as guides in the dark,
|
||
and also when a fall, like the present, confounded the deep swamps on
|
||
either hand with the firmer path: but, excepting a dirty dot pointing
|
||
up here and there, all traces of their existence had vanished: and my
|
||
companion found it necessary to warn me frequently to steer to the
|
||
right or left, when I imagined I was following, correctly, the windings
|
||
of the road.
|
||
|
||
We exchanged little conversation, and he halted at the entrance of
|
||
Thrushcross Park, saying, I could make no error there. Our adieux were
|
||
limited to a hasty bow, and then I pushed forward, trusting to my own
|
||
resources; for the porter’s lodge is untenanted as yet. The distance
|
||
from the gate to the Grange is two miles; I believe I managed to make
|
||
it four, what with losing myself among the trees, and sinking up to the
|
||
neck in snow: a predicament which only those who have experienced it
|
||
can appreciate. At any rate, whatever were my wanderings, the clock
|
||
chimed twelve as I entered the house; and that gave exactly an hour for
|
||
every mile of the usual way from Wuthering Heights.
|
||
|
||
My human fixture and her satellites rushed to welcome me; exclaiming,
|
||
tumultuously, they had completely given me up: everybody conjectured
|
||
that I perished last night; and they were wondering how they must set
|
||
about the search for my remains. I bid them be quiet, now that they saw
|
||
me returned, and, benumbed to my very heart, I dragged upstairs;
|
||
whence, after putting on dry clothes, and pacing to and fro thirty or
|
||
forty minutes, to restore the animal heat, I adjourned to my study,
|
||
feeble as a kitten: almost too much so to enjoy the cheerful fire and
|
||
smoking coffee which the servant had prepared for my refreshment.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER IV
|
||
|
||
|
||
What vain weather-cocks we are! I, who had determined to hold myself
|
||
independent of all social intercourse, and thanked my stars that, at
|
||
length, I had lighted on a spot where it was next to impracticable—I,
|
||
weak wretch, after maintaining till dusk a struggle with low spirits
|
||
and solitude, was finally compelled to strike my colours; and under
|
||
pretence of gaining information concerning the necessities of my
|
||
establishment, I desired Mrs. Dean, when she brought in supper, to sit
|
||
down while I ate it; hoping sincerely she would prove a regular gossip,
|
||
and either rouse me to animation or lull me to sleep by her talk.
|
||
|
||
“You have lived here a considerable time,” I commenced; “did you not
|
||
say sixteen years?”
|
||
|
||
“Eighteen, sir: I came when the mistress was married, to wait on her;
|
||
after she died, the master retained me for his housekeeper.”
|
||
|
||
“Indeed.”
|
||
|
||
There ensued a pause. She was not a gossip, I feared; unless about her
|
||
own affairs, and those could hardly interest me. However, having
|
||
studied for an interval, with a fist on either knee, and a cloud of
|
||
meditation over her ruddy countenance, she ejaculated—“Ah, times are
|
||
greatly changed since then!”
|
||
|
||
“Yes,” I remarked, “you’ve seen a good many alterations, I suppose?”
|
||
|
||
“I have: and troubles too,” she said.
|
||
|
||
“Oh, I’ll turn the talk on my landlord’s family!” I thought to myself.
|
||
“A good subject to start! And that pretty girl-widow, I should like to
|
||
know her history: whether she be a native of the country, or, as is
|
||
more probable, an exotic that the surly _indigenae_ will not recognise
|
||
for kin.” With this intention I asked Mrs. Dean why Heathcliff let
|
||
Thrushcross Grange, and preferred living in a situation and residence
|
||
so much inferior. “Is he not rich enough to keep the estate in good
|
||
order?” I inquired.
|
||
|
||
“Rich, sir!” she returned. “He has nobody knows what money, and every
|
||
year it increases. Yes, yes, he’s rich enough to live in a finer house
|
||
than this: but he’s very near—close-handed; and, if he had meant to
|
||
flit to Thrushcross Grange, as soon as he heard of a good tenant he
|
||
could not have borne to miss the chance of getting a few hundreds more.
|
||
It is strange people should be so greedy, when they are alone in the
|
||
world!”
|
||
|
||
“He had a son, it seems?”
|
||
|
||
“Yes, he had one—he is dead.”
|
||
|
||
“And that young lady, Mrs. Heathcliff, is his widow?”
|
||
|
||
“Yes.”
|
||
|
||
“Where did she come from originally?”
|
||
|
||
“Why, sir, she is my late master’s daughter: Catherine Linton was her
|
||
maiden name. I nursed her, poor thing! I did wish Mr. Heathcliff would
|
||
remove here, and then we might have been together again.”
|
||
|
||
“What! Catherine Linton?” I exclaimed, astonished. But a minute’s
|
||
reflection convinced me it was not my ghostly Catherine. “Then,” I
|
||
continued, “my predecessor’s name was Linton?”
|
||
|
||
“It was.”
|
||
|
||
“And who is that Earnshaw: Hareton Earnshaw, who lives with Mr.
|
||
Heathcliff? Are they relations?”
|
||
|
||
“No; he is the late Mrs. Linton’s nephew.”
|
||
|
||
“The young lady’s cousin, then?”
|
||
|
||
“Yes; and her husband was her cousin also: one on the mother’s, the
|
||
other on the father’s side: Heathcliff married Mr. Linton’s sister.”
|
||
|
||
“I see the house at Wuthering Heights has ‘Earnshaw’ carved over the
|
||
front door. Are they an old family?”
|
||
|
||
“Very old, sir; and Hareton is the last of them, as our Miss Cathy is
|
||
of us—I mean, of the Lintons. Have you been to Wuthering Heights? I beg
|
||
pardon for asking; but I should like to hear how she is!”
|
||
|
||
“Mrs. Heathcliff? she looked very well, and very handsome; yet, I
|
||
think, not very happy.”
|
||
|
||
“Oh dear, I don’t wonder! And how did you like the master?”
|
||
|
||
“A rough fellow, rather, Mrs. Dean. Is not that his character?”
|
||
|
||
“Rough as a saw-edge, and hard as whinstone! The less you meddle with
|
||
him the better.”
|
||
|
||
“He must have had some ups and downs in life to make him such a churl.
|
||
Do you know anything of his history?”
|
||
|
||
“It’s a cuckoo’s, sir—I know all about it: except where he was born,
|
||
and who were his parents, and how he got his money at first. And
|
||
Hareton has been cast out like an unfledged dunnock! The unfortunate
|
||
lad is the only one in all this parish that does not guess how he has
|
||
been cheated.”
|
||
|
||
“Well, Mrs. Dean, it will be a charitable deed to tell me something of
|
||
my neighbours: I feel I shall not rest if I go to bed; so be good
|
||
enough to sit and chat an hour.”
|
||
|
||
“Oh, certainly, sir! I’ll just fetch a little sewing, and then I’ll sit
|
||
as long as you please. But you’ve caught cold: I saw you shivering, and
|
||
you must have some gruel to drive it out.”
|
||
|
||
The worthy woman bustled off, and I crouched nearer the fire; my head
|
||
felt hot, and the rest of me chill: moreover, I was excited, almost to
|
||
a pitch of foolishness, through my nerves and brain. This caused me to
|
||
feel, not uncomfortable, but rather fearful (as I am still) of serious
|
||
effects from the incidents of to-day and yesterday. She returned
|
||
presently, bringing a smoking basin and a basket of work; and, having
|
||
placed the former on the hob, drew in her seat, evidently pleased to
|
||
find me so companionable.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
Before I came to live here, she commenced—waiting no farther invitation
|
||
to her story—I was almost always at Wuthering Heights; because my
|
||
mother had nursed Mr. Hindley Earnshaw, that was Hareton’s father, and
|
||
I got used to playing with the children: I ran errands too, and helped
|
||
to make hay, and hung about the farm ready for anything that anybody
|
||
would set me to. One fine summer morning—it was the beginning of
|
||
harvest, I remember—Mr. Earnshaw, the old master, came downstairs,
|
||
dressed for a journey; and, after he had told Joseph what was to be
|
||
done during the day, he turned to Hindley, and Cathy, and me—for I sat
|
||
eating my porridge with them—and he said, speaking to his son, “Now, my
|
||
bonny man, I’m going to Liverpool to-day, what shall I bring you? You
|
||
may choose what you like: only let it be little, for I shall walk there
|
||
and back: sixty miles each way, that is a long spell!” Hindley named a
|
||
fiddle, and then he asked Miss Cathy; she was hardly six years old, but
|
||
she could ride any horse in the stable, and she chose a whip. He did
|
||
not forget me; for he had a kind heart, though he was rather severe
|
||
sometimes. He promised to bring me a pocketful of apples and pears, and
|
||
then he kissed his children, said good-bye, and set off.
|
||
|
||
It seemed a long while to us all—the three days of his absence—and
|
||
often did little Cathy ask when he would be home. Mrs. Earnshaw
|
||
expected him by supper-time on the third evening, and she put the meal
|
||
off hour after hour; there were no signs of his coming, however, and at
|
||
last the children got tired of running down to the gate to look. Then
|
||
it grew dark; she would have had them to bed, but they begged sadly to
|
||
be allowed to stay up; and, just about eleven o’clock, the door-latch
|
||
was raised quietly, and in stepped the master. He threw himself into a
|
||
chair, laughing and groaning, and bid them all stand off, for he was
|
||
nearly killed—he would not have such another walk for the three
|
||
kingdoms.
|
||
|
||
“And at the end of it to be flighted to death!” he said, opening his
|
||
great-coat, which he held bundled up in his arms. “See here, wife! I
|
||
was never so beaten with anything in my life: but you must e’en take it
|
||
as a gift of God; though it’s as dark almost as if it came from the
|
||
devil.”
|
||
|
||
We crowded round, and over Miss Cathy’s head I had a peep at a dirty,
|
||
ragged, black-haired child; big enough both to walk and talk: indeed,
|
||
its face looked older than Catherine’s; yet when it was set on its
|
||
feet, it only stared round, and repeated over and over again some
|
||
gibberish that nobody could understand. I was frightened, and Mrs.
|
||
Earnshaw was ready to fling it out of doors: she did fly up, asking how
|
||
he could fashion to bring that gipsy brat into the house, when they had
|
||
their own bairns to feed and fend for? What he meant to do with it, and
|
||
whether he were mad? The master tried to explain the matter; but he was
|
||
really half dead with fatigue, and all that I could make out, amongst
|
||
her scolding, was a tale of his seeing it starving, and houseless, and
|
||
as good as dumb, in the streets of Liverpool, where he picked it up and
|
||
inquired for its owner. Not a soul knew to whom it belonged, he said;
|
||
and his money and time being both limited, he thought it better to take
|
||
it home with him at once, than run into vain expenses there: because he
|
||
was determined he would not leave it as he found it. Well, the
|
||
conclusion was, that my mistress grumbled herself calm; and Mr.
|
||
Earnshaw told me to wash it, and give it clean things, and let it sleep
|
||
with the children.
|
||
|
||
Hindley and Cathy contented themselves with looking and listening till
|
||
peace was restored: then, both began searching their father’s pockets
|
||
for the presents he had promised them. The former was a boy of
|
||
fourteen, but when he drew out what had been a fiddle, crushed to
|
||
morsels in the great-coat, he blubbered aloud; and Cathy, when she
|
||
learned the master had lost her whip in attending on the stranger,
|
||
showed her humour by grinning and spitting at the stupid little thing;
|
||
earning for her pains a sound blow from her father, to teach her
|
||
cleaner manners. They entirely refused to have it in bed with them, or
|
||
even in their room; and I had no more sense, so I put it on the landing
|
||
of the stairs, hoping it might be gone on the morrow. By chance, or
|
||
else attracted by hearing his voice, it crept to Mr. Earnshaw’s door,
|
||
and there he found it on quitting his chamber. Inquiries were made as
|
||
to how it got there; I was obliged to confess, and in recompense for my
|
||
cowardice and inhumanity was sent out of the house.
|
||
|
||
This was Heathcliff’s first introduction to the family. On coming back
|
||
a few days afterwards (for I did not consider my banishment perpetual),
|
||
I found they had christened him “Heathcliff”: it was the name of a son
|
||
who died in childhood, and it has served him ever since, both for
|
||
Christian and surname. Miss Cathy and he were now very thick; but
|
||
Hindley hated him: and to say the truth I did the same; and we plagued
|
||
and went on with him shamefully: for I wasn’t reasonable enough to feel
|
||
my injustice, and the mistress never put in a word on his behalf when
|
||
she saw him wronged.
|
||
|
||
He seemed a sullen, patient child; hardened, perhaps, to ill-treatment:
|
||
he would stand Hindley’s blows without winking or shedding a tear, and
|
||
my pinches moved him only to draw in a breath and open his eyes, as if
|
||
he had hurt himself by accident, and nobody was to blame. This
|
||
endurance made old Earnshaw furious, when he discovered his son
|
||
persecuting the poor fatherless child, as he called him. He took to
|
||
Heathcliff strangely, believing all he said (for that matter, he said
|
||
precious little, and generally the truth), and petting him up far above
|
||
Cathy, who was too mischievous and wayward for a favourite.
|
||
|
||
So, from the very beginning, he bred bad feeling in the house; and at
|
||
Mrs. Earnshaw’s death, which happened in less than two years after, the
|
||
young master had learned to regard his father as an oppressor rather
|
||
than a friend, and Heathcliff as a usurper of his parent’s affections
|
||
and his privileges; and he grew bitter with brooding over these
|
||
injuries. I sympathised a while; but when the children fell ill of the
|
||
measles, and I had to tend them, and take on me the cares of a woman at
|
||
once, I changed my idea. Heathcliff was dangerously sick; and while he
|
||
lay at the worst he would have me constantly by his pillow: I suppose
|
||
he felt I did a good deal for him, and he hadn’t wit to guess that I
|
||
was compelled to do it. However, I will say this, he was the quietest
|
||
child that ever nurse watched over. The difference between him and the
|
||
others forced me to be less partial. Cathy and her brother harassed me
|
||
terribly: _he_ was as uncomplaining as a lamb; though hardness, not
|
||
gentleness, made him give little trouble.
|
||
|
||
He got through, and the doctor affirmed it was in a great measure owing
|
||
to me, and praised me for my care. I was vain of his commendations, and
|
||
softened towards the being by whose means I earned them, and thus
|
||
Hindley lost his last ally: still I couldn’t dote on Heathcliff, and I
|
||
wondered often what my master saw to admire so much in the sullen boy;
|
||
who never, to my recollection, repaid his indulgence by any sign of
|
||
gratitude. He was not insolent to his benefactor, he was simply
|
||
insensible; though knowing perfectly the hold he had on his heart, and
|
||
conscious he had only to speak and all the house would be obliged to
|
||
bend to his wishes. As an instance, I remember Mr. Earnshaw once bought
|
||
a couple of colts at the parish fair, and gave the lads each one.
|
||
Heathcliff took the handsomest, but it soon fell lame, and when he
|
||
discovered it, he said to Hindley—
|
||
|
||
“You must exchange horses with me: I don’t like mine; and if you won’t
|
||
I shall tell your father of the three thrashings you’ve given me this
|
||
week, and show him my arm, which is black to the shoulder.” Hindley put
|
||
out his tongue, and cuffed him over the ears. “You’d better do it at
|
||
once,” he persisted, escaping to the porch (they were in the stable):
|
||
“you will have to: and if I speak of these blows, you’ll get them again
|
||
with interest.” “Off, dog!” cried Hindley, threatening him with an iron
|
||
weight used for weighing potatoes and hay. “Throw it,” he replied,
|
||
standing still, “and then I’ll tell how you boasted that you would turn
|
||
me out of doors as soon as he died, and see whether he will not turn
|
||
you out directly.” Hindley threw it, hitting him on the breast, and
|
||
down he fell, but staggered up immediately, breathless and white; and,
|
||
had not I prevented it, he would have gone just so to the master, and
|
||
got full revenge by letting his condition plead for him, intimating who
|
||
had caused it. “Take my colt, Gipsy, then!” said young Earnshaw. “And I
|
||
pray that he may break your neck: take him, and be damned, you beggarly
|
||
interloper! and wheedle my father out of all he has: only afterwards
|
||
show him what you are, imp of Satan.—And take that, I hope he’ll kick
|
||
out your brains!”
|
||
|
||
Heathcliff had gone to loose the beast, and shift it to his own stall;
|
||
he was passing behind it, when Hindley finished his speech by knocking
|
||
him under its feet, and without stopping to examine whether his hopes
|
||
were fulfilled, ran away as fast as he could. I was surprised to
|
||
witness how coolly the child gathered himself up, and went on with his
|
||
intention; exchanging saddles and all, and then sitting down on a
|
||
bundle of hay to overcome the qualm which the violent blow occasioned,
|
||
before he entered the house. I persuaded him easily to let me lay the
|
||
blame of his bruises on the horse: he minded little what tale was told
|
||
since he had what he wanted. He complained so seldom, indeed, of such
|
||
stirs as these, that I really thought him not vindictive: I was
|
||
deceived completely, as you will hear.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER V
|
||
|
||
|
||
In the course of time Mr. Earnshaw began to fail. He had been active
|
||
and healthy, yet his strength left him suddenly; and when he was
|
||
confined to the chimney-corner he grew grievously irritable. A nothing
|
||
vexed him; and suspected slights of his authority nearly threw him into
|
||
fits. This was especially to be remarked if any one attempted to impose
|
||
upon, or domineer over, his favourite: he was painfully jealous lest a
|
||
word should be spoken amiss to him; seeming to have got into his head
|
||
the notion that, because he liked Heathcliff, all hated, and longed to
|
||
do him an ill-turn. It was a disadvantage to the lad; for the kinder
|
||
among us did not wish to fret the master, so we humoured his
|
||
partiality; and that humouring was rich nourishment to the child’s
|
||
pride and black tempers. Still it became in a manner necessary; twice,
|
||
or thrice, Hindley’s manifestation of scorn, while his father was near,
|
||
roused the old man to a fury: he seized his stick to strike him, and
|
||
shook with rage that he could not do it.
|
||
|
||
At last, our curate (we had a curate then who made the living answer by
|
||
teaching the little Lintons and Earnshaws, and farming his bit of land
|
||
himself) advised that the young man should be sent to college; and Mr.
|
||
Earnshaw agreed, though with a heavy spirit, for he said—“Hindley was
|
||
nought, and would never thrive as where he wandered.”
|
||
|
||
I hoped heartily we should have peace now. It hurt me to think the
|
||
master should be made uncomfortable by his own good deed. I fancied the
|
||
discontent of age and disease arose from his family disagreements; as
|
||
he would have it that it did: really, you know, sir, it was in his
|
||
sinking frame. We might have got on tolerably, notwithstanding, but for
|
||
two people—Miss Cathy, and Joseph, the servant: you saw him, I daresay,
|
||
up yonder. He was, and is yet most likely, the wearisomest
|
||
self-righteous Pharisee that ever ransacked a Bible to rake the
|
||
promises to himself and fling the curses to his neighbours. By his
|
||
knack of sermonising and pious discoursing, he contrived to make a
|
||
great impression on Mr. Earnshaw; and the more feeble the master
|
||
became, the more influence he gained. He was relentless in worrying him
|
||
about his soul’s concerns, and about ruling his children rigidly. He
|
||
encouraged him to regard Hindley as a reprobate; and, night after
|
||
night, he regularly grumbled out a long string of tales against
|
||
Heathcliff and Catherine: always minding to flatter Earnshaw’s weakness
|
||
by heaping the heaviest blame on the latter.
|
||
|
||
Certainly she had ways with her such as I never saw a child take up
|
||
before; and she put all of us past our patience fifty times and oftener
|
||
in a day: from the hour she came downstairs till the hour she went to
|
||
bed, we had not a minute’s security that she wouldn’t be in mischief.
|
||
Her spirits were always at high-water mark, her tongue always
|
||
going—singing, laughing, and plaguing everybody who would not do the
|
||
same. A wild, wicked slip she was—but she had the bonniest eye, the
|
||
sweetest smile, and lightest foot in the parish: and, after all, I
|
||
believe she meant no harm; for when once she made you cry in good
|
||
earnest, it seldom happened that she would not keep you company, and
|
||
oblige you to be quiet that you might comfort her. She was much too
|
||
fond of Heathcliff. The greatest punishment we could invent for her was
|
||
to keep her separate from him: yet she got chided more than any of us
|
||
on his account. In play, she liked exceedingly to act the little
|
||
mistress; using her hands freely, and commanding her companions: she
|
||
did so to me, but I would not bear slapping and ordering; and so I let
|
||
her know.
|
||
|
||
Now, Mr. Earnshaw did not understand jokes from his children: he had
|
||
always been strict and grave with them; and Catherine, on her part, had
|
||
no idea why her father should be crosser and less patient in his ailing
|
||
condition than he was in his prime. His peevish reproofs wakened in her
|
||
a naughty delight to provoke him: she was never so happy as when we
|
||
were all scolding her at once, and she defying us with her bold, saucy
|
||
look, and her ready words; turning Joseph’s religious curses into
|
||
ridicule, baiting me, and doing just what her father hated most—showing
|
||
how her pretended insolence, which he thought real, had more power over
|
||
Heathcliff than his kindness: how the boy would do _her_ bidding in
|
||
anything, and _his_ only when it suited his own inclination. After
|
||
behaving as badly as possible all day, she sometimes came fondling to
|
||
make it up at night. “Nay, Cathy,” the old man would say, “I cannot
|
||
love thee, thou’rt worse than thy brother. Go, say thy prayers, child,
|
||
and ask God’s pardon. I doubt thy mother and I must rue that we ever
|
||
reared thee!” That made her cry, at first; and then being repulsed
|
||
continually hardened her, and she laughed if I told her to say she was
|
||
sorry for her faults, and beg to be forgiven.
|
||
|
||
But the hour came, at last, that ended Mr. Earnshaw’s troubles on
|
||
earth. He died quietly in his chair one October evening, seated by the
|
||
fire-side. A high wind blustered round the house, and roared in the
|
||
chimney: it sounded wild and stormy, yet it was not cold, and we were
|
||
all together—I, a little removed from the hearth, busy at my knitting,
|
||
and Joseph reading his Bible near the table (for the servants generally
|
||
sat in the house then, after their work was done). Miss Cathy had been
|
||
sick, and that made her still; she leant against her father’s knee, and
|
||
Heathcliff was lying on the floor with his head in her lap. I remember
|
||
the master, before he fell into a doze, stroking her bonny hair—it
|
||
pleased him rarely to see her gentle—and saying, “Why canst thou not
|
||
always be a good lass, Cathy?” And she turned her face up to his, and
|
||
laughed, and answered, “Why cannot you always be a good man, father?”
|
||
But as soon as she saw him vexed again, she kissed his hand, and said
|
||
she would sing him to sleep. She began singing very low, till his
|
||
fingers dropped from hers, and his head sank on his breast. Then I told
|
||
her to hush, and not stir, for fear she should wake him. We all kept as
|
||
mute as mice a full half-hour, and should have done so longer, only
|
||
Joseph, having finished his chapter, got up and said that he must rouse
|
||
the master for prayers and bed. He stepped forward, and called him by
|
||
name, and touched his shoulder; but he would not move: so he took the
|
||
candle and looked at him. I thought there was something wrong as he set
|
||
down the light; and seizing the children each by an arm, whispered them
|
||
to “frame upstairs, and make little din—they might pray alone that
|
||
evening—he had summut to do.”
|
||
|
||
“I shall bid father good-night first,” said Catherine, putting her arms
|
||
round his neck, before we could hinder her. The poor thing discovered
|
||
her loss directly—she screamed out—“Oh, he’s dead, Heathcliff! he’s
|
||
dead!” And they both set up a heart-breaking cry.
|
||
|
||
I joined my wail to theirs, loud and bitter; but Joseph asked what we
|
||
could be thinking of to roar in that way over a saint in heaven. He
|
||
told me to put on my cloak and run to Gimmerton for the doctor and the
|
||
parson. I could not guess the use that either would be of, then.
|
||
However, I went, through wind and rain, and brought one, the doctor,
|
||
back with me; the other said he would come in the morning. Leaving
|
||
Joseph to explain matters, I ran to the children’s room: their door was
|
||
ajar, I saw they had never lain down, though it was past midnight; but
|
||
they were calmer, and did not need me to console them. The little souls
|
||
were comforting each other with better thoughts than I could have hit
|
||
on: no parson in the world ever pictured heaven so beautifully as they
|
||
did, in their innocent talk; and, while I sobbed and listened, I could
|
||
not help wishing we were all there safe together.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER VI
|
||
|
||
|
||
Mr. Hindley came home to the funeral; and—a thing that amazed us, and
|
||
set the neighbours gossiping right and left—he brought a wife with him.
|
||
What she was, and where she was born, he never informed us: probably,
|
||
she had neither money nor name to recommend her, or he would scarcely
|
||
have kept the union from his father.
|
||
|
||
She was not one that would have disturbed the house much on her own
|
||
account. Every object she saw, the moment she crossed the threshold,
|
||
appeared to delight her; and every circumstance that took place about
|
||
her: except the preparing for the burial, and the presence of the
|
||
mourners. I thought she was half silly, from her behaviour while that
|
||
went on: she ran into her chamber, and made me come with her, though I
|
||
should have been dressing the children: and there she sat shivering and
|
||
clasping her hands, and asking repeatedly—“Are they gone yet?” Then she
|
||
began describing with hysterical emotion the effect it produced on her
|
||
to see black; and started, and trembled, and, at last, fell
|
||
a-weeping—and when I asked what was the matter, answered, she didn’t
|
||
know; but she felt so afraid of dying! I imagined her as little likely
|
||
to die as myself. She was rather thin, but young, and
|
||
fresh-complexioned, and her eyes sparkled as bright as diamonds. I did
|
||
remark, to be sure, that mounting the stairs made her breathe very
|
||
quick; that the least sudden noise set her all in a quiver, and that
|
||
she coughed troublesomely sometimes: but I knew nothing of what these
|
||
symptoms portended, and had no impulse to sympathise with her. We don’t
|
||
in general take to foreigners here, Mr. Lockwood, unless they take to
|
||
us first.
|
||
|
||
Young Earnshaw was altered considerably in the three years of his
|
||
absence. He had grown sparer, and lost his colour, and spoke and
|
||
dressed quite differently; and, on the very day of his return, he told
|
||
Joseph and me we must thenceforth quarter ourselves in the
|
||
back-kitchen, and leave the house for him. Indeed, he would have
|
||
carpeted and papered a small spare room for a parlour; but his wife
|
||
expressed such pleasure at the white floor and huge glowing fireplace,
|
||
at the pewter dishes and delf-case, and dog-kennel, and the wide space
|
||
there was to move about in where they usually sat, that he thought it
|
||
unnecessary to her comfort, and so dropped the intention.
|
||
|
||
She expressed pleasure, too, at finding a sister among her new
|
||
acquaintance; and she prattled to Catherine, and kissed her, and ran
|
||
about with her, and gave her quantities of presents, at the beginning.
|
||
Her affection tired very soon, however, and when she grew peevish,
|
||
Hindley became tyrannical. A few words from her, evincing a dislike to
|
||
Heathcliff, were enough to rouse in him all his old hatred of the boy.
|
||
He drove him from their company to the servants, deprived him of the
|
||
instructions of the curate, and insisted that he should labour out of
|
||
doors instead; compelling him to do so as hard as any other lad on the
|
||
farm.
|
||
|
||
Heathcliff bore his degradation pretty well at first, because Cathy
|
||
taught him what she learnt, and worked or played with him in the
|
||
fields. They both promised fair to grow up as rude as savages; the
|
||
young master being entirely negligent how they behaved, and what they
|
||
did, so they kept clear of him. He would not even have seen after their
|
||
going to church on Sundays, only Joseph and the curate reprimanded his
|
||
carelessness when they absented themselves; and that reminded him to
|
||
order Heathcliff a flogging, and Catherine a fast from dinner or
|
||
supper. But it was one of their chief amusements to run away to the
|
||
moors in the morning and remain there all day, and the after punishment
|
||
grew a mere thing to laugh at. The curate might set as many chapters as
|
||
he pleased for Catherine to get by heart, and Joseph might thrash
|
||
Heathcliff till his arm ached; they forgot everything the minute they
|
||
were together again: at least the minute they had contrived some
|
||
naughty plan of revenge; and many a time I’ve cried to myself to watch
|
||
them growing more reckless daily, and I not daring to speak a syllable,
|
||
for fear of losing the small power I still retained over the unfriended
|
||
creatures. One Sunday evening, it chanced that they were banished from
|
||
the sitting-room, for making a noise, or a light offence of the kind;
|
||
and when I went to call them to supper, I could discover them nowhere.
|
||
We searched the house, above and below, and the yard and stables; they
|
||
were invisible: and, at last, Hindley in a passion told us to bolt the
|
||
doors, and swore nobody should let them in that night. The household
|
||
went to bed; and I, too anxious to lie down, opened my lattice and put
|
||
my head out to hearken, though it rained: determined to admit them in
|
||
spite of the prohibition, should they return. In a while, I
|
||
distinguished steps coming up the road, and the light of a lantern
|
||
glimmered through the gate. I threw a shawl over my head and ran to
|
||
prevent them from waking Mr. Earnshaw by knocking. There was
|
||
Heathcliff, by himself: it gave me a start to see him alone.
|
||
|
||
“Where is Miss Catherine?” I cried hurriedly. “No accident, I hope?”
|
||
“At Thrushcross Grange,” he answered; “and I would have been there too,
|
||
but they had not the manners to ask me to stay.” “Well, you will catch
|
||
it!” I said: “you’ll never be content till you’re sent about your
|
||
business. What in the world led you wandering to Thrushcross Grange?”
|
||
“Let me get off my wet clothes, and I’ll tell you all about it, Nelly,”
|
||
he replied. I bid him beware of rousing the master, and while he
|
||
undressed and I waited to put out the candle, he continued—“Cathy and I
|
||
escaped from the wash-house to have a ramble at liberty, and getting a
|
||
glimpse of the Grange lights, we thought we would just go and see
|
||
whether the Lintons passed their Sunday evenings standing shivering in
|
||
corners, while their father and mother sat eating and drinking, and
|
||
singing and laughing, and burning their eyes out before the fire. Do
|
||
you think they do? Or reading sermons, and being catechised by their
|
||
man-servant, and set to learn a column of Scripture names, if they
|
||
don’t answer properly?” “Probably not,” I responded. “They are good
|
||
children, no doubt, and don’t deserve the treatment you receive, for
|
||
your bad conduct.” “Don’t cant, Nelly,” he said: “nonsense! We ran from
|
||
the top of the Heights to the park, without stopping—Catherine
|
||
completely beaten in the race, because she was barefoot. You’ll have to
|
||
seek for her shoes in the bog to-morrow. We crept through a broken
|
||
hedge, groped our way up the path, and planted ourselves on a
|
||
flower-plot under the drawing-room window. The light came from thence;
|
||
they had not put up the shutters, and the curtains were only half
|
||
closed. Both of us were able to look in by standing on the basement,
|
||
and clinging to the ledge, and we saw—ah! it was beautiful—a splendid
|
||
place carpeted with crimson, and crimson-covered chairs and tables, and
|
||
a pure white ceiling bordered by gold, a shower of glass-drops hanging
|
||
in silver chains from the centre, and shimmering with little soft
|
||
tapers. Old Mr. and Mrs. Linton were not there; Edgar and his sister
|
||
had it entirely to themselves. Shouldn’t they have been happy? We
|
||
should have thought ourselves in heaven! And now, guess what your good
|
||
children were doing? Isabella—I believe she is eleven, a year younger
|
||
than Cathy—lay screaming at the farther end of the room, shrieking as
|
||
if witches were running red-hot needles into her. Edgar stood on the
|
||
hearth weeping silently, and in the middle of the table sat a little
|
||
dog, shaking its paw and yelping; which, from their mutual accusations,
|
||
we understood they had nearly pulled in two between them. The idiots!
|
||
That was their pleasure! to quarrel who should hold a heap of warm
|
||
hair, and each begin to cry because both, after struggling to get it,
|
||
refused to take it. We laughed outright at the petted things; we did
|
||
despise them! When would you catch me wishing to have what Catherine
|
||
wanted? or find us by ourselves, seeking entertainment in yelling, and
|
||
sobbing, and rolling on the ground, divided by the whole room? I’d not
|
||
exchange, for a thousand lives, my condition here, for Edgar Linton’s
|
||
at Thrushcross Grange—not if I might have the privilege of flinging
|
||
Joseph off the highest gable, and painting the house-front with
|
||
Hindley’s blood!”
|
||
|
||
“Hush, hush!” I interrupted. “Still you have not told me, Heathcliff,
|
||
how Catherine is left behind?”
|
||
|
||
“I told you we laughed,” he answered. “The Lintons heard us, and with
|
||
one accord they shot like arrows to the door; there was silence, and
|
||
then a cry, ‘Oh, mamma, mamma! Oh, papa! Oh, mamma, come here. Oh,
|
||
papa, oh!’ They really did howl out something in that way. We made
|
||
frightful noises to terrify them still more, and then we dropped off
|
||
the ledge, because somebody was drawing the bars, and we felt we had
|
||
better flee. I had Cathy by the hand, and was urging her on, when all
|
||
at once she fell down. ‘Run, Heathcliff, run!’ she whispered. ‘They
|
||
have let the bull-dog loose, and he holds me!’ The devil had seized her
|
||
ankle, Nelly: I heard his abominable snorting. She did not yell out—no!
|
||
she would have scorned to do it, if she had been spitted on the horns
|
||
of a mad cow. I did, though: I vociferated curses enough to annihilate
|
||
any fiend in Christendom; and I got a stone and thrust it between his
|
||
jaws, and tried with all my might to cram it down his throat. A beast
|
||
of a servant came up with a lantern, at last, shouting—‘Keep fast,
|
||
Skulker, keep fast!’ He changed his note, however, when he saw
|
||
Skulker’s game. The dog was throttled off; his huge, purple tongue
|
||
hanging half a foot out of his mouth, and his pendent lips streaming
|
||
with bloody slaver. The man took Cathy up; she was sick: not from fear,
|
||
I’m certain, but from pain. He carried her in; I followed, grumbling
|
||
execrations and vengeance. ‘What prey, Robert?’ hallooed Linton from
|
||
the entrance. ‘Skulker has caught a little girl, sir,’ he replied; ‘and
|
||
there’s a lad here,’ he added, making a clutch at me, ‘who looks an
|
||
out-and-outer! Very like the robbers were for putting them through the
|
||
window to open the doors to the gang after all were asleep, that they
|
||
might murder us at their ease. Hold your tongue, you foul-mouthed
|
||
thief, you! you shall go to the gallows for this. Mr. Linton, sir,
|
||
don’t lay by your gun.’ ‘No, no, Robert,’ said the old fool. ‘The
|
||
rascals knew that yesterday was my rent-day: they thought to have me
|
||
cleverly. Come in; I’ll furnish them a reception. There, John, fasten
|
||
the chain. Give Skulker some water, Jenny. To beard a magistrate in his
|
||
stronghold, and on the Sabbath, too! Where will their insolence stop?
|
||
Oh, my dear Mary, look here! Don’t be afraid, it is but a boy—yet the
|
||
villain scowls so plainly in his face; would it not be a kindness to
|
||
the country to hang him at once, before he shows his nature in acts as
|
||
well as features?’ He pulled me under the chandelier, and Mrs. Linton
|
||
placed her spectacles on her nose and raised her hands in horror. The
|
||
cowardly children crept nearer also, Isabella lisping—‘Frightful thing!
|
||
Put him in the cellar, papa. He’s exactly like the son of the
|
||
fortune-teller that stole my tame pheasant. Isn’t he, Edgar?’
|
||
|
||
“While they examined me, Cathy came round; she heard the last speech,
|
||
and laughed. Edgar Linton, after an inquisitive stare, collected
|
||
sufficient wit to recognise her. They see us at church, you know,
|
||
though we seldom meet them elsewhere. ‘That’s Miss Earnshaw!’ he
|
||
whispered to his mother, ‘and look how Skulker has bitten her—how her
|
||
foot bleeds!’
|
||
|
||
“‘Miss Earnshaw? Nonsense!’ cried the dame; ‘Miss Earnshaw scouring the
|
||
country with a gipsy! And yet, my dear, the child is in mourning—surely
|
||
it is—and she may be lamed for life!’
|
||
|
||
“‘What culpable carelessness in her brother!’ exclaimed Mr. Linton,
|
||
turning from me to Catherine. ‘I’ve understood from Shielders’” (that
|
||
was the curate, sir) “‘that he lets her grow up in absolute heathenism.
|
||
But who is this? Where did she pick up this companion? Oho! I declare
|
||
he is that strange acquisition my late neighbour made, in his journey
|
||
to Liverpool—a little Lascar, or an American or Spanish castaway.’
|
||
|
||
“‘A wicked boy, at all events,’ remarked the old lady, ‘and quite unfit
|
||
for a decent house! Did you notice his language, Linton? I’m shocked
|
||
that my children should have heard it.’
|
||
|
||
“I recommenced cursing—don’t be angry, Nelly—and so Robert was ordered
|
||
to take me off. I refused to go without Cathy; he dragged me into the
|
||
garden, pushed the lantern into my hand, assured me that Mr. Earnshaw
|
||
should be informed of my behaviour, and, bidding me march directly,
|
||
secured the door again. The curtains were still looped up at one
|
||
corner, and I resumed my station as spy; because, if Catherine had
|
||
wished to return, I intended shattering their great glass panes to a
|
||
million of fragments, unless they let her out. She sat on the sofa
|
||
quietly. Mrs. Linton took off the grey cloak of the dairy-maid which we
|
||
had borrowed for our excursion, shaking her head and expostulating with
|
||
her, I suppose: she was a young lady, and they made a distinction
|
||
between her treatment and mine. Then the woman-servant brought a basin
|
||
of warm water, and washed her feet; and Mr. Linton mixed a tumbler of
|
||
negus, and Isabella emptied a plateful of cakes into her lap, and Edgar
|
||
stood gaping at a distance. Afterwards, they dried and combed her
|
||
beautiful hair, and gave her a pair of enormous slippers, and wheeled
|
||
her to the fire; and I left her, as merry as she could be, dividing her
|
||
food between the little dog and Skulker, whose nose she pinched as he
|
||
ate; and kindling a spark of spirit in the vacant blue eyes of the
|
||
Lintons—a dim reflection from her own enchanting face. I saw they were
|
||
full of stupid admiration; she is so immeasurably superior to them—to
|
||
everybody on earth, is she not, Nelly?”
|
||
|
||
“There will more come of this business than you reckon on,” I answered,
|
||
covering him up and extinguishing the light. “You are incurable,
|
||
Heathcliff; and Mr. Hindley will have to proceed to extremities, see if
|
||
he won’t.” My words came truer than I desired. The luckless adventure
|
||
made Earnshaw furious. And then Mr. Linton, to mend matters, paid us a
|
||
visit himself on the morrow, and read the young master such a lecture
|
||
on the road he guided his family, that he was stirred to look about
|
||
him, in earnest. Heathcliff received no flogging, but he was told that
|
||
the first word he spoke to Miss Catherine should ensure a dismissal;
|
||
and Mrs. Earnshaw undertook to keep her sister-in-law in due restraint
|
||
when she returned home; employing art, not force: with force she would
|
||
have found it impossible.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER VII
|
||
|
||
|
||
Cathy stayed at Thrushcross Grange five weeks: till Christmas. By that
|
||
time her ankle was thoroughly cured, and her manners much improved. The
|
||
mistress visited her often in the interval, and commenced her plan of
|
||
reform by trying to raise her self-respect with fine clothes and
|
||
flattery, which she took readily; so that, instead of a wild, hatless
|
||
little savage jumping into the house, and rushing to squeeze us all
|
||
breathless, there lighted from a handsome black pony a very dignified
|
||
person, with brown ringlets falling from the cover of a feathered
|
||
beaver, and a long cloth habit, which she was obliged to hold up with
|
||
both hands that she might sail in. Hindley lifted her from her horse,
|
||
exclaiming delightedly, “Why, Cathy, you are quite a beauty! I should
|
||
scarcely have known you: you look like a lady now. Isabella Linton is
|
||
not to be compared with her, is she, Frances?” “Isabella has not her
|
||
natural advantages,” replied his wife: “but she must mind and not grow
|
||
wild again here. Ellen, help Miss Catherine off with her things—Stay,
|
||
dear, you will disarrange your curls—let me untie your hat.”
|
||
|
||
I removed the habit, and there shone forth beneath a grand plaid silk
|
||
frock, white trousers, and burnished shoes; and, while her eyes
|
||
sparkled joyfully when the dogs came bounding up to welcome her, she
|
||
dared hardly touch them lest they should fawn upon her splendid
|
||
garments. She kissed me gently: I was all flour making the Christmas
|
||
cake, and it would not have done to give me a hug; and then she looked
|
||
round for Heathcliff. Mr. and Mrs. Earnshaw watched anxiously their
|
||
meeting; thinking it would enable them to judge, in some measure, what
|
||
grounds they had for hoping to succeed in separating the two friends.
|
||
|
||
Heathcliff was hard to discover, at first. If he were careless, and
|
||
uncared for, before Catherine’s absence, he had been ten times more so
|
||
since. Nobody but I even did him the kindness to call him a dirty boy,
|
||
and bid him wash himself, once a week; and children of his age seldom
|
||
have a natural pleasure in soap and water. Therefore, not to mention
|
||
his clothes, which had seen three months’ service in mire and dust, and
|
||
his thick uncombed hair, the surface of his face and hands was dismally
|
||
beclouded. He might well skulk behind the settle, on beholding such a
|
||
bright, graceful damsel enter the house, instead of a rough-headed
|
||
counterpart of himself, as he expected. “Is Heathcliff not here?” she
|
||
demanded, pulling off her gloves, and displaying fingers wonderfully
|
||
whitened with doing nothing and staying indoors.
|
||
|
||
“Heathcliff, you may come forward,” cried Mr. Hindley, enjoying his
|
||
discomfiture, and gratified to see what a forbidding young blackguard
|
||
he would be compelled to present himself. “You may come and wish Miss
|
||
Catherine welcome, like the other servants.”
|
||
|
||
Cathy, catching a glimpse of her friend in his concealment, flew to
|
||
embrace him; she bestowed seven or eight kisses on his cheek within the
|
||
second, and then stopped, and drawing back, burst into a laugh,
|
||
exclaiming, “Why, how very black and cross you look! and how—how funny
|
||
and grim! But that’s because I’m used to Edgar and Isabella Linton.
|
||
Well, Heathcliff, have you forgotten me?”
|
||
|
||
She had some reason to put the question, for shame and pride threw
|
||
double gloom over his countenance, and kept him immovable.
|
||
|
||
“Shake hands, Heathcliff,” said Mr. Earnshaw, condescendingly; “once in
|
||
a way, that is permitted.”
|
||
|
||
“I shall not,” replied the boy, finding his tongue at last; “I shall
|
||
not stand to be laughed at. I shall not bear it!”
|
||
|
||
And he would have broken from the circle, but Miss Cathy seized him
|
||
again.
|
||
|
||
“I did not mean to laugh at you,” she said; “I could not hinder myself:
|
||
Heathcliff, shake hands at least! What are you sulky for? It was only
|
||
that you looked odd. If you wash your face and brush your hair, it will
|
||
be all right: but you are so dirty!”
|
||
|
||
She gazed concernedly at the dusky fingers she held in her own, and
|
||
also at her dress; which she feared had gained no embellishment from
|
||
its contact with his.
|
||
|
||
“You needn’t have touched me!” he answered, following her eye and
|
||
snatching away his hand. “I shall be as dirty as I please: and I like
|
||
to be dirty, and I will be dirty.”
|
||
|
||
With that he dashed headforemost out of the room, amid the merriment of
|
||
the master and mistress, and to the serious disturbance of Catherine;
|
||
who could not comprehend how her remarks should have produced such an
|
||
exhibition of bad temper.
|
||
|
||
After playing lady’s-maid to the new-comer, and putting my cakes in the
|
||
oven, and making the house and kitchen cheerful with great fires,
|
||
befitting Christmas-eve, I prepared to sit down and amuse myself by
|
||
singing carols, all alone; regardless of Joseph’s affirmations that he
|
||
considered the merry tunes I chose as next door to songs. He had
|
||
retired to private prayer in his chamber, and Mr. and Mrs. Earnshaw
|
||
were engaging Missy’s attention by sundry gay trifles bought for her to
|
||
present to the little Lintons, as an acknowledgment of their kindness.
|
||
They had invited them to spend the morrow at Wuthering Heights, and the
|
||
invitation had been accepted, on one condition: Mrs. Linton begged that
|
||
her darlings might be kept carefully apart from that “naughty swearing
|
||
boy.”
|
||
|
||
Under these circumstances I remained solitary. I smelt the rich scent
|
||
of the heating spices; and admired the shining kitchen utensils, the
|
||
polished clock, decked in holly, the silver mugs ranged on a tray ready
|
||
to be filled with mulled ale for supper; and above all, the speckless
|
||
purity of my particular care—the scoured and well-swept floor. I gave
|
||
due inward applause to every object, and then I remembered how old
|
||
Earnshaw used to come in when all was tidied, and call me a cant lass,
|
||
and slip a shilling into my hand as a Christmas-box; and from that I
|
||
went on to think of his fondness for Heathcliff, and his dread lest he
|
||
should suffer neglect after death had removed him: and that naturally
|
||
led me to consider the poor lad’s situation now, and from singing I
|
||
changed my mind to crying. It struck me soon, however, there would be
|
||
more sense in endeavouring to repair some of his wrongs than shedding
|
||
tears over them: I got up and walked into the court to seek him. He was
|
||
not far; I found him smoothing the glossy coat of the new pony in the
|
||
stable, and feeding the other beasts, according to custom.
|
||
|
||
“Make haste, Heathcliff!” I said, “the kitchen is so comfortable; and
|
||
Joseph is upstairs: make haste, and let me dress you smart before Miss
|
||
Cathy comes out, and then you can sit together, with the whole hearth
|
||
to yourselves, and have a long chatter till bedtime.”
|
||
|
||
He proceeded with his task, and never turned his head towards me.
|
||
|
||
“Come—are you coming?” I continued. “There’s a little cake for each of
|
||
you, nearly enough; and you’ll need half-an-hour’s donning.”
|
||
|
||
I waited five minutes, but getting no answer left him. Catherine supped
|
||
with her brother and sister-in-law: Joseph and I joined at an
|
||
unsociable meal, seasoned with reproofs on one side and sauciness on
|
||
the other. His cake and cheese remained on the table all night for the
|
||
fairies. He managed to continue work till nine o’clock, and then
|
||
marched dumb and dour to his chamber. Cathy sat up late, having a world
|
||
of things to order for the reception of her new friends: she came into
|
||
the kitchen once to speak to her old one; but he was gone, and she only
|
||
stayed to ask what was the matter with him, and then went back. In the
|
||
morning he rose early; and, as it was a holiday, carried his ill-humour
|
||
on to the moors; not re-appearing till the family were departed for
|
||
church. Fasting and reflection seemed to have brought him to a better
|
||
spirit. He hung about me for a while, and having screwed up his
|
||
courage, exclaimed abruptly—“Nelly, make me decent, I’m going to be
|
||
good.”
|
||
|
||
“High time, Heathcliff,” I said; “you _have_ grieved Catherine: she’s
|
||
sorry she ever came home, I daresay! It looks as if you envied her,
|
||
because she is more thought of than you.”
|
||
|
||
The notion of _envying_ Catherine was incomprehensible to him, but the
|
||
notion of grieving her he understood clearly enough.
|
||
|
||
“Did she say she was grieved?” he inquired, looking very serious.
|
||
|
||
“She cried when I told her you were off again this morning.”
|
||
|
||
“Well, _I_ cried last night,” he returned, “and I had more reason to
|
||
cry than she.”
|
||
|
||
“Yes: you had the reason of going to bed with a proud heart and an
|
||
empty stomach,” said I. “Proud people breed sad sorrows for themselves.
|
||
But, if you be ashamed of your touchiness, you must ask pardon, mind,
|
||
when she comes in. You must go up and offer to kiss her, and say—you
|
||
know best what to say; only do it heartily, and not as if you thought
|
||
her converted into a stranger by her grand dress. And now, though I
|
||
have dinner to get ready, I’ll steal time to arrange you so that Edgar
|
||
Linton shall look quite a doll beside you: and that he does. You are
|
||
younger, and yet, I’ll be bound, you are taller and twice as broad
|
||
across the shoulders; you could knock him down in a twinkling; don’t
|
||
you feel that you could?”
|
||
|
||
Heathcliff’s face brightened a moment; then it was overcast afresh, and
|
||
he sighed.
|
||
|
||
“But, Nelly, if I knocked him down twenty times, that wouldn’t make him
|
||
less handsome or me more so. I wish I had light hair and a fair skin,
|
||
and was dressed and behaved as well, and had a chance of being as rich
|
||
as he will be!”
|
||
|
||
“And cried for mamma at every turn,” I added, “and trembled if a
|
||
country lad heaved his fist against you, and sat at home all day for a
|
||
shower of rain. Oh, Heathcliff, you are showing a poor spirit! Come to
|
||
the glass, and I’ll let you see what you should wish. Do you mark those
|
||
two lines between your eyes; and those thick brows, that, instead of
|
||
rising arched, sink in the middle; and that couple of black fiends, so
|
||
deeply buried, who never open their windows boldly, but lurk glinting
|
||
under them, like devil’s spies? Wish and learn to smooth away the surly
|
||
wrinkles, to raise your lids frankly, and change the fiends to
|
||
confident, innocent angels, suspecting and doubting nothing, and always
|
||
seeing friends where they are not sure of foes. Don’t get the
|
||
expression of a vicious cur that appears to know the kicks it gets are
|
||
its desert, and yet hates all the world, as well as the kicker, for
|
||
what it suffers.”
|
||
|
||
“In other words, I must wish for Edgar Linton’s great blue eyes and
|
||
even forehead,” he replied. “I do—and that won’t help me to them.”
|
||
|
||
“A good heart will help you to a bonny face, my lad,” I continued, “if
|
||
you were a regular black; and a bad one will turn the bonniest into
|
||
something worse than ugly. And now that we’ve done washing, and
|
||
combing, and sulking—tell me whether you don’t think yourself rather
|
||
handsome? I’ll tell you, I do. You’re fit for a prince in disguise. Who
|
||
knows but your father was Emperor of China, and your mother an Indian
|
||
queen, each of them able to buy up, with one week’s income, Wuthering
|
||
Heights and Thrushcross Grange together? And you were kidnapped by
|
||
wicked sailors and brought to England. Were I in your place, I would
|
||
frame high notions of my birth; and the thoughts of what I was should
|
||
give me courage and dignity to support the oppressions of a little
|
||
farmer!”
|
||
|
||
So I chattered on; and Heathcliff gradually lost his frown and began to
|
||
look quite pleasant, when all at once our conversation was interrupted
|
||
by a rumbling sound moving up the road and entering the court. He ran
|
||
to the window and I to the door, just in time to behold the two Lintons
|
||
descend from the family carriage, smothered in cloaks and furs, and the
|
||
Earnshaws dismount from their horses: they often rode to church in
|
||
winter. Catherine took a hand of each of the children, and brought them
|
||
into the house and set them before the fire, which quickly put colour
|
||
into their white faces.
|
||
|
||
I urged my companion to hasten now and show his amiable humour, and he
|
||
willingly obeyed; but ill luck would have it that, as he opened the
|
||
door leading from the kitchen on one side, Hindley opened it on the
|
||
other. They met, and the master, irritated at seeing him clean and
|
||
cheerful, or, perhaps, eager to keep his promise to Mrs. Linton, shoved
|
||
him back with a sudden thrust, and angrily bade Joseph “keep the fellow
|
||
out of the room—send him into the garret till dinner is over. He’ll be
|
||
cramming his fingers in the tarts and stealing the fruit, if left alone
|
||
with them a minute.”
|
||
|
||
“Nay, sir,” I could not avoid answering, “he’ll touch nothing, not he:
|
||
and I suppose he must have his share of the dainties as well as we.”
|
||
|
||
“He shall have his share of my hand, if I catch him downstairs till
|
||
dark,” cried Hindley. “Begone, you vagabond! What! you are attempting
|
||
the coxcomb, are you? Wait till I get hold of those elegant locks—see
|
||
if I won’t pull them a bit longer!”
|
||
|
||
“They are long enough already,” observed Master Linton, peeping from
|
||
the doorway; “I wonder they don’t make his head ache. It’s like a
|
||
colt’s mane over his eyes!”
|
||
|
||
He ventured this remark without any intention to insult; but
|
||
Heathcliff’s violent nature was not prepared to endure the appearance
|
||
of impertinence from one whom he seemed to hate, even then, as a rival.
|
||
He seized a tureen of hot apple sauce, the first thing that came under
|
||
his gripe, and dashed it full against the speaker’s face and neck; who
|
||
instantly commenced a lament that brought Isabella and Catherine
|
||
hurrying to the place. Mr. Earnshaw snatched up the culprit directly
|
||
and conveyed him to his chamber; where, doubtless, he administered a
|
||
rough remedy to cool the fit of passion, for he appeared red and
|
||
breathless. I got the dish-cloth, and rather spitefully scrubbed
|
||
Edgar’s nose and mouth, affirming it served him right for meddling. His
|
||
sister began weeping to go home, and Cathy stood by confounded,
|
||
blushing for all.
|
||
|
||
“You should not have spoken to him!” she expostulated with Master
|
||
Linton. “He was in a bad temper, and now you’ve spoilt your visit; and
|
||
he’ll be flogged: I hate him to be flogged! I can’t eat my dinner. Why
|
||
did you speak to him, Edgar?”
|
||
|
||
“I didn’t,” sobbed the youth, escaping from my hands, and finishing the
|
||
remainder of the purification with his cambric pocket-handkerchief. “I
|
||
promised mamma that I wouldn’t say one word to him, and I didn’t.”
|
||
|
||
“Well, don’t cry,” replied Catherine, contemptuously; “you’re not
|
||
killed. Don’t make more mischief; my brother is coming: be quiet! Hush,
|
||
Isabella! Has anybody hurt _you?_”
|
||
|
||
“There, there, children—to your seats!” cried Hindley, bustling in.
|
||
“That brute of a lad has warmed me nicely. Next time, Master Edgar,
|
||
take the law into your own fists—it will give you an appetite!”
|
||
|
||
The little party recovered its equanimity at sight of the fragrant
|
||
feast. They were hungry after their ride, and easily consoled, since no
|
||
real harm had befallen them. Mr. Earnshaw carved bountiful platefuls,
|
||
and the mistress made them merry with lively talk. I waited behind her
|
||
chair, and was pained to behold Catherine, with dry eyes and an
|
||
indifferent air, commence cutting up the wing of a goose before her.
|
||
“An unfeeling child,” I thought to myself; “how lightly she dismisses
|
||
her old playmate’s troubles. I could not have imagined her to be so
|
||
selfish.” She lifted a mouthful to her lips: then she set it down
|
||
again: her cheeks flushed, and the tears gushed over them. She slipped
|
||
her fork to the floor, and hastily dived under the cloth to conceal her
|
||
emotion. I did not call her unfeeling long; for I perceived she was in
|
||
purgatory throughout the day, and wearying to find an opportunity of
|
||
getting by herself, or paying a visit to Heathcliff, who had been
|
||
locked up by the master: as I discovered, on endeavouring to introduce
|
||
to him a private mess of victuals.
|
||
|
||
In the evening we had a dance. Cathy begged that he might be liberated
|
||
then, as Isabella Linton had no partner: her entreaties were vain, and
|
||
I was appointed to supply the deficiency. We got rid of all gloom in
|
||
the excitement of the exercise, and our pleasure was increased by the
|
||
arrival of the Gimmerton band, mustering fifteen strong: a trumpet, a
|
||
trombone, clarionets, bassoons, French horns, and a bass viol, besides
|
||
singers. They go the rounds of all the respectable houses, and receive
|
||
contributions every Christmas, and we esteemed it a first-rate treat to
|
||
hear them. After the usual carols had been sung, we set them to songs
|
||
and glees. Mrs. Earnshaw loved the music, and so they gave us plenty.
|
||
|
||
Catherine loved it too: but she said it sounded sweetest at the top of
|
||
the steps, and she went up in the dark: I followed. They shut the house
|
||
door below, never noting our absence, it was so full of people. She
|
||
made no stay at the stairs’-head, but mounted farther, to the garret
|
||
where Heathcliff was confined, and called him. He stubbornly declined
|
||
answering for a while: she persevered, and finally persuaded him to
|
||
hold communion with her through the boards. I let the poor things
|
||
converse unmolested, till I supposed the songs were going to cease, and
|
||
the singers to get some refreshment: then I clambered up the ladder to
|
||
warn her. Instead of finding her outside, I heard her voice within. The
|
||
little monkey had crept by the skylight of one garret, along the roof,
|
||
into the skylight of the other, and it was with the utmost difficulty I
|
||
could coax her out again. When she did come, Heathcliff came with her,
|
||
and she insisted that I should take him into the kitchen, as my
|
||
fellow-servant had gone to a neighbour’s, to be removed from the sound
|
||
of our “devil’s psalmody,” as it pleased him to call it. I told them I
|
||
intended by no means to encourage their tricks: but as the prisoner had
|
||
never broken his fast since yesterday’s dinner, I would wink at his
|
||
cheating Mr. Hindley that once. He went down: I set him a stool by the
|
||
fire, and offered him a quantity of good things: but he was sick and
|
||
could eat little, and my attempts to entertain him were thrown away. He
|
||
leant his two elbows on his knees, and his chin on his hands, and
|
||
remained rapt in dumb meditation. On my inquiring the subject of his
|
||
thoughts, he answered gravely—“I’m trying to settle how I shall pay
|
||
Hindley back. I don’t care how long I wait, if I can only do it at
|
||
last. I hope he will not die before I do!”
|
||
|
||
“For shame, Heathcliff!” said I. “It is for God to punish wicked
|
||
people; we should learn to forgive.”
|
||
|
||
“No, God won’t have the satisfaction that I shall,” he returned. “I
|
||
only wish I knew the best way! Let me alone, and I’ll plan it out:
|
||
while I’m thinking of that I don’t feel pain.”
|
||
|
||
But, Mr. Lockwood, I forget these tales cannot divert you. I’m annoyed
|
||
how I should dream of chattering on at such a rate; and your gruel
|
||
cold, and you nodding for bed! I could have told Heathcliff’s history,
|
||
all that you need hear, in half a dozen words.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
Thus interrupting herself, the housekeeper rose, and proceeded to lay
|
||
aside her sewing; but I felt incapable of moving from the hearth, and I
|
||
was very far from nodding. “Sit still, Mrs. Dean,” I cried; “do sit
|
||
still another half-hour. You’ve done just right to tell the story
|
||
leisurely. That is the method I like; and you must finish it in the
|
||
same style. I am interested in every character you have mentioned, more
|
||
or less.”
|
||
|
||
“The clock is on the stroke of eleven, sir.”
|
||
|
||
“No matter—I’m not accustomed to go to bed in the long hours. One or
|
||
two is early enough for a person who lies till ten.”
|
||
|
||
“You shouldn’t lie till ten. There’s the very prime of the morning gone
|
||
long before that time. A person who has not done one-half his day’s
|
||
work by ten o’clock, runs a chance of leaving the other half undone.”
|
||
|
||
“Nevertheless, Mrs. Dean, resume your chair; because to-morrow I intend
|
||
lengthening the night till afternoon. I prognosticate for myself an
|
||
obstinate cold, at least.”
|
||
|
||
“I hope not, sir. Well, you must allow me to leap over some three
|
||
years; during that space Mrs. Earnshaw—”
|
||
|
||
“No, no, I’ll allow nothing of the sort! Are you acquainted with the
|
||
mood of mind in which, if you were seated alone, and the cat licking
|
||
its kitten on the rug before you, you would watch the operation so
|
||
intently that puss’s neglect of one ear would put you seriously out of
|
||
temper?”
|
||
|
||
“A terribly lazy mood, I should say.”
|
||
|
||
“On the contrary, a tiresomely active one. It is mine, at present; and,
|
||
therefore, continue minutely. I perceive that people in these regions
|
||
acquire over people in towns the value that a spider in a dungeon does
|
||
over a spider in a cottage, to their various occupants; and yet the
|
||
deepened attraction is not entirely owing to the situation of the
|
||
looker-on. They _do_ live more in earnest, more in themselves, and less
|
||
in surface, change, and frivolous external things. I could fancy a love
|
||
for life here almost possible; and I was a fixed unbeliever in any love
|
||
of a year’s standing. One state resembles setting a hungry man down to
|
||
a single dish, on which he may concentrate his entire appetite and do
|
||
it justice; the other, introducing him to a table laid out by French
|
||
cooks: he can perhaps extract as much enjoyment from the whole; but
|
||
each part is a mere atom in his regard and remembrance.”
|
||
|
||
“Oh! here we are the same as anywhere else, when you get to know us,”
|
||
observed Mrs. Dean, somewhat puzzled at my speech.
|
||
|
||
“Excuse me,” I responded; “you, my good friend, are a striking evidence
|
||
against that assertion. Excepting a few provincialisms of slight
|
||
consequence, you have no marks of the manners which I am habituated to
|
||
consider as peculiar to your class. I am sure you have thought a great
|
||
deal more than the generality of servants think. You have been
|
||
compelled to cultivate your reflective faculties for want of occasions
|
||
for frittering your life away in silly trifles.”
|
||
|
||
Mrs. Dean laughed.
|
||
|
||
“I certainly esteem myself a steady, reasonable kind of body,” she
|
||
said; “not exactly from living among the hills and seeing one set of
|
||
faces, and one series of actions, from year’s end to year’s end; but I
|
||
have undergone sharp discipline, which has taught me wisdom; and then,
|
||
I have read more than you would fancy, Mr. Lockwood. You could not open
|
||
a book in this library that I have not looked into, and got something
|
||
out of also: unless it be that range of Greek and Latin, and that of
|
||
French; and those I know one from another: it is as much as you can
|
||
expect of a poor man’s daughter. However, if I am to follow my story in
|
||
true gossip’s fashion, I had better go on; and instead of leaping three
|
||
years, I will be content to pass to the next summer—the summer of 1778,
|
||
that is nearly twenty-three years ago.”
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER VIII
|
||
|
||
|
||
On the morning of a fine June day my first bonny little nursling, and
|
||
the last of the ancient Earnshaw stock, was born. We were busy with the
|
||
hay in a far-away field, when the girl that usually brought our
|
||
breakfasts came running an hour too soon across the meadow and up the
|
||
lane, calling me as she ran.
|
||
|
||
“Oh, such a grand bairn!” she panted out. “The finest lad that ever
|
||
breathed! But the doctor says missis must go: he says she’s been in a
|
||
consumption these many months. I heard him tell Mr. Hindley: and now
|
||
she has nothing to keep her, and she’ll be dead before winter. You must
|
||
come home directly. You’re to nurse it, Nelly: to feed it with sugar
|
||
and milk, and take care of it day and night. I wish I were you, because
|
||
it will be all yours when there is no missis!”
|
||
|
||
“But is she very ill?” I asked, flinging down my rake and tying my
|
||
bonnet.
|
||
|
||
“I guess she is; yet she looks bravely,” replied the girl, “and she
|
||
talks as if she thought of living to see it grow a man. She’s out of
|
||
her head for joy, it’s such a beauty! If I were her I’m certain I
|
||
should not die: I should get better at the bare sight of it, in spite
|
||
of Kenneth. I was fairly mad at him. Dame Archer brought the cherub
|
||
down to master, in the house, and his face just began to light up, when
|
||
the old croaker steps forward, and says he—‘Earnshaw, it’s a blessing
|
||
your wife has been spared to leave you this son. When she came, I felt
|
||
convinced we shouldn’t keep her long; and now, I must tell you, the
|
||
winter will probably finish her. Don’t take on, and fret about it too
|
||
much: it can’t be helped. And besides, you should have known better
|
||
than to choose such a rush of a lass!’”
|
||
|
||
“And what did the master answer?” I inquired.
|
||
|
||
“I think he swore: but I didn’t mind him, I was straining to see the
|
||
bairn,” and she began again to describe it rapturously. I, as zealous
|
||
as herself, hurried eagerly home to admire, on my part; though I was
|
||
very sad for Hindley’s sake. He had room in his heart only for two
|
||
idols—his wife and himself: he doted on both, and adored one, and I
|
||
couldn’t conceive how he would bear the loss.
|
||
|
||
When we got to Wuthering Heights, there he stood at the front door;
|
||
and, as I passed in, I asked, “how was the baby?”
|
||
|
||
“Nearly ready to run about, Nell!” he replied, putting on a cheerful
|
||
smile.
|
||
|
||
“And the mistress?” I ventured to inquire; “the doctor says she’s—”
|
||
|
||
“Damn the doctor!” he interrupted, reddening. “Frances is quite right:
|
||
she’ll be perfectly well by this time next week. Are you going
|
||
upstairs? will you tell her that I’ll come, if she’ll promise not to
|
||
talk. I left her because she would not hold her tongue; and she
|
||
must—tell her Mr. Kenneth says she must be quiet.”
|
||
|
||
I delivered this message to Mrs. Earnshaw; she seemed in flighty
|
||
spirits, and replied merrily, “I hardly spoke a word, Ellen, and there
|
||
he has gone out twice, crying. Well, say I promise I won’t speak: but
|
||
that does not bind me not to laugh at him!”
|
||
|
||
Poor soul! Till within a week of her death that gay heart never failed
|
||
her; and her husband persisted doggedly, nay, furiously, in affirming
|
||
her health improved every day. When Kenneth warned him that his
|
||
medicines were useless at that stage of the malady, and he needn’t put
|
||
him to further expense by attending her, he retorted, “I know you need
|
||
not—she’s well—she does not want any more attendance from you! She
|
||
never was in a consumption. It was a fever; and it is gone: her pulse
|
||
is as slow as mine now, and her cheek as cool.”
|
||
|
||
He told his wife the same story, and she seemed to believe him; but one
|
||
night, while leaning on his shoulder, in the act of saying she thought
|
||
she should be able to get up to-morrow, a fit of coughing took her—a
|
||
very slight one—he raised her in his arms; she put her two hands about
|
||
his neck, her face changed, and she was dead.
|
||
|
||
As the girl had anticipated, the child Hareton fell wholly into my
|
||
hands. Mr. Earnshaw, provided he saw him healthy and never heard him
|
||
cry, was contented, as far as regarded him. For himself, he grew
|
||
desperate: his sorrow was of that kind that will not lament. He neither
|
||
wept nor prayed; he cursed and defied: execrated God and man, and gave
|
||
himself up to reckless dissipation. The servants could not bear his
|
||
tyrannical and evil conduct long: Joseph and I were the only two that
|
||
would stay. I had not the heart to leave my charge; and besides, you
|
||
know, I had been his foster-sister, and excused his behaviour more
|
||
readily than a stranger would. Joseph remained to hector over tenants
|
||
and labourers; and because it was his vocation to be where he had
|
||
plenty of wickedness to reprove.
|
||
|
||
The master’s bad ways and bad companions formed a pretty example for
|
||
Catherine and Heathcliff. His treatment of the latter was enough to
|
||
make a fiend of a saint. And, truly, it appeared as if the lad _were_
|
||
possessed of something diabolical at that period. He delighted to
|
||
witness Hindley degrading himself past redemption; and became daily
|
||
more notable for savage sullenness and ferocity. I could not half tell
|
||
what an infernal house we had. The curate dropped calling, and nobody
|
||
decent came near us, at last; unless Edgar Linton’s visits to Miss
|
||
Cathy might be an exception. At fifteen she was the queen of the
|
||
country-side; she had no peer; and she did turn out a haughty,
|
||
headstrong creature! I own I did not like her, after infancy was past;
|
||
and I vexed her frequently by trying to bring down her arrogance: she
|
||
never took an aversion to me, though. She had a wondrous constancy to
|
||
old attachments: even Heathcliff kept his hold on her affections
|
||
unalterably; and young Linton, with all his superiority, found it
|
||
difficult to make an equally deep impression. He was my late master:
|
||
that is his portrait over the fireplace. It used to hang on one side,
|
||
and his wife’s on the other; but hers has been removed, or else you
|
||
might see something of what she was. Can you make that out?
|
||
|
||
Mrs. Dean raised the candle, and I discerned a soft-featured face,
|
||
exceedingly resembling the young lady at the Heights, but more pensive
|
||
and amiable in expression. It formed a sweet picture. The long light
|
||
hair curled slightly on the temples; the eyes were large and serious;
|
||
the figure almost too graceful. I did not marvel how Catherine Earnshaw
|
||
could forget her first friend for such an individual. I marvelled much
|
||
how he, with a mind to correspond with his person, could fancy my idea
|
||
of Catherine Earnshaw.
|
||
|
||
“A very agreeable portrait,” I observed to the house-keeper. “Is it
|
||
like?”
|
||
|
||
“Yes,” she answered; “but he looked better when he was animated; that
|
||
is his everyday countenance: he wanted spirit in general.”
|
||
|
||
Catherine had kept up her acquaintance with the Lintons since her
|
||
five-weeks’ residence among them; and as she had no temptation to show
|
||
her rough side in their company, and had the sense to be ashamed of
|
||
being rude where she experienced such invariable courtesy, she imposed
|
||
unwittingly on the old lady and gentleman by her ingenious cordiality;
|
||
gained the admiration of Isabella, and the heart and soul of her
|
||
brother: acquisitions that flattered her from the first—for she was
|
||
full of ambition—and led her to adopt a double character without
|
||
exactly intending to deceive any one. In the place where she heard
|
||
Heathcliff termed a “vulgar young ruffian,” and “worse than a brute,”
|
||
she took care not to act like him; but at home she had small
|
||
inclination to practise politeness that would only be laughed at, and
|
||
restrain an unruly nature when it would bring her neither credit nor
|
||
praise.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Edgar seldom mustered courage to visit Wuthering Heights openly. He
|
||
had a terror of Earnshaw’s reputation, and shrunk from encountering
|
||
him; and yet he was always received with our best attempts at civility:
|
||
the master himself avoided offending him, knowing why he came; and if
|
||
he could not be gracious, kept out of the way. I rather think his
|
||
appearance there was distasteful to Catherine; she was not artful,
|
||
never played the coquette, and had evidently an objection to her two
|
||
friends meeting at all; for when Heathcliff expressed contempt of
|
||
Linton in his presence, she could not half coincide, as she did in his
|
||
absence; and when Linton evinced disgust and antipathy to Heathcliff,
|
||
she dared not treat his sentiments with indifference, as if
|
||
depreciation of her playmate were of scarcely any consequence to her.
|
||
I’ve had many a laugh at her perplexities and untold troubles, which
|
||
she vainly strove to hide from my mockery. That sounds ill-natured: but
|
||
she was so proud, it became really impossible to pity her distresses,
|
||
till she should be chastened into more humility. She did bring herself,
|
||
finally, to confess, and to confide in me: there was not a soul else
|
||
that she might fashion into an adviser.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Hindley had gone from home one afternoon, and Heathcliff presumed
|
||
to give himself a holiday on the strength of it. He had reached the age
|
||
of sixteen then, I think, and without having bad features, or being
|
||
deficient in intellect, he contrived to convey an impression of inward
|
||
and outward repulsiveness that his present aspect retains no traces of.
|
||
In the first place, he had by that time lost the benefit of his early
|
||
education: continual hard work, begun soon and concluded late, had
|
||
extinguished any curiosity he once possessed in pursuit of knowledge,
|
||
and any love for books or learning. His childhood’s sense of
|
||
superiority, instilled into him by the favours of old Mr. Earnshaw, was
|
||
faded away. He struggled long to keep up an equality with Catherine in
|
||
her studies, and yielded with poignant though silent regret: but he
|
||
yielded completely; and there was no prevailing on him to take a step
|
||
in the way of moving upward, when he found he must, necessarily, sink
|
||
beneath his former level. Then personal appearance sympathised with
|
||
mental deterioration: he acquired a slouching gait and ignoble look;
|
||
his naturally reserved disposition was exaggerated into an almost
|
||
idiotic excess of unsociable moroseness; and he took a grim pleasure,
|
||
apparently, in exciting the aversion rather than the esteem of his few
|
||
acquaintance.
|
||
|
||
Catherine and he were constant companions still at his seasons of
|
||
respite from labour; but he had ceased to express his fondness for her
|
||
in words, and recoiled with angry suspicion from her girlish caresses,
|
||
as if conscious there could be no gratification in lavishing such marks
|
||
of affection on him. On the before-named occasion he came into the
|
||
house to announce his intention of doing nothing, while I was assisting
|
||
Miss Cathy to arrange her dress: she had not reckoned on his taking it
|
||
into his head to be idle; and imagining she would have the whole place
|
||
to herself, she managed, by some means, to inform Mr. Edgar of her
|
||
brother’s absence, and was then preparing to receive him.
|
||
|
||
“Cathy, are you busy this afternoon?” asked Heathcliff. “Are you going
|
||
anywhere?”
|
||
|
||
“No, it is raining,” she answered.
|
||
|
||
“Why have you that silk frock on, then?” he said. “Nobody coming here,
|
||
I hope?”
|
||
|
||
“Not that I know of,” stammered Miss: “but you should be in the field
|
||
now, Heathcliff. It is an hour past dinner time; I thought you were
|
||
gone.”
|
||
|
||
“Hindley does not often free us from his accursed presence,” observed
|
||
the boy. “I’ll not work any more to-day: I’ll stay with you.”
|
||
|
||
“Oh, but Joseph will tell,” she suggested; “you’d better go!”
|
||
|
||
“Joseph is loading lime on the further side of Penistone Crags; it will
|
||
take him till dark, and he’ll never know.”
|
||
|
||
So saying, he lounged to the fire, and sat down. Catherine reflected
|
||
an instant, with knitted brows—she found it needful to smooth the way
|
||
for an intrusion. “Isabella and Edgar Linton talked of calling this
|
||
afternoon,” she said, at the conclusion of a minute’s silence. “As it
|
||
rains, I hardly expect them; but they may come, and if they do, you run
|
||
the risk of being scolded for no good.”
|
||
|
||
“Order Ellen to say you are engaged, Cathy,” he persisted; “don’t turn
|
||
me out for those pitiful, silly friends of yours! I’m on the point,
|
||
sometimes, of complaining that they—but I’ll not—”
|
||
|
||
“That they what?” cried Catherine, gazing at him with a troubled
|
||
countenance. “Oh, Nelly!” she added petulantly, jerking her head away
|
||
from my hands, “you’ve combed my hair quite out of curl! That’s enough;
|
||
let me alone. What are you on the point of complaining about,
|
||
Heathcliff?”
|
||
|
||
“Nothing—only look at the almanack on that wall;” he pointed to a
|
||
framed sheet hanging near the window, and continued, “The crosses are
|
||
for the evenings you have spent with the Lintons, the dots for those
|
||
spent with me. Do you see? I’ve marked every day.”
|
||
|
||
“Yes—very foolish: as if I took notice!” replied Catherine, in a
|
||
peevish tone. “And where is the sense of that?”
|
||
|
||
“To show that I _do_ take notice,” said Heathcliff.
|
||
|
||
“And should I always be sitting with you?” she demanded, growing more
|
||
irritated. “What good do I get? What do you talk about? You might be
|
||
dumb, or a baby, for anything you say to amuse me, or for anything you
|
||
do, either!”
|
||
|
||
“You never told me before that I talked too little, or that you
|
||
disliked my company, Cathy!” exclaimed Heathcliff, in much agitation.
|
||
|
||
“It’s no company at all, when people know nothing and say nothing,” she
|
||
muttered.
|
||
|
||
Her companion rose up, but he hadn’t time to express his feelings
|
||
further, for a horse’s feet were heard on the flags, and having knocked
|
||
gently, young Linton entered, his face brilliant with delight at the
|
||
unexpected summons he had received. Doubtless Catherine marked the
|
||
difference between her friends, as one came in and the other went out.
|
||
The contrast resembled what you see in exchanging a bleak, hilly, coal
|
||
country for a beautiful fertile valley; and his voice and greeting were
|
||
as opposite as his aspect. He had a sweet, low manner of speaking, and
|
||
pronounced his words as you do: that’s less gruff than we talk here,
|
||
and softer.
|
||
|
||
“I’m not come too soon, am I?” he said, casting a look at me: I had
|
||
begun to wipe the plate, and tidy some drawers at the far end in the
|
||
dresser.
|
||
|
||
“No,” answered Catherine. “What are you doing there, Nelly?”
|
||
|
||
“My work, Miss,” I replied. (Mr. Hindley had given me directions to
|
||
make a third party in any private visits Linton chose to pay.)
|
||
|
||
She stepped behind me and whispered crossly, “Take yourself and your
|
||
dusters off; when company are in the house, servants don’t commence
|
||
scouring and cleaning in the room where they are!”
|
||
|
||
“It’s a good opportunity, now that master is away,” I answered aloud:
|
||
“he hates me to be fidgeting over these things in his presence. I’m
|
||
sure Mr. Edgar will excuse me.”
|
||
|
||
“I hate you to be fidgeting in _my_ presence,” exclaimed the young lady
|
||
imperiously, not allowing her guest time to speak: she had failed to
|
||
recover her equanimity since the little dispute with Heathcliff.
|
||
|
||
“I’m sorry for it, Miss Catherine,” was my response; and I proceeded
|
||
assiduously with my occupation.
|
||
|
||
She, supposing Edgar could not see her, snatched the cloth from my
|
||
hand, and pinched me, with a prolonged wrench, very spitefully on the
|
||
arm. I’ve said I did not love her, and rather relished mortifying her
|
||
vanity now and then: besides, she hurt me extremely; so I started up
|
||
from my knees, and screamed out, “Oh, Miss, that’s a nasty trick! You
|
||
have no right to nip me, and I’m not going to bear it.”
|
||
|
||
“I didn’t touch you, you lying creature!” cried she, her fingers
|
||
tingling to repeat the act, and her ears red with rage. She never had
|
||
power to conceal her passion, it always set her whole complexion in a
|
||
blaze.
|
||
|
||
“What’s that, then?” I retorted, showing a decided purple witness to
|
||
refute her.
|
||
|
||
She stamped her foot, wavered a moment, and then, irresistibly impelled
|
||
by the naughty spirit within her, slapped me on the cheek: a stinging
|
||
blow that filled both eyes with water.
|
||
|
||
“Catherine, love! Catherine!” interposed Linton, greatly shocked at the
|
||
double fault of falsehood and violence which his idol had committed.
|
||
|
||
“Leave the room, Ellen!” she repeated, trembling all over.
|
||
|
||
Little Hareton, who followed me everywhere, and was sitting near me on
|
||
the floor, at seeing my tears commenced crying himself, and sobbed out
|
||
complaints against “wicked aunt Cathy,” which drew her fury on to his
|
||
unlucky head: she seized his shoulders, and shook him till the poor
|
||
child waxed livid, and Edgar thoughtlessly laid hold of her hands to
|
||
deliver him. In an instant one was wrung free, and the astonished young
|
||
man felt it applied over his own ear in a way that could not be
|
||
mistaken for jest. He drew back in consternation. I lifted Hareton in
|
||
my arms, and walked off to the kitchen with him, leaving the door of
|
||
communication open, for I was curious to watch how they would settle
|
||
their disagreement. The insulted visitor moved to the spot where he had
|
||
laid his hat, pale and with a quivering lip.
|
||
|
||
“That’s right!” I said to myself. “Take warning and begone! It’s a
|
||
kindness to let you have a glimpse of her genuine disposition.”
|
||
|
||
“Where are you going?” demanded Catherine, advancing to the door.
|
||
|
||
He swerved aside, and attempted to pass.
|
||
|
||
“You must not go!” she exclaimed, energetically.
|
||
|
||
“I must and shall!” he replied in a subdued voice.
|
||
|
||
“No,” she persisted, grasping the handle; “not yet, Edgar Linton: sit
|
||
down; you shall not leave me in that temper. I should be miserable all
|
||
night, and I won’t be miserable for you!”
|
||
|
||
“Can I stay after you have struck me?” asked Linton.
|
||
|
||
Catherine was mute.
|
||
|
||
“You’ve made me afraid and ashamed of you,” he continued; “I’ll not
|
||
come here again!”
|
||
|
||
Her eyes began to glisten and her lids to twinkle.
|
||
|
||
“And you told a deliberate untruth!” he said.
|
||
|
||
“I didn’t!” she cried, recovering her speech; “I did nothing
|
||
deliberately. Well, go, if you please—get away! And now I’ll cry—I’ll
|
||
cry myself sick!”
|
||
|
||
She dropped down on her knees by a chair, and set to weeping in serious
|
||
earnest. Edgar persevered in his resolution as far as the court; there
|
||
he lingered. I resolved to encourage him.
|
||
|
||
“Miss is dreadfully wayward, sir,” I called out. “As bad as any marred
|
||
child: you’d better be riding home, or else she will be sick, only to
|
||
grieve us.”
|
||
|
||
The soft thing looked askance through the window: he possessed the
|
||
power to depart as much as a cat possesses the power to leave a mouse
|
||
half killed, or a bird half eaten. Ah, I thought, there will be no
|
||
saving him: he’s doomed, and flies to his fate! And so it was: he
|
||
turned abruptly, hastened into the house again, shut the door behind
|
||
him; and when I went in a while after to inform them that Earnshaw had
|
||
come home rabid drunk, ready to pull the whole place about our ears
|
||
(his ordinary frame of mind in that condition), I saw the quarrel had
|
||
merely effected a closer intimacy—had broken the outworks of youthful
|
||
timidity, and enabled them to forsake the disguise of friendship, and
|
||
confess themselves lovers.
|
||
|
||
Intelligence of Mr. Hindley’s arrival drove Linton speedily to his
|
||
horse, and Catherine to her chamber. I went to hide little Hareton, and
|
||
to take the shot out of the master’s fowling-piece, which he was fond
|
||
of playing with in his insane excitement, to the hazard of the lives of
|
||
any who provoked, or even attracted his notice too much; and I had hit
|
||
upon the plan of removing it, that he might do less mischief if he did
|
||
go the length of firing the gun.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER IX
|
||
|
||
|
||
He entered, vociferating oaths dreadful to hear; and caught me in the
|
||
act of stowing his son away in the kitchen cupboard. Hareton was
|
||
impressed with a wholesome terror of encountering either his wild
|
||
beast’s fondness or his madman’s rage; for in one he ran a chance of
|
||
being squeezed and kissed to death, and in the other of being flung
|
||
into the fire, or dashed against the wall; and the poor thing remained
|
||
perfectly quiet wherever I chose to put him.
|
||
|
||
“There, I’ve found it out at last!” cried Hindley, pulling me back by
|
||
the skin of my neck, like a dog. “By heaven and hell, you’ve sworn
|
||
between you to murder that child! I know how it is, now, that he is
|
||
always out of my way. But, with the help of Satan, I shall make you
|
||
swallow the carving-knife, Nelly! You needn’t laugh; for I’ve just
|
||
crammed Kenneth, head-downmost, in the Black-horse marsh; and two is
|
||
the same as one—and I want to kill some of you: I shall have no rest
|
||
till I do!”
|
||
|
||
“But I don’t like the carving-knife, Mr. Hindley,” I answered; “it has
|
||
been cutting red herrings. I’d rather be shot, if you please.”
|
||
|
||
“You’d rather be damned!” he said; “and so you shall. No law in England
|
||
can hinder a man from keeping his house decent, and mine’s abominable!
|
||
Open your mouth.”
|
||
|
||
He held the knife in his hand, and pushed its point between my teeth:
|
||
but, for my part, I was never much afraid of his vagaries. I spat out,
|
||
and affirmed it tasted detestably—I would not take it on any account.
|
||
|
||
“Oh!” said he, releasing me, “I see that hideous little villain is not
|
||
Hareton: I beg your pardon, Nell. If it be, he deserves flaying alive
|
||
for not running to welcome me, and for screaming as if I were a goblin.
|
||
Unnatural cub, come hither! I’ll teach thee to impose on a
|
||
good-hearted, deluded father. Now, don’t you think the lad would be
|
||
handsomer cropped? It makes a dog fiercer, and I love something
|
||
fierce—get me a scissors—something fierce and trim! Besides, it’s
|
||
infernal affectation—devilish conceit it is, to cherish our ears—we’re
|
||
asses enough without them. Hush, child, hush! Well then, it is my
|
||
darling! wisht, dry thy eyes—there’s a joy; kiss me. What! it won’t?
|
||
Kiss me, Hareton! Damn thee, kiss me! By God, as if I would rear such a
|
||
monster! As sure as I’m living, I’ll break the brat’s neck.”
|
||
|
||
Poor Hareton was squalling and kicking in his father’s arms with all
|
||
his might, and redoubled his yells when he carried him upstairs and
|
||
lifted him over the banister. I cried out that he would frighten the
|
||
child into fits, and ran to rescue him. As I reached them, Hindley
|
||
leant forward on the rails to listen to a noise below; almost
|
||
forgetting what he had in his hands. “Who is that?” he asked, hearing
|
||
some one approaching the stairs’-foot. I leant forward also, for the
|
||
purpose of signing to Heathcliff, whose step I recognised, not to come
|
||
further; and, at the instant when my eye quitted Hareton, he gave a
|
||
sudden spring, delivered himself from the careless grasp that held him,
|
||
and fell.
|
||
|
||
There was scarcely time to experience a thrill of horror before we saw
|
||
that the little wretch was safe. Heathcliff arrived underneath just at
|
||
the critical moment; by a natural impulse he arrested his descent, and
|
||
setting him on his feet, looked up to discover the author of the
|
||
accident. A miser who has parted with a lucky lottery ticket for five
|
||
shillings, and finds next day he has lost in the bargain five thousand
|
||
pounds, could not show a blanker countenance than he did on beholding
|
||
the figure of Mr. Earnshaw above. It expressed, plainer than words
|
||
could do, the intensest anguish at having made himself the instrument
|
||
of thwarting his own revenge. Had it been dark, I daresay he would have
|
||
tried to remedy the mistake by smashing Hareton’s skull on the steps;
|
||
but, we witnessed his salvation; and I was presently below with my
|
||
precious charge pressed to my heart. Hindley descended more leisurely,
|
||
sobered and abashed.
|
||
|
||
“It is your fault, Ellen,” he said; “you should have kept him out of
|
||
sight: you should have taken him from me! Is he injured anywhere?”
|
||
|
||
“Injured!” I cried angrily; “if he is not killed, he’ll be an idiot!
|
||
Oh! I wonder his mother does not rise from her grave to see how you use
|
||
him. You’re worse than a heathen—treating your own flesh and blood in
|
||
that manner!”
|
||
|
||
He attempted to touch the child, who, on finding himself with me,
|
||
sobbed off his terror directly. At the first finger his father laid on
|
||
him, however, he shrieked again louder than before, and struggled as if
|
||
he would go into convulsions.
|
||
|
||
“You shall not meddle with him!” I continued. “He hates you—they all
|
||
hate you—that’s the truth! A happy family you have; and a pretty state
|
||
you’re come to!”
|
||
|
||
“I shall come to a prettier, yet, Nelly,” laughed the misguided man,
|
||
recovering his hardness. “At present, convey yourself and him away. And
|
||
hark you, Heathcliff! clear you too quite from my reach and hearing. I
|
||
wouldn’t murder you to-night; unless, perhaps, I set the house on fire:
|
||
but that’s as my fancy goes.”
|
||
|
||
While saying this he took a pint bottle of brandy from the dresser, and
|
||
poured some into a tumbler.
|
||
|
||
“Nay, don’t!” I entreated. “Mr. Hindley, do take warning. Have mercy on
|
||
this unfortunate boy, if you care nothing for yourself!”
|
||
|
||
“Any one will do better for him than I shall,” he answered.
|
||
|
||
“Have mercy on your own soul!” I said, endeavouring to snatch the glass
|
||
from his hand.
|
||
|
||
“Not I! On the contrary, I shall have great pleasure in sending it to
|
||
perdition to punish its Maker,” exclaimed the blasphemer. “Here’s to
|
||
its hearty damnation!”
|
||
|
||
He drank the spirits and impatiently bade us go; terminating his
|
||
command with a sequel of horrid imprecations too bad to repeat or
|
||
remember.
|
||
|
||
“It’s a pity he cannot kill himself with drink,” observed Heathcliff,
|
||
muttering an echo of curses back when the door was shut. “He’s doing
|
||
his very utmost; but his constitution defies him. Mr. Kenneth says he
|
||
would wager his mare that he’ll outlive any man on this side Gimmerton,
|
||
and go to the grave a hoary sinner; unless some happy chance out of the
|
||
common course befall him.”
|
||
|
||
I went into the kitchen, and sat down to lull my little lamb to sleep.
|
||
Heathcliff, as I thought, walked through to the barn. It turned out
|
||
afterwards that he only got as far as the other side the settle, when
|
||
he flung himself on a bench by the wall, removed from the fire, and
|
||
remained silent.
|
||
|
||
I was rocking Hareton on my knee, and humming a song that began,—
|
||
|
||
It was far in the night, and the bairnies grat,
|
||
The mither beneath the mools heard that,
|
||
|
||
|
||
when Miss Cathy, who had listened to the hubbub from her room, put her
|
||
head in, and whispered,—“Are you alone, Nelly?”
|
||
|
||
“Yes, Miss,” I replied.
|
||
|
||
She entered and approached the hearth. I, supposing she was going to
|
||
say something, looked up. The expression of her face seemed disturbed
|
||
and anxious. Her lips were half asunder, as if she meant to speak, and
|
||
she drew a breath; but it escaped in a sigh instead of a sentence. I
|
||
resumed my song; not having forgotten her recent behaviour.
|
||
|
||
“Where’s Heathcliff?” she said, interrupting me.
|
||
|
||
“About his work in the stable,” was my answer.
|
||
|
||
He did not contradict me; perhaps he had fallen into a doze. There
|
||
followed another long pause, during which I perceived a drop or two
|
||
trickle from Catherine’s cheek to the flags. Is she sorry for her
|
||
shameful conduct?—I asked myself. That will be a novelty: but she may
|
||
come to the point as she will—I sha’n’t help her! No, she felt small
|
||
trouble regarding any subject, save her own concerns.
|
||
|
||
“Oh, dear!” she cried at last. “I’m very unhappy!”
|
||
|
||
“A pity,” observed I. “You’re hard to please; so many friends and so
|
||
few cares, and can’t make yourself content!”
|
||
|
||
“Nelly, will you keep a secret for me?” she pursued, kneeling down by
|
||
me, and lifting her winsome eyes to my face with that sort of look
|
||
which turns off bad temper, even when one has all the right in the
|
||
world to indulge it.
|
||
|
||
“Is it worth keeping?” I inquired, less sulkily.
|
||
|
||
“Yes, and it worries me, and I must let it out! I want to know what I
|
||
should do. To-day, Edgar Linton has asked me to marry him, and I’ve
|
||
given him an answer. Now, before I tell you whether it was a consent or
|
||
denial, you tell me which it ought to have been.”
|
||
|
||
“Really, Miss Catherine, how can I know?” I replied. “To be sure,
|
||
considering the exhibition you performed in his presence this
|
||
afternoon, I might say it would be wise to refuse him: since he asked
|
||
you after that, he must either be hopelessly stupid or a venturesome
|
||
fool.”
|
||
|
||
“If you talk so, I won’t tell you any more,” she returned, peevishly
|
||
rising to her feet. “I accepted him, Nelly. Be quick, and say whether I
|
||
was wrong!”
|
||
|
||
“You accepted him! Then what good is it discussing the matter? You have
|
||
pledged your word, and cannot retract.”
|
||
|
||
“But say whether I should have done so—do!” she exclaimed in an
|
||
irritated tone; chafing her hands together, and frowning.
|
||
|
||
“There are many things to be considered before that question can be
|
||
answered properly,” I said, sententiously. “First and foremost, do you
|
||
love Mr. Edgar?”
|
||
|
||
“Who can help it? Of course I do,” she answered.
|
||
|
||
Then I put her through the following catechism: for a girl of
|
||
twenty-two it was not injudicious.
|
||
|
||
“Why do you love him, Miss Cathy?”
|
||
|
||
“Nonsense, I do—that’s sufficient.”
|
||
|
||
“By no means; you must say why?”
|
||
|
||
“Well, because he is handsome, and pleasant to be with.”
|
||
|
||
“Bad!” was my commentary.
|
||
|
||
“And because he is young and cheerful.”
|
||
|
||
“Bad, still.”
|
||
|
||
“And because he loves me.”
|
||
|
||
“Indifferent, coming there.”
|
||
|
||
“And he will be rich, and I shall like to be the greatest woman of the
|
||
neighbourhood, and I shall be proud of having such a husband.”
|
||
|
||
“Worst of all. And now, say how you love him?”
|
||
|
||
“As everybody loves—You’re silly, Nelly.”
|
||
|
||
“Not at all—Answer.”
|
||
|
||
“I love the ground under his feet, and the air over his head, and
|
||
everything he touches, and every word he says. I love all his looks,
|
||
and all his actions, and him entirely and altogether. There now!”
|
||
|
||
“And why?”
|
||
|
||
“Nay; you are making a jest of it: it is exceedingly ill-natured! It’s
|
||
no jest to me!” said the young lady, scowling, and turning her face to
|
||
the fire.
|
||
|
||
“I’m very far from jesting, Miss Catherine,” I replied. “You love Mr.
|
||
Edgar because he is handsome, and young, and cheerful, and rich, and
|
||
loves you. The last, however, goes for nothing: you would love him
|
||
without that, probably; and with it you wouldn’t, unless he possessed
|
||
the four former attractions.”
|
||
|
||
“No, to be sure not: I should only pity him—hate him, perhaps, if he
|
||
were ugly, and a clown.”
|
||
|
||
“But there are several other handsome, rich young men in the world:
|
||
handsomer, possibly, and richer than he is. What should hinder you from
|
||
loving them?”
|
||
|
||
“If there be any, they are out of my way: I’ve seen none like Edgar.”
|
||
|
||
“You may see some; and he won’t always be handsome, and young, and may
|
||
not always be rich.”
|
||
|
||
“He is now; and I have only to do with the present. I wish you would
|
||
speak rationally.”
|
||
|
||
“Well, that settles it: if you have only to do with the present, marry
|
||
Mr. Linton.”
|
||
|
||
“I don’t want your permission for that—I _shall_ marry him: and yet you
|
||
have not told me whether I’m right.”
|
||
|
||
“Perfectly right; if people be right to marry only for the present. And
|
||
now, let us hear what you are unhappy about. Your brother will be
|
||
pleased; the old lady and gentleman will not object, I think; you will
|
||
escape from a disorderly, comfortless home into a wealthy, respectable
|
||
one; and you love Edgar, and Edgar loves you. All seems smooth and
|
||
easy: where is the obstacle?”
|
||
|
||
“_Here_! and _here_!” replied Catherine, striking one hand on her
|
||
forehead, and the other on her breast: “in whichever place the soul
|
||
lives. In my soul and in my heart, I’m convinced I’m wrong!”
|
||
|
||
“That’s very strange! I cannot make it out.”
|
||
|
||
“It’s my secret. But if you will not mock at me, I’ll explain it: I
|
||
can’t do it distinctly; but I’ll give you a feeling of how I feel.”
|
||
|
||
She seated herself by me again: her countenance grew sadder and graver,
|
||
and her clasped hands trembled.
|
||
|
||
“Nelly, do you never dream queer dreams?” she said, suddenly, after
|
||
some minutes’ reflection.
|
||
|
||
“Yes, now and then,” I answered.
|
||
|
||
“And so do I. I’ve dreamt in my life dreams that have stayed with me
|
||
ever after, and changed my ideas: they’ve gone through and through me,
|
||
like wine through water, and altered the colour of my mind. And this is
|
||
one: I’m going to tell it—but take care not to smile at any part of
|
||
it.”
|
||
|
||
“Oh! don’t, Miss Catherine!” I cried. “We’re dismal enough without
|
||
conjuring up ghosts and visions to perplex us. Come, come, be merry and
|
||
like yourself! Look at little Hareton! _he’s_ dreaming nothing dreary.
|
||
How sweetly he smiles in his sleep!”
|
||
|
||
“Yes; and how sweetly his father curses in his solitude! You remember
|
||
him, I daresay, when he was just such another as that chubby thing:
|
||
nearly as young and innocent. However, Nelly, I shall oblige you to
|
||
listen: it’s not long; and I’ve no power to be merry to-night.”
|
||
|
||
“I won’t hear it, I won’t hear it!” I repeated, hastily.
|
||
|
||
I was superstitious about dreams then, and am still; and Catherine had
|
||
an unusual gloom in her aspect, that made me dread something from which
|
||
I might shape a prophecy, and foresee a fearful catastrophe. She was
|
||
vexed, but she did not proceed. Apparently taking up another subject,
|
||
she recommenced in a short time.
|
||
|
||
“If I were in heaven, Nelly, I should be extremely miserable.”
|
||
|
||
“Because you are not fit to go there,” I answered. “All sinners would
|
||
be miserable in heaven.”
|
||
|
||
“But it is not for that. I dreamt once that I was there.”
|
||
|
||
“I tell you I won’t hearken to your dreams, Miss Catherine! I’ll go to
|
||
bed,” I interrupted again.
|
||
|
||
She laughed, and held me down; for I made a motion to leave my chair.
|
||
|
||
“This is nothing,” cried she: “I was only going to say that heaven did
|
||
not seem to be my home; and I broke my heart with weeping to come back
|
||
to earth; and the angels were so angry that they flung me out into the
|
||
middle of the heath on the top of Wuthering Heights; where I woke
|
||
sobbing for joy. That will do to explain my secret, as well as the
|
||
other. I’ve no more business to marry Edgar Linton than I have to be in
|
||
heaven; and if the wicked man in there had not brought Heathcliff so
|
||
low, I shouldn’t have thought of it. It would degrade me to marry
|
||
Heathcliff now; so he shall never know how I love him: and that, not
|
||
because he’s handsome, Nelly, but because he’s more myself than I am.
|
||
Whatever our souls are made of, his and mine are the same; and Linton’s
|
||
is as different as a moonbeam from lightning, or frost from fire.”
|
||
|
||
Ere this speech ended I became sensible of Heathcliff’s presence.
|
||
Having noticed a slight movement, I turned my head, and saw him rise
|
||
from the bench, and steal out noiselessly. He had listened till he
|
||
heard Catherine say it would degrade her to marry him, and then he
|
||
stayed to hear no further. My companion, sitting on the ground, was
|
||
prevented by the back of the settle from remarking his presence or
|
||
departure; but I started, and bade her hush!
|
||
|
||
“Why?” she asked, gazing nervously round.
|
||
|
||
“Joseph is here,” I answered, catching opportunely the roll of his
|
||
cartwheels up the road; “and Heathcliff will come in with him. I’m not
|
||
sure whether he were not at the door this moment.”
|
||
|
||
“Oh, he couldn’t overhear me at the door!” said she. “Give me Hareton,
|
||
while you get the supper, and when it is ready ask me to sup with you.
|
||
I want to cheat my uncomfortable conscience, and be convinced that
|
||
Heathcliff has no notion of these things. He has not, has he? He does
|
||
not know what being in love is!”
|
||
|
||
“I see no reason that he should not know, as well as you,” I returned;
|
||
“and if _you_ are his choice, he’ll be the most unfortunate creature
|
||
that ever was born! As soon as you become Mrs. Linton, he loses friend,
|
||
and love, and all! Have you considered how you’ll bear the separation,
|
||
and how he’ll bear to be quite deserted in the world? Because, Miss
|
||
Catherine—”
|
||
|
||
“He quite deserted! we separated!” she exclaimed, with an accent of
|
||
indignation. “Who is to separate us, pray? They’ll meet the fate of
|
||
Milo! Not as long as I live, Ellen: for no mortal creature. Every
|
||
Linton on the face of the earth might melt into nothing before I could
|
||
consent to forsake Heathcliff. Oh, that’s not what I intend—that’s not
|
||
what I mean! I shouldn’t be Mrs. Linton were such a price demanded!
|
||
He’ll be as much to me as he has been all his lifetime. Edgar must
|
||
shake off his antipathy, and tolerate him, at least. He will, when he
|
||
learns my true feelings towards him. Nelly, I see now you think me a
|
||
selfish wretch; but did it never strike you that if Heathcliff and I
|
||
married, we should be beggars? whereas, if I marry Linton I can aid
|
||
Heathcliff to rise, and place him out of my brother’s power.”
|
||
|
||
“With your husband’s money, Miss Catherine?” I asked. “You’ll find him
|
||
not so pliable as you calculate upon: and, though I’m hardly a judge, I
|
||
think that’s the worst motive you’ve given yet for being the wife of
|
||
young Linton.”
|
||
|
||
“It is not,” retorted she; “it is the best! The others were the
|
||
satisfaction of my whims: and for Edgar’s sake, too, to satisfy him.
|
||
This is for the sake of one who comprehends in his person my feelings
|
||
to Edgar and myself. I cannot express it; but surely you and everybody
|
||
have a notion that there is or should be an existence of yours beyond
|
||
you. What were the use of my creation, if I were entirely contained
|
||
here? My great miseries in this world have been Heathcliff’s miseries,
|
||
and I watched and felt each from the beginning: my great thought in
|
||
living is himself. If all else perished, and _he_ remained, _I_ should
|
||
still continue to be; and if all else remained, and he were
|
||
annihilated, the universe would turn to a mighty stranger: I should not
|
||
seem a part of it. My love for Linton is like the foliage in the woods:
|
||
time will change it, I’m well aware, as winter changes the trees. My
|
||
love for Heathcliff resembles the eternal rocks beneath: a source of
|
||
little visible delight, but necessary. Nelly, I _am_ Heathcliff! He’s
|
||
always, always in my mind: not as a pleasure, any more than I am always
|
||
a pleasure to myself, but as my own being. So don’t talk of our
|
||
separation again: it is impracticable; and—”
|
||
|
||
She paused, and hid her face in the folds of my gown; but I jerked it
|
||
forcibly away. I was out of patience with her folly!
|
||
|
||
“If I can make any sense of your nonsense, Miss,” I said, “it only goes
|
||
to convince me that you are ignorant of the duties you undertake in
|
||
marrying; or else that you are a wicked, unprincipled girl. But trouble
|
||
me with no more secrets: I’ll not promise to keep them.”
|
||
|
||
“You’ll keep that?” she asked, eagerly.
|
||
|
||
“No, I’ll not promise,” I repeated.
|
||
|
||
She was about to insist, when the entrance of Joseph finished our
|
||
conversation; and Catherine removed her seat to a corner, and nursed
|
||
Hareton, while I made the supper. After it was cooked, my
|
||
fellow-servant and I began to quarrel who should carry some to Mr.
|
||
Hindley; and we didn’t settle it till all was nearly cold. Then we came
|
||
to the agreement that we would let him ask, if he wanted any; for we
|
||
feared particularly to go into his presence when he had been some time
|
||
alone.
|
||
|
||
“And how isn’t that nowt comed in fro’ th’ field, be this time? What is
|
||
he about? girt idle seeght!” demanded the old man, looking round for
|
||
Heathcliff.
|
||
|
||
“I’ll call him,” I replied. “He’s in the barn, I’ve no doubt.”
|
||
|
||
I went and called, but got no answer. On returning, I whispered to
|
||
Catherine that he had heard a good part of what she said, I was sure;
|
||
and told how I saw him quit the kitchen just as she complained of her
|
||
brother’s conduct regarding him. She jumped up in a fine fright, flung
|
||
Hareton on to the settle, and ran to seek for her friend herself; not
|
||
taking leisure to consider why she was so flurried, or how her talk
|
||
would have affected him. She was absent such a while that Joseph
|
||
proposed we should wait no longer. He cunningly conjectured they were
|
||
staying away in order to avoid hearing his protracted blessing. They
|
||
were “ill eneugh for ony fahl manners,” he affirmed. And on their
|
||
behalf he added that night a special prayer to the usual
|
||
quarter-of-an-hour’s supplication before meat, and would have tacked
|
||
another to the end of the grace, had not his young mistress broken in
|
||
upon him with a hurried command that he must run down the road, and,
|
||
wherever Heathcliff had rambled, find and make him re-enter directly!
|
||
|
||
“I want to speak to him, and I _must_, before I go upstairs,” she said.
|
||
“And the gate is open: he is somewhere out of hearing; for he would not
|
||
reply, though I shouted at the top of the fold as loud as I could.”
|
||
|
||
Joseph objected at first; she was too much in earnest, however, to
|
||
suffer contradiction; and at last he placed his hat on his head, and
|
||
walked grumbling forth. Meantime, Catherine paced up and down the
|
||
floor, exclaiming—“I wonder where he is—I wonder where he _can_ be!
|
||
What did I say, Nelly? I’ve forgotten. Was he vexed at my bad humour
|
||
this afternoon? Dear! tell me what I’ve said to grieve him? I do wish
|
||
he’d come. I do wish he would!”
|
||
|
||
“What a noise for nothing!” I cried, though rather uneasy myself. “What
|
||
a trifle scares you! It’s surely no great cause of alarm that
|
||
Heathcliff should take a moonlight saunter on the moors, or even lie
|
||
too sulky to speak to us in the hay-loft. I’ll engage he’s lurking
|
||
there. See if I don’t ferret him out!”
|
||
|
||
I departed to renew my search; its result was disappointment, and
|
||
Joseph’s quest ended in the same.
|
||
|
||
“Yon lad gets war und war!” observed he on re-entering. “He’s left th’
|
||
gate at t’ full swing, and Miss’s pony has trodden dahn two rigs o’
|
||
corn, and plottered through, raight o’er into t’ meadow! Hahsomdiver,
|
||
t’ maister ’ull play t’ devil to-morn, and he’ll do weel. He’s patience
|
||
itsseln wi’ sich careless, offald craters—patience itsseln he is! Bud
|
||
he’ll not be soa allus—yah’s see, all on ye! Yah mun’n’t drive him out
|
||
of his heead for nowt!”
|
||
|
||
“Have you found Heathcliff, you ass?” interrupted Catherine. “Have you
|
||
been looking for him, as I ordered?”
|
||
|
||
“I sud more likker look for th’ horse,” he replied. “It ’ud be to more
|
||
sense. Bud I can look for norther horse nur man of a neeght loike
|
||
this—as black as t’ chimbley! und Heathcliff’s noan t’ chap to coom at
|
||
_my_ whistle—happen he’ll be less hard o’ hearing wi’ _ye_!”
|
||
|
||
It _was_ a very dark evening for summer: the clouds appeared inclined
|
||
to thunder, and I said we had better all sit down; the approaching rain
|
||
would be certain to bring him home without further trouble. However,
|
||
Catherine would not be persuaded into tranquillity. She kept wandering
|
||
to and fro, from the gate to the door, in a state of agitation which
|
||
permitted no repose; and at length took up a permanent situation on one
|
||
side of the wall, near the road: where, heedless of my expostulations
|
||
and the growling thunder, and the great drops that began to plash
|
||
around her, she remained, calling at intervals, and then listening, and
|
||
then crying outright. She beat Hareton, or any child, at a good
|
||
passionate fit of crying.
|
||
|
||
About midnight, while we still sat up, the storm came rattling over the
|
||
Heights in full fury. There was a violent wind, as well as thunder, and
|
||
either one or the other split a tree off at the corner of the building:
|
||
a huge bough fell across the roof, and knocked down a portion of the
|
||
east chimney-stack, sending a clatter of stones and soot into the
|
||
kitchen-fire. We thought a bolt had fallen in the middle of us; and
|
||
Joseph swung on to his knees, beseeching the Lord to remember the
|
||
patriarchs Noah and Lot, and, as in former times, spare the righteous,
|
||
though he smote the ungodly. I felt some sentiment that it must be a
|
||
judgment on us also. The Jonah, in my mind, was Mr. Earnshaw; and I
|
||
shook the handle of his den that I might ascertain if he were yet
|
||
living. He replied audibly enough, in a fashion which made my companion
|
||
vociferate, more clamorously than before, that a wide distinction might
|
||
be drawn between saints like himself and sinners like his master. But
|
||
the uproar passed away in twenty minutes, leaving us all unharmed;
|
||
excepting Cathy, who got thoroughly drenched for her obstinacy in
|
||
refusing to take shelter, and standing bonnetless and shawlless to
|
||
catch as much water as she could with her hair and clothes. She came in
|
||
and lay down on the settle, all soaked as she was, turning her face to
|
||
the back, and putting her hands before it.
|
||
|
||
“Well, Miss!” I exclaimed, touching her shoulder; “you are not bent on
|
||
getting your death, are you? Do you know what o’clock it is? Half-past
|
||
twelve. Come, come to bed! there’s no use waiting any longer on that
|
||
foolish boy: he’ll be gone to Gimmerton, and he’ll stay there now. He
|
||
guesses we shouldn’t wait for him till this late hour: at least, he
|
||
guesses that only Mr. Hindley would be up; and he’d rather avoid having
|
||
the door opened by the master.”
|
||
|
||
“Nay, nay, he’s noan at Gimmerton,” said Joseph. “I’s niver wonder but
|
||
he’s at t’ bothom of a bog-hoile. This visitation worn’t for nowt, and
|
||
I wod hev’ ye to look out, Miss—yah muh be t’ next. Thank Hivin for
|
||
all! All warks togither for gooid to them as is chozzen, and piked out
|
||
fro’ th’ rubbidge! Yah knaw whet t’ Scripture ses.” And he began
|
||
quoting several texts, referring us to chapters and verses where we
|
||
might find them.
|
||
|
||
I, having vainly begged the wilful girl to rise and remove her wet
|
||
things, left him preaching and her shivering, and betook myself to bed
|
||
with little Hareton, who slept as fast as if everyone had been sleeping
|
||
round him. I heard Joseph read on a while afterwards; then I
|
||
distinguished his slow step on the ladder, and then I dropped asleep.
|
||
|
||
Coming down somewhat later than usual, I saw, by the sunbeams piercing
|
||
the chinks of the shutters, Miss Catherine still seated near the
|
||
fireplace. The house-door was ajar, too; light entered from its
|
||
unclosed windows; Hindley had come out, and stood on the kitchen
|
||
hearth, haggard and drowsy.
|
||
|
||
“What ails you, Cathy?” he was saying when I entered: “you look as
|
||
dismal as a drowned whelp. Why are you so damp and pale, child?”
|
||
|
||
“I’ve been wet,” she answered reluctantly, “and I’m cold, that’s all.”
|
||
|
||
“Oh, she is naughty!” I cried, perceiving the master to be tolerably
|
||
sober. “She got steeped in the shower of yesterday evening, and there
|
||
she has sat the night through, and I couldn’t prevail on her to stir.”
|
||
|
||
Mr. Earnshaw stared at us in surprise. “The night through,” he
|
||
repeated. “What kept her up? not fear of the thunder, surely? That was
|
||
over hours since.”
|
||
|
||
Neither of us wished to mention Heathcliff’s absence, as long as we
|
||
could conceal it; so I replied, I didn’t know how she took it into her
|
||
head to sit up; and she said nothing. The morning was fresh and cool; I
|
||
threw back the lattice, and presently the room filled with sweet scents
|
||
from the garden; but Catherine called peevishly to me, “Ellen, shut the
|
||
window. I’m starving!” And her teeth chattered as she shrank closer to
|
||
the almost extinguished embers.
|
||
|
||
“She’s ill,” said Hindley, taking her wrist; “I suppose that’s the
|
||
reason she would not go to bed. Damn it! I don’t want to be troubled
|
||
with more sickness here. What took you into the rain?”
|
||
|
||
“Running after t’ lads, as usuald!” croaked Joseph, catching an
|
||
opportunity from our hesitation to thrust in his evil tongue. “If I war
|
||
yah, maister, I’d just slam t’ boards i’ their faces all on ’em, gentle
|
||
and simple! Never a day ut yah’re off, but yon cat o’ Linton comes
|
||
sneaking hither; and Miss Nelly, shoo’s a fine lass! shoo sits watching
|
||
for ye i’ t’ kitchen; and as yah’re in at one door, he’s out at
|
||
t’other; and, then, wer grand lady goes a-courting of her side! It’s
|
||
bonny behaviour, lurking amang t’ fields, after twelve o’ t’ night, wi’
|
||
that fahl, flaysome divil of a gipsy, Heathcliff! They think _I’m_
|
||
blind; but I’m noan: nowt ut t’ soart!—I seed young Linton boath coming
|
||
and going, and I seed _yah_” (directing his discourse to me), “yah
|
||
gooid fur nowt, slattenly witch! nip up and bolt into th’ house, t’
|
||
minute yah heard t’ maister’s horse-fit clatter up t’ road.”
|
||
|
||
“Silence, eavesdropper!” cried Catherine; “none of your insolence
|
||
before me! Edgar Linton came yesterday by chance, Hindley; and it was
|
||
_I_ who told him to be off: because I knew you would not like to have
|
||
met him as you were.”
|
||
|
||
“You lie, Cathy, no doubt,” answered her brother, “and you are a
|
||
confounded simpleton! But never mind Linton at present: tell me, were
|
||
you not with Heathcliff last night? Speak the truth, now. You need not
|
||
be afraid of harming him: though I hate him as much as ever, he did me
|
||
a good turn a short time since that will make my conscience tender of
|
||
breaking his neck. To prevent it, I shall send him about his business
|
||
this very morning; and after he’s gone, I’d advise you all to look
|
||
sharp: I shall only have the more humour for you.”
|
||
|
||
“I never saw Heathcliff last night,” answered Catherine, beginning to
|
||
sob bitterly: “and if you do turn him out of doors, I’ll go with him.
|
||
But, perhaps, you’ll never have an opportunity: perhaps, he’s gone.”
|
||
Here she burst into uncontrollable grief, and the remainder of her
|
||
words were inarticulate.
|
||
|
||
Hindley lavished on her a torrent of scornful abuse, and bade her get
|
||
to her room immediately, or she shouldn’t cry for nothing! I obliged
|
||
her to obey; and I shall never forget what a scene she acted when we
|
||
reached her chamber: it terrified me. I thought she was going mad, and
|
||
I begged Joseph to run for the doctor. It proved the commencement of
|
||
delirium: Mr. Kenneth, as soon as he saw her, pronounced her
|
||
dangerously ill; she had a fever. He bled her, and he told me to let
|
||
her live on whey and water-gruel, and take care she did not throw
|
||
herself downstairs or out of the window; and then he left: for he had
|
||
enough to do in the parish, where two or three miles was the ordinary
|
||
distance between cottage and cottage.
|
||
|
||
Though I cannot say I made a gentle nurse, and Joseph and the master
|
||
were no better, and though our patient was as wearisome and headstrong
|
||
as a patient could be, she weathered it through. Old Mrs. Linton paid
|
||
us several visits, to be sure, and set things to rights, and scolded
|
||
and ordered us all; and when Catherine was convalescent, she insisted
|
||
on conveying her to Thrushcross Grange: for which deliverance we were
|
||
very grateful. But the poor dame had reason to repent of her kindness:
|
||
she and her husband both took the fever, and died within a few days of
|
||
each other.
|
||
|
||
Our young lady returned to us saucier and more passionate, and
|
||
haughtier than ever. Heathcliff had never been heard of since the
|
||
evening of the thunder-storm; and, one day, I had the misfortune, when
|
||
she had provoked me exceedingly, to lay the blame of his disappearance
|
||
on her: where indeed it belonged, as she well knew. From that period,
|
||
for several months, she ceased to hold any communication with me, save
|
||
in the relation of a mere servant. Joseph fell under a ban also: he
|
||
_would_ speak his mind, and lecture her all the same as if she were a
|
||
little girl; and she esteemed herself a woman, and our mistress, and
|
||
thought that her recent illness gave her a claim to be treated with
|
||
consideration. Then the doctor had said that she would not bear
|
||
crossing much; she ought to have her own way; and it was nothing less
|
||
than murder in her eyes for any one to presume to stand up and
|
||
contradict her. From Mr. Earnshaw and his companions she kept aloof;
|
||
and tutored by Kenneth, and serious threats of a fit that often
|
||
attended her rages, her brother allowed her whatever she pleased to
|
||
demand, and generally avoided aggravating her fiery temper. He was
|
||
rather _too_ indulgent in humouring her caprices; not from affection,
|
||
but from pride: he wished earnestly to see her bring honour to the
|
||
family by an alliance with the Lintons, and as long as she let him
|
||
alone she might trample on us like slaves, for aught he cared! Edgar
|
||
Linton, as multitudes have been before and will be after him, was
|
||
infatuated: and believed himself the happiest man alive on the day he
|
||
led her to Gimmerton Chapel, three years subsequent to his father’s
|
||
death.
|
||
|
||
Much against my inclination, I was persuaded to leave Wuthering Heights
|
||
and accompany her here. Little Hareton was nearly five years old, and I
|
||
had just begun to teach him his letters. We made a sad parting; but
|
||
Catherine’s tears were more powerful than ours. When I refused to go,
|
||
and when she found her entreaties did not move me, she went lamenting
|
||
to her husband and brother. The former offered me munificent wages; the
|
||
latter ordered me to pack up: he wanted no women in the house, he said,
|
||
now that there was no mistress; and as to Hareton, the curate should
|
||
take him in hand, by-and-by. And so I had but one choice left: to do as
|
||
I was ordered. I told the master he got rid of all decent people only
|
||
to run to ruin a little faster; I kissed Hareton, said good-by; and
|
||
since then he has been a stranger: and it’s very queer to think it, but
|
||
I’ve no doubt he has completely forgotten all about Ellen Dean, and
|
||
that he was ever more than all the world to her and she to him!
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
At this point of the housekeeper’s story she chanced to glance towards
|
||
the time-piece over the chimney; and was in amazement on seeing the
|
||
minute-hand measure half-past one. She would not hear of staying a
|
||
second longer: in truth, I felt rather disposed to defer the sequel of
|
||
her narrative myself. And now that she is vanished to her rest, and I
|
||
have meditated for another hour or two, I shall summon courage to go
|
||
also, in spite of aching laziness of head and limbs.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER X
|
||
|
||
|
||
A charming introduction to a hermit’s life! Four weeks’ torture,
|
||
tossing, and sickness! Oh, these bleak winds and bitter northern skies,
|
||
and impassable roads, and dilatory country surgeons! And oh, this
|
||
dearth of the human physiognomy! and, worse than all, the terrible
|
||
intimation of Kenneth that I need not expect to be out of doors till
|
||
spring!
|
||
|
||
Mr. Heathcliff has just honoured me with a call. About seven days ago
|
||
he sent me a brace of grouse—the last of the season. Scoundrel! He is
|
||
not altogether guiltless in this illness of mine; and that I had a
|
||
great mind to tell him. But, alas! how could I offend a man who was
|
||
charitable enough to sit at my bedside a good hour, and talk on some
|
||
other subject than pills and draughts, blisters and leeches? This is
|
||
quite an easy interval. I am too weak to read; yet I feel as if I could
|
||
enjoy something interesting. Why not have up Mrs. Dean to finish her
|
||
tale? I can recollect its chief incidents, as far as she had gone. Yes:
|
||
I remember her hero had run off, and never been heard of for three
|
||
years; and the heroine was married. I’ll ring: she’ll be delighted to
|
||
find me capable of talking cheerfully. Mrs. Dean came.
|
||
|
||
“It wants twenty minutes, sir, to taking the medicine,” she commenced.
|
||
|
||
“Away, away with it!” I replied; “I desire to have—”
|
||
|
||
“The doctor says you must drop the powders.”
|
||
|
||
“With all my heart! Don’t interrupt me. Come and take your seat here.
|
||
Keep your fingers from that bitter phalanx of vials. Draw your knitting
|
||
out of your pocket—that will do—now continue the history of Mr.
|
||
Heathcliff, from where you left off, to the present day. Did he finish
|
||
his education on the Continent, and come back a gentleman? or did he
|
||
get a sizar’s place at college, or escape to America, and earn honours
|
||
by drawing blood from his foster-country? or make a fortune more
|
||
promptly on the English highways?”
|
||
|
||
“He may have done a little in all these vocations, Mr. Lockwood; but I
|
||
couldn’t give my word for any. I stated before that I didn’t know how
|
||
he gained his money; neither am I aware of the means he took to raise
|
||
his mind from the savage ignorance into which it was sunk: but, with
|
||
your leave, I’ll proceed in my own fashion, if you think it will amuse
|
||
and not weary you. Are you feeling better this morning?”
|
||
|
||
“Much.”
|
||
|
||
“That’s good news.”
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
I got Miss Catherine and myself to Thrushcross Grange; and, to my
|
||
agreeable disappointment, she behaved infinitely better than I dared to
|
||
expect. She seemed almost over-fond of Mr. Linton; and even to his
|
||
sister she showed plenty of affection. They were both very attentive to
|
||
her comfort, certainly. It was not the thorn bending to the
|
||
honeysuckles, but the honeysuckles embracing the thorn. There were no
|
||
mutual concessions: one stood erect, and the others yielded: and who
|
||
_can_ be ill-natured and bad-tempered when they encounter neither
|
||
opposition nor indifference? I observed that Mr. Edgar had a
|
||
deep-rooted fear of ruffling her humour. He concealed it from her; but
|
||
if ever he heard me answer sharply, or saw any other servant grow
|
||
cloudy at some imperious order of hers, he would show his trouble by a
|
||
frown of displeasure that never darkened on his own account. He many a
|
||
time spoke sternly to me about my pertness; and averred that the stab
|
||
of a knife could not inflict a worse pang than he suffered at seeing
|
||
his lady vexed. Not to grieve a kind master, I learned to be less
|
||
touchy; and, for the space of half a year, the gunpowder lay as
|
||
harmless as sand, because no fire came near to explode it. Catherine
|
||
had seasons of gloom and silence now and then: they were respected with
|
||
sympathising silence by her husband, who ascribed them to an alteration
|
||
in her constitution, produced by her perilous illness; as she was never
|
||
subject to depression of spirits before. The return of sunshine was
|
||
welcomed by answering sunshine from him. I believe I may assert that
|
||
they were really in possession of deep and growing happiness.
|
||
|
||
It ended. Well, we _must_ be for ourselves in the long run; the mild
|
||
and generous are only more justly selfish than the domineering; and it
|
||
ended when circumstances caused each to feel that the one’s interest
|
||
was not the chief consideration in the other’s thoughts. On a mellow
|
||
evening in September, I was coming from the garden with a heavy basket
|
||
of apples which I had been gathering. It had got dusk, and the moon
|
||
looked over the high wall of the court, causing undefined shadows to
|
||
lurk in the corners of the numerous projecting portions of the
|
||
building. I set my burden on the house-steps by the kitchen-door, and
|
||
lingered to rest, and drew in a few more breaths of the soft, sweet
|
||
air; my eyes were on the moon, and my back to the entrance, when I
|
||
heard a voice behind me say,—“Nelly, is that you?”
|
||
|
||
It was a deep voice, and foreign in tone; yet there was something in
|
||
the manner of pronouncing my name which made it sound familiar. I
|
||
turned about to discover who spoke, fearfully; for the doors were shut,
|
||
and I had seen nobody on approaching the steps. Something stirred in
|
||
the porch; and, moving nearer, I distinguished a tall man dressed in
|
||
dark clothes, with dark face and hair. He leant against the side, and
|
||
held his fingers on the latch as if intending to open for himself. “Who
|
||
can it be?” I thought. “Mr. Earnshaw? Oh, no! The voice has no
|
||
resemblance to his.”
|
||
|
||
“I have waited here an hour,” he resumed, while I continued staring;
|
||
“and the whole of that time all round has been as still as death. I
|
||
dared not enter. You do not know me? Look, I’m not a stranger!”
|
||
|
||
A ray fell on his features; the cheeks were sallow, and half covered
|
||
with black whiskers; the brows lowering, the eyes deep-set and
|
||
singular. I remembered the eyes.
|
||
|
||
“What!” I cried, uncertain whether to regard him as a worldly visitor,
|
||
and I raised my hands in amazement. “What! you come back? Is it really
|
||
you? Is it?”
|
||
|
||
“Yes, Heathcliff,” he replied, glancing from me up to the windows,
|
||
which reflected a score of glittering moons, but showed no lights from
|
||
within. “Are they at home? where is she? Nelly, you are not glad! you
|
||
needn’t be so disturbed. Is she here? Speak! I want to have one word
|
||
with her—your mistress. Go, and say some person from Gimmerton desires
|
||
to see her.”
|
||
|
||
“How will she take it?” I exclaimed. “What will she do? The surprise
|
||
bewilders me—it will put her out of her head! And you _are_ Heathcliff!
|
||
But altered! Nay, there’s no comprehending it. Have you been for a
|
||
soldier?”
|
||
|
||
“Go and carry my message,” he interrupted, impatiently. “I’m in hell
|
||
till you do!”
|
||
|
||
He lifted the latch, and I entered; but when I got to the parlour where
|
||
Mr. and Mrs. Linton were, I could not persuade myself to proceed. At
|
||
length I resolved on making an excuse to ask if they would have the
|
||
candles lighted, and I opened the door.
|
||
|
||
They sat together in a window whose lattice lay back against the wall,
|
||
and displayed, beyond the garden trees, and the wild green park, the
|
||
valley of Gimmerton, with a long line of mist winding nearly to its top
|
||
(for very soon after you pass the chapel, as you may have noticed, the
|
||
sough that runs from the marshes joins a beck which follows the bend of
|
||
the glen). Wuthering Heights rose above this silvery vapour; but our
|
||
old house was invisible; it rather dips down on the other side. Both
|
||
the room and its occupants, and the scene they gazed on, looked
|
||
wondrously peaceful. I shrank reluctantly from performing my errand;
|
||
and was actually going away leaving it unsaid, after having put my
|
||
question about the candles, when a sense of my folly compelled me to
|
||
return, and mutter, “A person from Gimmerton wishes to see you ma’am.”
|
||
|
||
“What does he want?” asked Mrs. Linton.
|
||
|
||
“I did not question him,” I answered.
|
||
|
||
“Well, close the curtains, Nelly,” she said; “and bring up tea. I’ll be
|
||
back again directly.”
|
||
|
||
She quitted the apartment; Mr. Edgar inquired, carelessly, who it was.
|
||
|
||
“Some one mistress does not expect,” I replied. “That Heathcliff—you
|
||
recollect him, sir—who used to live at Mr. Earnshaw’s.”
|
||
|
||
“What! the gipsy—the ploughboy?” he cried. “Why did you not say so to
|
||
Catherine?”
|
||
|
||
“Hush! you must not call him by those names, master,” I said. “She’d be
|
||
sadly grieved to hear you. She was nearly heartbroken when he ran off.
|
||
I guess his return will make a jubilee to her.”
|
||
|
||
Mr. Linton walked to a window on the other side of the room that
|
||
overlooked the court. He unfastened it, and leant out. I suppose they
|
||
were below, for he exclaimed quickly: “Don’t stand there, love! Bring
|
||
the person in, if it be anyone particular.” Ere long, I heard the click
|
||
of the latch, and Catherine flew upstairs, breathless and wild; too
|
||
excited to show gladness: indeed, by her face, you would rather have
|
||
surmised an awful calamity.
|
||
|
||
“Oh, Edgar, Edgar!” she panted, flinging her arms round his neck. “Oh,
|
||
Edgar darling! Heathcliff’s come back—he is!” And she tightened her
|
||
embrace to a squeeze.
|
||
|
||
“Well, well,” cried her husband, crossly, “don’t strangle me for that!
|
||
He never struck me as such a marvellous treasure. There is no need to
|
||
be frantic!”
|
||
|
||
“I know you didn’t like him,” she answered, repressing a little the
|
||
intensity of her delight. “Yet, for my sake, you must be friends now.
|
||
Shall I tell him to come up?”
|
||
|
||
“Here,” he said, “into the parlour?”
|
||
|
||
“Where else?” she asked.
|
||
|
||
He looked vexed, and suggested the kitchen as a more suitable place for
|
||
him. Mrs. Linton eyed him with a droll expression—half angry, half
|
||
laughing at his fastidiousness.
|
||
|
||
“No,” she added, after a while; “I cannot sit in the kitchen. Set two
|
||
tables here, Ellen: one for your master and Miss Isabella, being
|
||
gentry; the other for Heathcliff and myself, being of the lower orders.
|
||
Will that please you, dear? Or must I have a fire lighted elsewhere? If
|
||
so, give directions. I’ll run down and secure my guest. I’m afraid the
|
||
joy is too great to be real!”
|
||
|
||
She was about to dart off again; but Edgar arrested her.
|
||
|
||
“_You_ bid him step up,” he said, addressing me; “and, Catherine, try
|
||
to be glad, without being absurd. The whole household need not witness
|
||
the sight of your welcoming a runaway servant as a brother.”
|
||
|
||
I descended, and found Heathcliff waiting under the porch, evidently
|
||
anticipating an invitation to enter. He followed my guidance without
|
||
waste of words, and I ushered him into the presence of the master and
|
||
mistress, whose flushed cheeks betrayed signs of warm talking. But the
|
||
lady’s glowed with another feeling when her friend appeared at the
|
||
door: she sprang forward, took both his hands, and led him to Linton;
|
||
and then she seized Linton’s reluctant fingers and crushed them into
|
||
his. Now, fully revealed by the fire and candlelight, I was amazed,
|
||
more than ever, to behold the transformation of Heathcliff. He had
|
||
grown a tall, athletic, well-formed man; beside whom my master seemed
|
||
quite slender and youth-like. His upright carriage suggested the idea
|
||
of his having been in the army. His countenance was much older in
|
||
expression and decision of feature than Mr. Linton’s; it looked
|
||
intelligent, and retained no marks of former degradation. A
|
||
half-civilised ferocity lurked yet in the depressed brows and eyes full
|
||
of black fire, but it was subdued; and his manner was even dignified:
|
||
quite divested of roughness, though too stern for grace. My master’s
|
||
surprise equalled or exceeded mine: he remained for a minute at a loss
|
||
how to address the ploughboy, as he had called him. Heathcliff dropped
|
||
his slight hand, and stood looking at him coolly till he chose to
|
||
speak.
|
||
|
||
“Sit down, sir,” he said, at length. “Mrs. Linton, recalling old times,
|
||
would have me give you a cordial reception; and, of course, I am
|
||
gratified when anything occurs to please her.”
|
||
|
||
“And I also,” answered Heathcliff, “especially if it be anything in
|
||
which I have a part. I shall stay an hour or two willingly.”
|
||
|
||
He took a seat opposite Catherine, who kept her gaze fixed on him as if
|
||
she feared he would vanish were she to remove it. He did not raise his
|
||
to her often: a quick glance now and then sufficed; but it flashed
|
||
back, each time more confidently, the undisguised delight he drank from
|
||
hers. They were too much absorbed in their mutual joy to suffer
|
||
embarrassment. Not so Mr. Edgar: he grew pale with pure annoyance: a
|
||
feeling that reached its climax when his lady rose, and stepping across
|
||
the rug, seized Heathcliff’s hands again, and laughed like one beside
|
||
herself.
|
||
|
||
“I shall think it a dream to-morrow!” she cried. “I shall not be able
|
||
to believe that I have seen, and touched, and spoken to you once more.
|
||
And yet, cruel Heathcliff! you don’t deserve this welcome. To be absent
|
||
and silent for three years, and never to think of me!”
|
||
|
||
“A little more than you have thought of me,” he murmured. “I heard of
|
||
your marriage, Cathy, not long since; and, while waiting in the yard
|
||
below, I meditated this plan—just to have one glimpse of your face, a
|
||
stare of surprise, perhaps, and pretended pleasure; afterwards settle
|
||
my score with Hindley; and then prevent the law by doing execution on
|
||
myself. Your welcome has put these ideas out of my mind; but beware of
|
||
meeting me with another aspect next time! Nay, you’ll not drive me off
|
||
again. You were really sorry for me, were you? Well, there was cause.
|
||
I’ve fought through a bitter life since I last heard your voice; and
|
||
you must forgive me, for I struggled only for you!”
|
||
|
||
“Catherine, unless we are to have cold tea, please to come to the
|
||
table,” interrupted Linton, striving to preserve his ordinary tone, and
|
||
a due measure of politeness. “Mr. Heathcliff will have a long walk,
|
||
wherever he may lodge to-night; and I’m thirsty.”
|
||
|
||
She took her post before the urn; and Miss Isabella came, summoned by
|
||
the bell; then, having handed their chairs forward, I left the room.
|
||
The meal hardly endured ten minutes. Catherine’s cup was never filled:
|
||
she could neither eat nor drink. Edgar had made a slop in his saucer,
|
||
and scarcely swallowed a mouthful. Their guest did not protract his
|
||
stay that evening above an hour longer. I asked, as he departed, if he
|
||
went to Gimmerton?
|
||
|
||
“No, to Wuthering Heights,” he answered: “Mr. Earnshaw invited me, when
|
||
I called this morning.”
|
||
|
||
Mr. Earnshaw invited _him_! and _he_ called on Mr. Earnshaw! I pondered
|
||
this sentence painfully, after he was gone. Is he turning out a bit of
|
||
a hypocrite, and coming into the country to work mischief under a
|
||
cloak? I mused: I had a presentiment in the bottom of my heart that he
|
||
had better have remained away.
|
||
|
||
About the middle of the night, I was wakened from my first nap by Mrs.
|
||
Linton gliding into my chamber, taking a seat on my bedside, and
|
||
pulling me by the hair to rouse me.
|
||
|
||
“I cannot rest, Ellen,” she said, by way of apology. “And I want some
|
||
living creature to keep me company in my happiness! Edgar is sulky,
|
||
because I’m glad of a thing that does not interest him: he refuses to
|
||
open his mouth, except to utter pettish, silly speeches; and he
|
||
affirmed I was cruel and selfish for wishing to talk when he was so
|
||
sick and sleepy. He always contrives to be sick at the least cross! I
|
||
gave a few sentences of commendation to Heathcliff, and he, either for
|
||
a headache or a pang of envy, began to cry: so I got up and left him.”
|
||
|
||
“What use is it praising Heathcliff to him?” I answered. “As lads they
|
||
had an aversion to each other, and Heathcliff would hate just as much
|
||
to hear him praised: it’s human nature. Let Mr. Linton alone about him,
|
||
unless you would like an open quarrel between them.”
|
||
|
||
“But does it not show great weakness?” pursued she. “I’m not envious: I
|
||
never feel hurt at the brightness of Isabella’s yellow hair and the
|
||
whiteness of her skin, at her dainty elegance, and the fondness all the
|
||
family exhibit for her. Even you, Nelly, if we have a dispute
|
||
sometimes, you back Isabella at once; and I yield like a foolish
|
||
mother: I call her a darling, and flatter her into a good temper. It
|
||
pleases her brother to see us cordial, and that pleases me. But they
|
||
are very much alike: they are spoiled children, and fancy the world was
|
||
made for their accommodation; and though I humour both, I think a smart
|
||
chastisement might improve them all the same.”
|
||
|
||
“You’re mistaken, Mrs. Linton,” said I. “They humour you: I know what
|
||
there would be to do if they did not. You can well afford to indulge
|
||
their passing whims as long as their business is to anticipate all your
|
||
desires. You may, however, fall out, at last, over something of equal
|
||
consequence to both sides; and then those you term weak are very
|
||
capable of being as obstinate as you.”
|
||
|
||
“And then we shall fight to the death, sha’n’t we, Nelly?” she
|
||
returned, laughing. “No! I tell you, I have such faith in Linton’s
|
||
love, that I believe I might kill him, and he wouldn’t wish to
|
||
retaliate.”
|
||
|
||
I advised her to value him the more for his affection.
|
||
|
||
“I do,” she answered, “but he needn’t resort to whining for trifles. It
|
||
is childish; and, instead of melting into tears because I said that
|
||
Heathcliff was now worthy of anyone’s regard, and it would honour the
|
||
first gentleman in the country to be his friend, he ought to have said
|
||
it for me, and been delighted from sympathy. He must get accustomed to
|
||
him, and he may as well like him: considering how Heathcliff has reason
|
||
to object to him, I’m sure he behaved excellently!”
|
||
|
||
“What do you think of his going to Wuthering Heights?” I inquired. “He
|
||
is reformed in every respect, apparently: quite a Christian: offering
|
||
the right hand of fellowship to his enemies all around!”
|
||
|
||
“He explained it,” she replied. “I wonder as much as you. He said he
|
||
called to gather information concerning me from you, supposing you
|
||
resided there still; and Joseph told Hindley, who came out and fell to
|
||
questioning him of what he had been doing, and how he had been living;
|
||
and finally, desired him to walk in. There were some persons sitting at
|
||
cards; Heathcliff joined them; my brother lost some money to him, and,
|
||
finding him plentifully supplied, he requested that he would come again
|
||
in the evening: to which he consented. Hindley is too reckless to
|
||
select his acquaintance prudently: he doesn’t trouble himself to
|
||
reflect on the causes he might have for mistrusting one whom he has
|
||
basely injured. But Heathcliff affirms his principal reason for
|
||
resuming a connection with his ancient persecutor is a wish to install
|
||
himself in quarters at walking distance from the Grange, and an
|
||
attachment to the house where we lived together; and likewise a hope
|
||
that I shall have more opportunities of seeing him there than I could
|
||
have if he settled in Gimmerton. He means to offer liberal payment for
|
||
permission to lodge at the Heights; and doubtless my brother’s
|
||
covetousness will prompt him to accept the terms: he was always greedy;
|
||
though what he grasps with one hand he flings away with the other.”
|
||
|
||
“It’s a nice place for a young man to fix his dwelling in!” said I.
|
||
“Have you no fear of the consequences, Mrs. Linton?”
|
||
|
||
“None for my friend,” she replied: “his strong head will keep him from
|
||
danger; a little for Hindley: but he can’t be made morally worse than
|
||
he is; and I stand between him and bodily harm. The event of this
|
||
evening has reconciled me to God and humanity! I had risen in angry
|
||
rebellion against Providence. Oh, I’ve endured very, very bitter
|
||
misery, Nelly! If that creature knew how bitter, he’d be ashamed to
|
||
cloud its removal with idle petulance. It was kindness for him which
|
||
induced me to bear it alone: had I expressed the agony I frequently
|
||
felt, he would have been taught to long for its alleviation as ardently
|
||
as I. However, it’s over, and I’ll take no revenge on his folly; I can
|
||
afford to suffer anything hereafter! Should the meanest thing alive
|
||
slap me on the cheek, I’d not only turn the other, but I’d ask pardon
|
||
for provoking it; and, as a proof, I’ll go make my peace with Edgar
|
||
instantly. Good-night! I’m an angel!”
|
||
|
||
In this self-complacent conviction she departed; and the success of her
|
||
fulfilled resolution was obvious on the morrow: Mr. Linton had not only
|
||
abjured his peevishness (though his spirits seemed still subdued by
|
||
Catherine’s exuberance of vivacity), but he ventured no objection to
|
||
her taking Isabella with her to Wuthering Heights in the afternoon; and
|
||
she rewarded him with such a summer of sweetness and affection in
|
||
return as made the house a paradise for several days; both master and
|
||
servants profiting from the perpetual sunshine.
|
||
|
||
Heathcliff—Mr. Heathcliff I should say in future—used the liberty of
|
||
visiting at Thrushcross Grange cautiously, at first: he seemed
|
||
estimating how far its owner would bear his intrusion. Catherine, also,
|
||
deemed it judicious to moderate her expressions of pleasure in
|
||
receiving him; and he gradually established his right to be expected.
|
||
He retained a great deal of the reserve for which his boyhood was
|
||
remarkable; and that served to repress all startling demonstrations of
|
||
feeling. My master’s uneasiness experienced a lull, and further
|
||
circumstances diverted it into another channel for a space.
|
||
|
||
His new source of trouble sprang from the not anticipated misfortune of
|
||
Isabella Linton evincing a sudden and irresistible attraction towards
|
||
the tolerated guest. She was at that time a charming young lady of
|
||
eighteen; infantile in manners, though possessed of keen wit, keen
|
||
feelings, and a keen temper, too, if irritated. Her brother, who loved
|
||
her tenderly, was appalled at this fantastic preference. Leaving aside
|
||
the degradation of an alliance with a nameless man, and the possible
|
||
fact that his property, in default of heirs male, might pass into such
|
||
a one’s power, he had sense to comprehend Heathcliff’s disposition: to
|
||
know that, though his exterior was altered, his mind was unchangeable
|
||
and unchanged. And he dreaded that mind: it revolted him: he shrank
|
||
forebodingly from the idea of committing Isabella to its keeping. He
|
||
would have recoiled still more had he been aware that her attachment
|
||
rose unsolicited, and was bestowed where it awakened no reciprocation
|
||
of sentiment; for the minute he discovered its existence he laid the
|
||
blame on Heathcliff’s deliberate designing.
|
||
|
||
We had all remarked, during some time, that Miss Linton fretted and
|
||
pined over something. She grew cross and wearisome; snapping at and
|
||
teasing Catherine continually, at the imminent risk of exhausting her
|
||
limited patience. We excused her, to a certain extent, on the plea of
|
||
ill-health: she was dwindling and fading before our eyes. But one day,
|
||
when she had been peculiarly wayward, rejecting her breakfast,
|
||
complaining that the servants did not do what she told them; that the
|
||
mistress would allow her to be nothing in the house, and Edgar
|
||
neglected her; that she had caught a cold with the doors being left
|
||
open, and we let the parlour fire go out on purpose to vex her, with a
|
||
hundred yet more frivolous accusations, Mrs. Linton peremptorily
|
||
insisted that she should get to bed; and, having scolded her heartily,
|
||
threatened to send for the doctor. Mention of Kenneth caused her to
|
||
exclaim, instantly, that her health was perfect, and it was only
|
||
Catherine’s harshness which made her unhappy.
|
||
|
||
“How can you say I am harsh, you naughty fondling?” cried the mistress,
|
||
amazed at the unreasonable assertion. “You are surely losing your
|
||
reason. When have I been harsh, tell me?”
|
||
|
||
“Yesterday,” sobbed Isabella, “and now!”
|
||
|
||
“Yesterday!” said her sister-in-law. “On what occasion?”
|
||
|
||
“In our walk along the moor: you told me to ramble where I pleased,
|
||
while you sauntered on with Mr. Heathcliff!”
|
||
|
||
“And that’s your notion of harshness?” said Catherine, laughing. “It
|
||
was no hint that your company was superfluous; we didn’t care whether
|
||
you kept with us or not; I merely thought Heathcliff’s talk would have
|
||
nothing entertaining for your ears.”
|
||
|
||
“Oh, no,” wept the young lady; “you wished me away, because you knew I
|
||
liked to be there!”
|
||
|
||
“Is she sane?” asked Mrs. Linton, appealing to me. “I’ll repeat our
|
||
conversation, word for word, Isabella; and you point out any charm it
|
||
could have had for you.”
|
||
|
||
“I don’t mind the conversation,” she answered: “I wanted to be with—”
|
||
|
||
“Well?” said Catherine, perceiving her hesitate to complete the
|
||
sentence.
|
||
|
||
“With him: and I won’t be always sent off!” she continued, kindling up.
|
||
“You are a dog in the manger, Cathy, and desire no one to be loved but
|
||
yourself!”
|
||
|
||
“You are an impertinent little monkey!” exclaimed Mrs. Linton, in
|
||
surprise. “But I’ll not believe this idiocy! It is impossible that you
|
||
can covet the admiration of Heathcliff—that you consider him an
|
||
agreeable person! I hope I have misunderstood you, Isabella?”
|
||
|
||
“No, you have not,” said the infatuated girl. “I love him more than
|
||
ever you loved Edgar, and he might love me, if you would let him!”
|
||
|
||
“I wouldn’t be you for a kingdom, then!” Catherine declared,
|
||
emphatically: and she seemed to speak sincerely. “Nelly, help me to
|
||
convince her of her madness. Tell her what Heathcliff is: an
|
||
unreclaimed creature, without refinement, without cultivation; an arid
|
||
wilderness of furze and whinstone. I’d as soon put that little canary
|
||
into the park on a winter’s day, as recommend you to bestow your heart
|
||
on him! It is deplorable ignorance of his character, child, and nothing
|
||
else, which makes that dream enter your head. Pray, don’t imagine that
|
||
he conceals depths of benevolence and affection beneath a stern
|
||
exterior! He’s not a rough diamond—a pearl-containing oyster of a
|
||
rustic: he’s a fierce, pitiless, wolfish man. I never say to him, ‘Let
|
||
this or that enemy alone, because it would be ungenerous or cruel to
|
||
harm them;’ I say, ‘Let them alone, because _I_ should hate them to be
|
||
wronged:’ and he’d crush you like a sparrow’s egg, Isabella, if he
|
||
found you a troublesome charge. I know he couldn’t love a Linton; and
|
||
yet he’d be quite capable of marrying your fortune and expectations:
|
||
avarice is growing with him a besetting sin. There’s my picture: and
|
||
I’m his friend—so much so, that had he thought seriously to catch you,
|
||
I should, perhaps, have held my tongue, and let you fall into his
|
||
trap.”
|
||
|
||
Miss Linton regarded her sister-in-law with indignation.
|
||
|
||
“For shame! for shame!” she repeated, angrily. “You are worse than
|
||
twenty foes, you poisonous friend!”
|
||
|
||
“Ah! you won’t believe me, then?” said Catherine. “You think I speak
|
||
from wicked selfishness?”
|
||
|
||
“I’m certain you do,” retorted Isabella; “and I shudder at you!”
|
||
|
||
“Good!” cried the other. “Try for yourself, if that be your spirit: I
|
||
have done, and yield the argument to your saucy insolence.”—
|
||
|
||
“And I must suffer for her egotism!” she sobbed, as Mrs. Linton left
|
||
the room. “All, all is against me: she has blighted my single
|
||
consolation. But she uttered falsehoods, didn’t she? Mr. Heathcliff is
|
||
not a fiend: he has an honourable soul, and a true one, or how could he
|
||
remember her?”
|
||
|
||
“Banish him from your thoughts, Miss,” I said. “He’s a bird of bad
|
||
omen: no mate for you. Mrs. Linton spoke strongly, and yet I can’t
|
||
contradict her. She is better acquainted with his heart than I, or any
|
||
one besides; and she never would represent him as worse than he is.
|
||
Honest people don’t hide their deeds. How has he been living? how has
|
||
he got rich? why is he staying at Wuthering Heights, the house of a man
|
||
whom he abhors? They say Mr. Earnshaw is worse and worse since he came.
|
||
They sit up all night together continually, and Hindley has been
|
||
borrowing money on his land, and does nothing but play and drink: I
|
||
heard only a week ago—it was Joseph who told me—I met him at Gimmerton:
|
||
‘Nelly,’ he said, ‘we’s hae a crowner’s ’quest enow, at ahr folks’. One
|
||
on ’em ’s a’most getten his finger cut off wi’ hauding t’ other fro’
|
||
stickin’ hisseln loike a cawlf. That’s maister, yah knaw, ’at ’s soa
|
||
up o’ going tuh t’ grand ’sizes. He’s noan feared o’ t’ bench o’
|
||
judges, norther Paul, nur Peter, nur John, nur Matthew, nor noan on
|
||
’em, not he! He fair likes—he langs to set his brazened face agean ’em!
|
||
And yon bonny lad Heathcliff, yah mind, he’s a rare ’un. He can girn a
|
||
laugh as well ’s onybody at a raight divil’s jest. Does he niver say
|
||
nowt of his fine living amang us, when he goes to t’ Grange? This is t’
|
||
way on ’t:—up at sun-down: dice, brandy, cloised shutters, und
|
||
can’le-light till next day at noon: then, t’ fooil gangs banning un
|
||
raving to his cham’er, makking dacent fowks dig thur fingers i’ thur
|
||
lugs fur varry shame; un’ the knave, why he can caint his brass, un’
|
||
ate, un’ sleep, un’ off to his neighbour’s to gossip wi’ t’ wife. I’
|
||
course, he tells Dame Catherine how her fathur’s goold runs into his
|
||
pocket, and her fathur’s son gallops down t’ broad road, while he flees
|
||
afore to oppen t’ pikes!’ Now, Miss Linton, Joseph is an old rascal,
|
||
but no liar; and, if his account of Heathcliff’s conduct be true, you
|
||
would never think of desiring such a husband, would you?”
|
||
|
||
“You are leagued with the rest, Ellen!” she replied. “I’ll not listen
|
||
to your slanders. What malevolence you must have to wish to convince me
|
||
that there is no happiness in the world!”
|
||
|
||
Whether she would have got over this fancy if left to herself, or
|
||
persevered in nursing it perpetually, I cannot say: she had little time
|
||
to reflect. The day after, there was a justice-meeting at the next
|
||
town; my master was obliged to attend; and Mr. Heathcliff, aware of his
|
||
absence, called rather earlier than usual. Catherine and Isabella were
|
||
sitting in the library, on hostile terms, but silent: the latter
|
||
alarmed at her recent indiscretion, and the disclosure she had made of
|
||
her secret feelings in a transient fit of passion; the former, on
|
||
mature consideration, really offended with her companion; and, if she
|
||
laughed again at her pertness, inclined to make it no laughing matter
|
||
to _her_. She did laugh as she saw Heathcliff pass the window. I was
|
||
sweeping the hearth, and I noticed a mischievous smile on her lips.
|
||
Isabella, absorbed in her meditations, or a book, remained till the
|
||
door opened; and it was too late to attempt an escape, which she would
|
||
gladly have done had it been practicable.
|
||
|
||
“Come in, that’s right!” exclaimed the mistress, gaily, pulling a chair
|
||
to the fire. “Here are two people sadly in need of a third to thaw the
|
||
ice between them; and you are the very one we should both of us choose.
|
||
Heathcliff, I’m proud to show you, at last, somebody that dotes on you
|
||
more than myself. I expect you to feel flattered. Nay, it’s not Nelly;
|
||
don’t look at her! My poor little sister-in-law is breaking her heart
|
||
by mere contemplation of your physical and moral beauty. It lies in
|
||
your own power to be Edgar’s brother! No, no, Isabella, you sha’n’t run
|
||
off,” she continued, arresting, with feigned playfulness, the
|
||
confounded girl, who had risen indignantly. “We were quarrelling like
|
||
cats about you, Heathcliff; and I was fairly beaten in protestations of
|
||
devotion and admiration: and, moreover, I was informed that if I would
|
||
but have the manners to stand aside, my rival, as she will have herself
|
||
to be, would shoot a shaft into your soul that would fix you for ever,
|
||
and send my image into eternal oblivion!”
|
||
|
||
“Catherine!” said Isabella, calling up her dignity, and disdaining to
|
||
struggle from the tight grasp that held her, “I’d thank you to adhere
|
||
to the truth and not slander me, even in joke! Mr. Heathcliff, be kind
|
||
enough to bid this friend of yours release me: she forgets that you and
|
||
I are not intimate acquaintances; and what amuses her is painful to me
|
||
beyond expression.”
|
||
|
||
As the guest answered nothing, but took his seat, and looked thoroughly
|
||
indifferent what sentiments she cherished concerning him, she turned
|
||
and whispered an earnest appeal for liberty to her tormentor.
|
||
|
||
“By no means!” cried Mrs. Linton in answer. “I won’t be named a dog in
|
||
the manger again. You _shall_ stay: now then! Heathcliff, why don’t you
|
||
evince satisfaction at my pleasant news? Isabella swears that the love
|
||
Edgar has for me is nothing to that she entertains for you. I’m sure
|
||
she made some speech of the kind; did she not, Ellen? And she has
|
||
fasted ever since the day before yesterday’s walk, from sorrow and rage
|
||
that I despatched her out of your society under the idea of its being
|
||
unacceptable.”
|
||
|
||
“I think you belie her,” said Heathcliff, twisting his chair to face
|
||
them. “She wishes to be out of my society now, at any rate!”
|
||
|
||
And he stared hard at the object of discourse, as one might do at a
|
||
strange repulsive animal: a centipede from the Indies, for instance,
|
||
which curiosity leads one to examine in spite of the aversion it
|
||
raises. The poor thing couldn’t bear that; she grew white and red in
|
||
rapid succession, and, while tears beaded her lashes, bent the strength
|
||
of her small fingers to loosen the firm clutch of Catherine; and
|
||
perceiving that as fast as she raised one finger off her arm another
|
||
closed down, and she could not remove the whole together, she began to
|
||
make use of her nails; and their sharpness presently ornamented the
|
||
detainer’s with crescents of red.
|
||
|
||
“There’s a tigress!” exclaimed Mrs. Linton, setting her free, and
|
||
shaking her hand with pain. “Begone, for God’s sake, and hide your
|
||
vixen face! How foolish to reveal those talons to _him_. Can’t you
|
||
fancy the conclusions he’ll draw? Look, Heathcliff! they are
|
||
instruments that will do execution—you must beware of your eyes.”
|
||
|
||
“I’d wrench them off her fingers, if they ever menaced me,” he
|
||
answered, brutally, when the door had closed after her. “But what did
|
||
you mean by teasing the creature in that manner, Cathy? You were not
|
||
speaking the truth, were you?”
|
||
|
||
“I assure you I was,” she returned. “She has been dying for your sake
|
||
several weeks, and raving about you this morning, and pouring forth a
|
||
deluge of abuse, because I represented your failings in a plain light,
|
||
for the purpose of mitigating her adoration. But don’t notice it
|
||
further: I wished to punish her sauciness, that’s all. I like her too
|
||
well, my dear Heathcliff, to let you absolutely seize and devour her
|
||
up.”
|
||
|
||
“And I like her too ill to attempt it,” said he, “except in a very
|
||
ghoulish fashion. You’d hear of odd things if I lived alone with that
|
||
mawkish, waxen face: the most ordinary would be painting on its white
|
||
the colours of the rainbow, and turning the blue eyes black, every day
|
||
or two: they detestably resemble Linton’s.”
|
||
|
||
“Delectably!” observed Catherine. “They are dove’s eyes—angel’s!”
|
||
|
||
“She’s her brother’s heir, is she not?” he asked, after a brief
|
||
silence.
|
||
|
||
“I should be sorry to think so,” returned his companion. “Half a dozen
|
||
nephews shall erase her title, please heaven! Abstract your mind from
|
||
the subject at present: you are too prone to covet your neighbour’s
|
||
goods; remember _this_ neighbour’s goods are mine.”
|
||
|
||
“If they were _mine_, they would be none the less that,” said
|
||
Heathcliff; “but though Isabella Linton may be silly, she is scarcely
|
||
mad; and, in short, we’ll dismiss the matter, as you advise.”
|
||
|
||
From their tongues they did dismiss it; and Catherine, probably, from
|
||
her thoughts. The other, I felt certain, recalled it often in the
|
||
course of the evening. I saw him smile to himself—grin rather—and lapse
|
||
into ominous musing whenever Mrs. Linton had occasion to be absent from
|
||
the apartment.
|
||
|
||
I determined to watch his movements. My heart invariably cleaved to the
|
||
master’s, in preference to Catherine’s side: with reason I imagined,
|
||
for he was kind, and trustful, and honourable; and she—she could not be
|
||
called the _opposite_, yet she seemed to allow herself such wide
|
||
latitude, that I had little faith in her principles, and still less
|
||
sympathy for her feelings. I wanted something to happen which might
|
||
have the effect of freeing both Wuthering Heights and the Grange of Mr.
|
||
Heathcliff, quietly; leaving us as we had been prior to his advent. His
|
||
visits were a continual nightmare to me; and, I suspected, to my master
|
||
also. His abode at the Heights was an oppression past explaining. I
|
||
felt that God had forsaken the stray sheep there to its own wicked
|
||
wanderings, and an evil beast prowled between it and the fold, waiting
|
||
his time to spring and destroy.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XI
|
||
|
||
|
||
Sometimes, while meditating on these things in solitude, I’ve got up in
|
||
a sudden terror, and put on my bonnet to go see how all was at the
|
||
farm. I’ve persuaded my conscience that it was a duty to warn him how
|
||
people talked regarding his ways; and then I’ve recollected his
|
||
confirmed bad habits, and, hopeless of benefiting him, have flinched
|
||
from re-entering the dismal house, doubting if I could bear to be taken
|
||
at my word.
|
||
|
||
One time I passed the old gate, going out of my way, on a journey to
|
||
Gimmerton. It was about the period that my narrative has reached: a
|
||
bright frosty afternoon; the ground bare, and the road hard and dry. I
|
||
came to a stone where the highway branches off on to the moor at your
|
||
left hand; a rough sand-pillar, with the letters W. H. cut on its north
|
||
side, on the east, G., and on the south-west, T. G. It serves as a
|
||
guide-post to the Grange, the Heights, and village. The sun shone
|
||
yellow on its grey head, reminding me of summer; and I cannot say why,
|
||
but all at once a gush of child’s sensations flowed into my heart.
|
||
Hindley and I held it a favourite spot twenty years before. I gazed
|
||
long at the weather-worn block; and, stooping down, perceived a hole
|
||
near the bottom still full of snail-shells and pebbles, which we were
|
||
fond of storing there with more perishable things; and, as fresh as
|
||
reality, it appeared that I beheld my early playmate seated on the
|
||
withered turf: his dark, square head bent forward, and his little hand
|
||
scooping out the earth with a piece of slate. “Poor Hindley!” I
|
||
exclaimed, involuntarily. I started: my bodily eye was cheated into a
|
||
momentary belief that the child lifted its face and stared straight
|
||
into mine! It vanished in a twinkling; but immediately I felt an
|
||
irresistible yearning to be at the Heights. Superstition urged me to
|
||
comply with this impulse: supposing he should be dead! I thought—or
|
||
should die soon!—supposing it were a sign of death! The nearer I got to
|
||
the house the more agitated I grew; and on catching sight of it I
|
||
trembled in every limb. The apparition had outstripped me: it stood
|
||
looking through the gate. That was my first idea on observing an
|
||
elf-locked, brown-eyed boy setting his ruddy countenance against the
|
||
bars. Further reflection suggested this must be Hareton, _my_ Hareton,
|
||
not altered greatly since I left him, ten months since.
|
||
|
||
“God bless thee, darling!” I cried, forgetting instantaneously my
|
||
foolish fears. “Hareton, it’s Nelly! Nelly, thy nurse.”
|
||
|
||
He retreated out of arm’s length, and picked up a large flint.
|
||
|
||
“I am come to see thy father, Hareton,” I added, guessing from the
|
||
action that Nelly, if she lived in his memory at all, was not
|
||
recognised as one with me.
|
||
|
||
He raised his missile to hurl it; I commenced a soothing speech, but
|
||
could not stay his hand: the stone struck my bonnet; and then ensued,
|
||
from the stammering lips of the little fellow, a string of curses,
|
||
which, whether he comprehended them or not, were delivered with
|
||
practised emphasis, and distorted his baby features into a shocking
|
||
expression of malignity. You may be certain this grieved more than
|
||
angered me. Fit to cry, I took an orange from my pocket, and offered it
|
||
to propitiate him. He hesitated, and then snatched it from my hold; as
|
||
if he fancied I only intended to tempt and disappoint him. I showed
|
||
another, keeping it out of his reach.
|
||
|
||
“Who has taught you those fine words, my bairn?” I inquired. “The
|
||
curate?”
|
||
|
||
“Damn the curate, and thee! Gie me that,” he replied.
|
||
|
||
“Tell us where you got your lessons, and you shall have it,” said I.
|
||
“Who’s your master?”
|
||
|
||
“Devil daddy,” was his answer.
|
||
|
||
“And what do you learn from daddy?” I continued.
|
||
|
||
He jumped at the fruit; I raised it higher. “What does he teach you?” I
|
||
asked.
|
||
|
||
“Naught,” said he, “but to keep out of his gait. Daddy cannot bide me,
|
||
because I swear at him.”
|
||
|
||
“Ah! and the devil teaches you to swear at daddy?” I observed.
|
||
|
||
“Ay—nay,” he drawled.
|
||
|
||
“Who, then?”
|
||
|
||
“Heathcliff.”
|
||
|
||
“I asked if he liked Mr. Heathcliff.”
|
||
|
||
“Ay!” he answered again.
|
||
|
||
Desiring to have his reasons for liking him, I could only gather the
|
||
sentences—“I known’t: he pays dad back what he gies to me—he curses
|
||
daddy for cursing me. He says I mun do as I will.”
|
||
|
||
“And the curate does not teach you to read and write, then?” I pursued.
|
||
|
||
“No, I was told the curate should have his —— teeth dashed down his ——
|
||
throat, if he stepped over the threshold—Heathcliff had promised that!”
|
||
|
||
I put the orange in his hand, and bade him tell his father that a woman
|
||
called Nelly Dean was waiting to speak with him, by the garden gate. He
|
||
went up the walk, and entered the house; but, instead of Hindley,
|
||
Heathcliff appeared on the door-stones; and I turned directly and ran
|
||
down the road as hard as ever I could race, making no halt till I
|
||
gained the guide-post, and feeling as scared as if I had raised a
|
||
goblin. This is not much connected with Miss Isabella’s affair: except
|
||
that it urged me to resolve further on mounting vigilant guard, and
|
||
doing my utmost to check the spread of such bad influence at the
|
||
Grange: even though I should wake a domestic storm, by thwarting Mrs.
|
||
Linton’s pleasure.
|
||
|
||
The next time Heathcliff came my young lady chanced to be feeding some
|
||
pigeons in the court. She had never spoken a word to her sister-in-law
|
||
for three days; but she had likewise dropped her fretful complaining,
|
||
and we found it a great comfort. Heathcliff had not the habit of
|
||
bestowing a single unnecessary civility on Miss Linton, I knew. Now, as
|
||
soon as he beheld her, his first precaution was to take a sweeping
|
||
survey of the house-front. I was standing by the kitchen-window, but I
|
||
drew out of sight. He then stepped across the pavement to her, and said
|
||
something: she seemed embarrassed, and desirous of getting away; to
|
||
prevent it, he laid his hand on her arm. She averted her face: he
|
||
apparently put some question which she had no mind to answer. There was
|
||
another rapid glance at the house, and supposing himself unseen, the
|
||
scoundrel had the impudence to embrace her.
|
||
|
||
“Judas! Traitor!” I ejaculated. “You are a hypocrite, too, are you? A
|
||
deliberate deceiver.”
|
||
|
||
“Who is, Nelly?” said Catherine’s voice at my elbow: I had been
|
||
over-intent on watching the pair outside to mark her entrance.
|
||
|
||
“Your worthless friend!” I answered, warmly: “the sneaking rascal
|
||
yonder. Ah, he has caught a glimpse of us—he is coming in! I wonder
|
||
will he have the heart to find a plausible excuse for making love to
|
||
Miss, when he told you he hated her?”
|
||
|
||
Mrs. Linton saw Isabella tear herself free, and run into the garden;
|
||
and a minute after, Heathcliff opened the door. I couldn’t withhold
|
||
giving some loose to my indignation; but Catherine angrily insisted on
|
||
silence, and threatened to order me out of the kitchen, if I dared to
|
||
be so presumptuous as to put in my insolent tongue.
|
||
|
||
“To hear you, people might think you were the mistress!” she cried.
|
||
“You want setting down in your right place! Heathcliff, what are you
|
||
about, raising this stir? I said you must let Isabella alone!—I beg you
|
||
will, unless you are tired of being received here, and wish Linton to
|
||
draw the bolts against you!”
|
||
|
||
“God forbid that he should try!” answered the black villain. I detested
|
||
him just then. “God keep him meek and patient! Every day I grow madder
|
||
after sending him to heaven!”
|
||
|
||
“Hush!” said Catherine, shutting the inner door. “Don’t vex me. Why
|
||
have you disregarded my request? Did she come across you on purpose?”
|
||
|
||
“What is it to you?” he growled. “I have a right to kiss her, if she
|
||
chooses; and you have no right to object. I am not _your_ husband:
|
||
_you_ needn’t be jealous of me!”
|
||
|
||
“I’m not jealous of you,” replied the mistress; “I’m jealous for you.
|
||
Clear your face: you sha’n’t scowl at me! If you like Isabella, you
|
||
shall marry her. But do you like her? Tell the truth, Heathcliff!
|
||
There, you won’t answer. I’m certain you don’t.”
|
||
|
||
“And would Mr. Linton approve of his sister marrying that man?” I
|
||
inquired.
|
||
|
||
“Mr. Linton should approve,” returned my lady, decisively.
|
||
|
||
“He might spare himself the trouble,” said Heathcliff: “I could do as
|
||
well without his approbation. And as to you, Catherine, I have a mind
|
||
to speak a few words now, while we are at it. I want you to be aware
|
||
that I _know_ you have treated me infernally—infernally! Do you hear?
|
||
And if you flatter yourself that I don’t perceive it, you are a fool;
|
||
and if you think I can be consoled by sweet words, you are an idiot:
|
||
and if you fancy I’ll suffer unrevenged, I’ll convince you of the
|
||
contrary, in a very little while! Meantime, thank you for telling me
|
||
your sister-in-law’s secret: I swear I’ll make the most of it. And
|
||
stand you aside!”
|
||
|
||
“What new phase of his character is this?” exclaimed Mrs. Linton, in
|
||
amazement. “I’ve treated you infernally—and you’ll take your revenge!
|
||
How will you take it, ungrateful brute? How have I treated you
|
||
infernally?”
|
||
|
||
“I seek no revenge on you,” replied Heathcliff, less vehemently.
|
||
“That’s not the plan. The tyrant grinds down his slaves and they don’t
|
||
turn against him; they crush those beneath them. You are welcome to
|
||
torture me to death for your amusement, only allow me to amuse myself a
|
||
little in the same style, and refrain from insult as much as you are
|
||
able. Having levelled my palace, don’t erect a hovel and complacently
|
||
admire your own charity in giving me that for a home. If I imagined you
|
||
really wished me to marry Isabel, I’d cut my throat!”
|
||
|
||
“Oh, the evil is that I am _not_ jealous, is it?” cried Catherine.
|
||
“Well, I won’t repeat my offer of a wife: it is as bad as offering
|
||
Satan a lost soul. Your bliss lies, like his, in inflicting misery. You
|
||
prove it. Edgar is restored from the ill-temper he gave way to at your
|
||
coming; I begin to be secure and tranquil; and you, restless to know us
|
||
at peace, appear resolved on exciting a quarrel. Quarrel with Edgar, if
|
||
you please, Heathcliff, and deceive his sister: you’ll hit on exactly
|
||
the most efficient method of revenging yourself on me.”
|
||
|
||
The conversation ceased. Mrs. Linton sat down by the fire, flushed and
|
||
gloomy. The spirit which served her was growing intractable: she could
|
||
neither lay nor control it. He stood on the hearth with folded arms,
|
||
brooding on his evil thoughts; and in this position I left them to seek
|
||
the master, who was wondering what kept Catherine below so long.
|
||
|
||
“Ellen,” said he, when I entered, “have you seen your mistress?”
|
||
|
||
“Yes; she’s in the kitchen, sir,” I answered. “She’s sadly put out by
|
||
Mr. Heathcliff’s behaviour: and, indeed, I do think it’s time to
|
||
arrange his visits on another footing. There’s harm in being too soft,
|
||
and now it’s come to this—.” And I related the scene in the court, and,
|
||
as near as I dared, the whole subsequent dispute. I fancied it could
|
||
not be very prejudicial to Mrs. Linton; unless she made it so
|
||
afterwards, by assuming the defensive for her guest. Edgar Linton had
|
||
difficulty in hearing me to the close. His first words revealed that he
|
||
did not clear his wife of blame.
|
||
|
||
“This is insufferable!” he exclaimed. “It is disgraceful that she
|
||
should own him for a friend, and force his company on me! Call me two
|
||
men out of the hall, Ellen. Catherine shall linger no longer to argue
|
||
with the low ruffian—I have humoured her enough.”
|
||
|
||
He descended, and bidding the servants wait in the passage, went,
|
||
followed by me, to the kitchen. Its occupants had recommenced their
|
||
angry discussion: Mrs. Linton, at least, was scolding with renewed
|
||
vigour; Heathcliff had moved to the window, and hung his head, somewhat
|
||
cowed by her violent rating apparently. He saw the master first, and
|
||
made a hasty motion that she should be silent; which she obeyed,
|
||
abruptly, on discovering the reason of his intimation.
|
||
|
||
“How is this?” said Linton, addressing her; “what notion of propriety
|
||
must you have to remain here, after the language which has been held to
|
||
you by that blackguard? I suppose, because it is his ordinary talk you
|
||
think nothing of it: you are habituated to his baseness, and, perhaps,
|
||
imagine I can get used to it too!”
|
||
|
||
“Have you been listening at the door, Edgar?” asked the mistress, in a
|
||
tone particularly calculated to provoke her husband, implying both
|
||
carelessness and contempt of his irritation. Heathcliff, who had raised
|
||
his eyes at the former speech, gave a sneering laugh at the latter; on
|
||
purpose, it seemed, to draw Mr. Linton’s attention to him. He
|
||
succeeded; but Edgar did not mean to entertain him with any high
|
||
flights of passion.
|
||
|
||
“I’ve been so far forbearing with you, sir,” he said quietly; “not that
|
||
I was ignorant of your miserable, degraded character, but I felt you
|
||
were only partly responsible for that; and Catherine wishing to keep up
|
||
your acquaintance, I acquiesced—foolishly. Your presence is a moral
|
||
poison that would contaminate the most virtuous: for that cause, and to
|
||
prevent worse consequences, I shall deny you hereafter admission into
|
||
this house, and give notice now that I require your instant departure.
|
||
Three minutes’ delay will render it involuntary and ignominious.”
|
||
|
||
Heathcliff measured the height and breadth of the speaker with an eye
|
||
full of derision.
|
||
|
||
“Cathy, this lamb of yours threatens like a bull!” he said. “It is in
|
||
danger of splitting its skull against my knuckles. By God! Mr. Linton,
|
||
I’m mortally sorry that you are not worth knocking down!”
|
||
|
||
My master glanced towards the passage, and signed me to fetch the men:
|
||
he had no intention of hazarding a personal encounter. I obeyed the
|
||
hint; but Mrs. Linton, suspecting something, followed; and when I
|
||
attempted to call them, she pulled me back, slammed the door to, and
|
||
locked it.
|
||
|
||
“Fair means!” she said, in answer to her husband’s look of angry
|
||
surprise. “If you have not courage to attack him, make an apology, or
|
||
allow yourself to be beaten. It will correct you of feigning more
|
||
valour than you possess. No, I’ll swallow the key before you shall get
|
||
it! I’m delightfully rewarded for my kindness to each! After constant
|
||
indulgence of one’s weak nature, and the other’s bad one, I earn for
|
||
thanks two samples of blind ingratitude, stupid to absurdity! Edgar, I
|
||
was defending you and yours; and I wish Heathcliff may flog you sick,
|
||
for daring to think an evil thought of me!”
|
||
|
||
It did not need the medium of a flogging to produce that effect on the
|
||
master. He tried to wrest the key from Catherine’s grasp, and for
|
||
safety she flung it into the hottest part of the fire; whereupon Mr.
|
||
Edgar was taken with a nervous trembling, and his countenance grew
|
||
deadly pale. For his life he could not avert that excess of emotion:
|
||
mingled anguish and humiliation overcame him completely. He leant on
|
||
the back of a chair, and covered his face.
|
||
|
||
“Oh, heavens! In old days this would win you knighthood!” exclaimed
|
||
Mrs. Linton. “We are vanquished! we are vanquished! Heathcliff would as
|
||
soon lift a finger at you as the king would march his army against a
|
||
colony of mice. Cheer up! you sha’n’t be hurt! Your type is not a lamb,
|
||
it’s a sucking leveret.”
|
||
|
||
“I wish you joy of the milk-blooded coward, Cathy!” said her friend. “I
|
||
compliment you on your taste. And that is the slavering, shivering
|
||
thing you preferred to me! I would not strike him with my fist, but I’d
|
||
kick him with my foot, and experience considerable satisfaction. Is he
|
||
weeping, or is he going to faint for fear?”
|
||
|
||
The fellow approached and gave the chair on which Linton rested a push.
|
||
He’d better have kept his distance: my master quickly sprang erect, and
|
||
struck him full on the throat a blow that would have levelled a
|
||
slighter man. It took his breath for a minute; and while he choked, Mr.
|
||
Linton walked out by the back door into the yard, and from thence to
|
||
the front entrance.
|
||
|
||
“There! you’ve done with coming here,” cried Catherine. “Get away, now;
|
||
he’ll return with a brace of pistols and half-a-dozen assistants. If he
|
||
did overhear us, of course he’d never forgive you. You’ve played me an
|
||
ill turn, Heathcliff! But go—make haste! I’d rather see Edgar at bay
|
||
than you.”
|
||
|
||
“Do you suppose I’m going with that blow burning in my gullet?” he
|
||
thundered. “By hell, no! I’ll crush his ribs in like a rotten hazel-nut
|
||
before I cross the threshold! If I don’t floor him now, I shall murder
|
||
him some time; so, as you value his existence, let me get at him!”
|
||
|
||
“He is not coming,” I interposed, framing a bit of a lie. “There’s the
|
||
coachman and the two gardeners; you’ll surely not wait to be thrust
|
||
into the road by them! Each has a bludgeon; and master will, very
|
||
likely, be watching from the parlour-windows to see that they fulfil
|
||
his orders.”
|
||
|
||
The gardeners and coachman _were_ there: but Linton was with them. They
|
||
had already entered the court. Heathcliff, on the second thoughts,
|
||
resolved to avoid a struggle against three underlings: he seized the
|
||
poker, smashed the lock from the inner door, and made his escape as
|
||
they tramped in.
|
||
|
||
Mrs. Linton, who was very much excited, bade me accompany her upstairs.
|
||
She did not know my share in contributing to the disturbance, and I was
|
||
anxious to keep her in ignorance.
|
||
|
||
“I’m nearly distracted, Nelly!” she exclaimed, throwing herself on the
|
||
sofa. “A thousand smiths’ hammers are beating in my head! Tell Isabella
|
||
to shun me; this uproar is owing to her; and should she or any one else
|
||
aggravate my anger at present, I shall get wild. And, Nelly, say to
|
||
Edgar, if you see him again to-night, that I’m in danger of being
|
||
seriously ill. I wish it may prove true. He has startled and distressed
|
||
me shockingly! I want to frighten him. Besides, he might come and begin
|
||
a string of abuse or complainings; I’m certain I should recriminate,
|
||
and God knows where we should end! Will you do so, my good Nelly? You
|
||
are aware that I am no way blamable in this matter. What possessed him
|
||
to turn listener? Heathcliff’s talk was outrageous, after you left us;
|
||
but I could soon have diverted him from Isabella, and the rest meant
|
||
nothing. Now all is dashed wrong; by the fool’s craving to hear evil of
|
||
self, that haunts some people like a demon! Had Edgar never gathered
|
||
our conversation, he would never have been the worse for it. Really,
|
||
when he opened on me in that unreasonable tone of displeasure after I
|
||
had scolded Heathcliff till I was hoarse for _him;_ I did not care
|
||
hardly what they did to each other; especially as I felt that, however
|
||
the scene closed, we should all be driven asunder for nobody knows how
|
||
long! Well, if I cannot keep Heathcliff for my friend—if Edgar will be
|
||
mean and jealous, I’ll try to break their hearts by breaking my own.
|
||
That will be a prompt way of finishing all, when I am pushed to
|
||
extremity! But it’s a deed to be reserved for a forlorn hope; I’d not
|
||
take Linton by surprise with it. To this point he has been discreet in
|
||
dreading to provoke me; you must represent the peril of quitting that
|
||
policy, and remind him of my passionate temper, verging, when kindled,
|
||
on frenzy. I wish you could dismiss that apathy out of that
|
||
countenance, and look rather more anxious about me.”
|
||
|
||
The stolidity with which I received these instructions was, no doubt,
|
||
rather exasperating: for they were delivered in perfect sincerity; but
|
||
I believed a person who could plan the turning of her fits of passion
|
||
to account, beforehand, might, by exerting her will, manage to control
|
||
herself tolerably, even while under their influence; and I did not wish
|
||
to “frighten” her husband, as she said, and multiply his annoyances for
|
||
the purpose of serving her selfishness. Therefore I said nothing when I
|
||
met the master coming towards the parlour; but I took the liberty of
|
||
turning back to listen whether they would resume their quarrel
|
||
together. He began to speak first.
|
||
|
||
“Remain where you are, Catherine,” he said; without any anger in his
|
||
voice, but with much sorrowful despondency. “I shall not stay. I am
|
||
neither come to wrangle nor be reconciled; but I wish just to learn
|
||
whether, after this evening’s events, you intend to continue your
|
||
intimacy with—”
|
||
|
||
“Oh, for mercy’s sake,” interrupted the mistress, stamping her foot,
|
||
“for mercy’s sake, let us hear no more of it now! Your cold blood
|
||
cannot be worked into a fever: your veins are full of ice-water; but
|
||
mine are boiling, and the sight of such chillness makes them dance.”
|
||
|
||
“To get rid of me, answer my question,” persevered Mr. Linton. “You
|
||
_must_ answer it; and that violence does not alarm me. I have found
|
||
that you can be as stoical as anyone, when you please. Will you give up
|
||
Heathcliff hereafter, or will you give up me? It is impossible for you
|
||
to be _my_ friend and _his_ at the same time; and I absolutely
|
||
_require_ to know which you choose.”
|
||
|
||
“I require to be let alone!” exclaimed Catherine, furiously. “I demand
|
||
it! Don’t you see I can scarcely stand? Edgar, you—you leave me!”
|
||
|
||
She rang the bell till it broke with a twang; I entered leisurely. It
|
||
was enough to try the temper of a saint, such senseless, wicked rages!
|
||
There she lay dashing her head against the arm of the sofa, and
|
||
grinding her teeth, so that you might fancy she would crash them to
|
||
splinters! Mr. Linton stood looking at her in sudden compunction and
|
||
fear. He told me to fetch some water. She had no breath for speaking. I
|
||
brought a glass full; and as she would not drink, I sprinkled it on her
|
||
face. In a few seconds she stretched herself out stiff, and turned up
|
||
her eyes, while her cheeks, at once blanched and livid, assumed the
|
||
aspect of death. Linton looked terrified.
|
||
|
||
“There is nothing in the world the matter,” I whispered. I did not want
|
||
him to yield, though I could not help being afraid in my heart.
|
||
|
||
“She has blood on her lips!” he said, shuddering.
|
||
|
||
“Never mind!” I answered, tartly. And I told him how she had resolved,
|
||
previous to his coming, on exhibiting a fit of frenzy. I incautiously
|
||
gave the account aloud, and she heard me; for she started up—her hair
|
||
flying over her shoulders, her eyes flashing, the muscles of her neck
|
||
and arms standing out preternaturally. I made up my mind for broken
|
||
bones, at least; but she only glared about her for an instant, and then
|
||
rushed from the room. The master directed me to follow; I did, to her
|
||
chamber-door: she hindered me from going further by securing it against
|
||
me.
|
||
|
||
As she never offered to descend to breakfast next morning, I went to
|
||
ask whether she would have some carried up. “No!” she replied,
|
||
peremptorily. The same question was repeated at dinner and tea; and
|
||
again on the morrow after, and received the same answer. Mr. Linton, on
|
||
his part, spent his time in the library, and did not inquire concerning
|
||
his wife’s occupations. Isabella and he had had an hour’s interview,
|
||
during which he tried to elicit from her some sentiment of proper
|
||
horror for Heathcliff’s advances: but he could make nothing of her
|
||
evasive replies, and was obliged to close the examination
|
||
unsatisfactorily; adding, however, a solemn warning, that if she were
|
||
so insane as to encourage that worthless suitor, it would dissolve all
|
||
bonds of relationship between herself and him.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XII
|
||
|
||
|
||
While Miss Linton moped about the park and garden, always silent, and
|
||
almost always in tears; and her brother shut himself up among books
|
||
that he never opened—wearying, I guessed, with a continual vague
|
||
expectation that Catherine, repenting her conduct, would come of her
|
||
own accord to ask pardon, and seek a reconciliation—and _she_ fasted
|
||
pertinaciously, under the idea, probably, that at every meal Edgar was
|
||
ready to choke for her absence, and pride alone held him from running
|
||
to cast himself at her feet; I went about my household duties,
|
||
convinced that the Grange had but one sensible soul in its walls, and
|
||
that lodged in my body. I wasted no condolences on Miss, nor any
|
||
expostulations on my mistress; nor did I pay much attention to the
|
||
sighs of my master, who yearned to hear his lady’s name, since he might
|
||
not hear her voice. I determined they should come about as they pleased
|
||
for me; and though it was a tiresomely slow process, I began to rejoice
|
||
at length in a faint dawn of its progress: as I thought at first.
|
||
|
||
Mrs. Linton, on the third day, unbarred her door, and having finished
|
||
the water in her pitcher and decanter, desired a renewed supply, and a
|
||
basin of gruel, for she believed she was dying. That I set down as a
|
||
speech meant for Edgar’s ears; I believed no such thing, so I kept it
|
||
to myself and brought her some tea and dry toast. She ate and drank
|
||
eagerly, and sank back on her pillow again, clenching her hands and
|
||
groaning. “Oh, I will die,” she exclaimed, “since no one cares anything
|
||
about me. I wish I had not taken that.” Then a good while after I heard
|
||
her murmur, “No, I’ll not die—he’d be glad—he does not love me at
|
||
all—he would never miss me!”
|
||
|
||
“Did you want anything, ma’am?” I inquired, still preserving my
|
||
external composure, in spite of her ghastly countenance and strange,
|
||
exaggerated manner.
|
||
|
||
“What is that apathetic being doing?” she demanded, pushing the thick
|
||
entangled locks from her wasted face. “Has he fallen into a lethargy,
|
||
or is he dead?”
|
||
|
||
“Neither,” replied I; “if you mean Mr. Linton. He’s tolerably well, I
|
||
think, though his studies occupy him rather more than they ought: he is
|
||
continually among his books, since he has no other society.”
|
||
|
||
I should not have spoken so if I had known her true condition, but I
|
||
could not get rid of the notion that she acted a part of her disorder.
|
||
|
||
“Among his books!” she cried, confounded. “And I dying! I on the brink
|
||
of the grave! My God! does he know how I’m altered?” continued she,
|
||
staring at her reflection in a mirror hanging against the opposite
|
||
wall. “Is that Catherine Linton? He imagines me in a pet—in play,
|
||
perhaps. Cannot you inform him that it is frightful earnest? Nelly, if
|
||
it be not too late, as soon as I learn how he feels, I’ll choose
|
||
between these two: either to starve at once—that would be no punishment
|
||
unless he had a heart—or to recover, and leave the country. Are you
|
||
speaking the truth about him now? Take care. Is he actually so utterly
|
||
indifferent for my life?”
|
||
|
||
“Why, ma’am,” I answered, “the master has no idea of your being
|
||
deranged; and of course he does not fear that you will let yourself die
|
||
of hunger.”
|
||
|
||
“You think not? Cannot you tell him I will?” she returned. “Persuade
|
||
him! speak of your own mind: say you are certain I will!”
|
||
|
||
“No, you forget, Mrs. Linton,” I suggested, “that you have eaten some
|
||
food with a relish this evening, and to-morrow you will perceive its
|
||
good effects.”
|
||
|
||
“If I were only sure it would kill him,” she interrupted, “I’d kill
|
||
myself directly! These three awful nights I’ve never closed my lids—and
|
||
oh, I’ve been tormented! I’ve been haunted, Nelly! But I begin to fancy
|
||
you don’t like me. How strange! I thought, though everybody hated and
|
||
despised each other, they could not avoid loving me. And they have all
|
||
turned to enemies in a few hours. _They_ have, I’m positive; the people
|
||
_here_. How dreary to meet death, surrounded by their cold faces!
|
||
Isabella, terrified and repelled, afraid to enter the room, it would be
|
||
so dreadful to watch Catherine go. And Edgar standing solemnly by to
|
||
see it over; then offering prayers of thanks to God for restoring peace
|
||
to his house, and going back to his _books_! What in the name of all
|
||
that feels has he to do with _books_, when I am dying?”
|
||
|
||
She could not bear the notion which I had put into her head of Mr.
|
||
Linton’s philosophical resignation. Tossing about, she increased her
|
||
feverish bewilderment to madness, and tore the pillow with her teeth;
|
||
then raising herself up all burning, desired that I would open the
|
||
window. We were in the middle of winter, the wind blew strong from the
|
||
north-east, and I objected. Both the expressions flitting over her
|
||
face, and the changes of her moods, began to alarm me terribly; and
|
||
brought to my recollection her former illness, and the doctor’s
|
||
injunction that she should not be crossed. A minute previously she was
|
||
violent; now, supported on one arm, and not noticing my refusal to obey
|
||
her, she seemed to find childish diversion in pulling the feathers from
|
||
the rents she had just made, and ranging them on the sheet according to
|
||
their different species: her mind had strayed to other associations.
|
||
|
||
“That’s a turkey’s,” she murmured to herself; “and this is a wild
|
||
duck’s; and this is a pigeon’s. Ah, they put pigeons’ feathers in the
|
||
pillows—no wonder I couldn’t die! Let me take care to throw it on the
|
||
floor when I lie down. And here is a moor-cock’s; and this—I should
|
||
know it among a thousand—it’s a lapwing’s. Bonny bird; wheeling over
|
||
our heads in the middle of the moor. It wanted to get to its nest, for
|
||
the clouds had touched the swells, and it felt rain coming. This
|
||
feather was picked up from the heath, the bird was not shot: we saw its
|
||
nest in the winter, full of little skeletons. Heathcliff set a trap
|
||
over it, and the old ones dared not come. I made him promise he’d never
|
||
shoot a lapwing after that, and he didn’t. Yes, here are more! Did he
|
||
shoot my lapwings, Nelly? Are they red, any of them? Let me look.”
|
||
|
||
“Give over with that baby-work!” I interrupted, dragging the pillow
|
||
away, and turning the holes towards the mattress, for she was removing
|
||
its contents by handfuls. “Lie down and shut your eyes: you’re
|
||
wandering. There’s a mess! The down is flying about like snow.”
|
||
|
||
I went here and there collecting it.
|
||
|
||
“I see in you, Nelly,” she continued dreamily, “an aged woman: you have
|
||
grey hair and bent shoulders. This bed is the fairy cave under
|
||
Penistone Crags, and you are gathering elf-bolts to hurt our heifers;
|
||
pretending, while I am near, that they are only locks of wool. That’s
|
||
what you’ll come to fifty years hence: I know you are not so now. I’m
|
||
not wandering: you’re mistaken, or else I should believe you really
|
||
_were_ that withered hag, and I should think I _was_ under Penistone
|
||
Crags; and I’m conscious it’s night, and there are two candles on the
|
||
table making the black press shine like jet.”
|
||
|
||
“The black press? where is that?” I asked. “You are talking in your
|
||
sleep!”
|
||
|
||
“It’s against the wall, as it always is,” she replied. “It _does_
|
||
appear odd—I see a face in it!”
|
||
|
||
“There’s no press in the room, and never was,” said I, resuming my
|
||
seat, and looping up the curtain that I might watch her.
|
||
|
||
“Don’t _you_ see that face?” she inquired, gazing earnestly at the
|
||
mirror.
|
||
|
||
And say what I could, I was incapable of making her comprehend it to be
|
||
her own; so I rose and covered it with a shawl.
|
||
|
||
“It’s behind there still!” she pursued, anxiously. “And it stirred. Who
|
||
is it? I hope it will not come out when you are gone! Oh! Nelly, the
|
||
room is haunted! I’m afraid of being alone!”
|
||
|
||
I took her hand in mine, and bid her be composed; for a succession of
|
||
shudders convulsed her frame, and she _would_ keep straining her gaze
|
||
towards the glass.
|
||
|
||
“There’s nobody here!” I insisted. “It was _yourself_, Mrs. Linton: you
|
||
knew it a while since.”
|
||
|
||
“Myself!” she gasped, “and the clock is striking twelve! It’s true,
|
||
then! that’s dreadful!”
|
||
|
||
Her fingers clutched the clothes, and gathered them over her eyes. I
|
||
attempted to steal to the door with an intention of calling her
|
||
husband; but I was summoned back by a piercing shriek—the shawl had
|
||
dropped from the frame.
|
||
|
||
“Why, what _is_ the matter?” cried I. “Who is coward now? Wake up! That
|
||
is the glass—the mirror, Mrs. Linton; and you see yourself in it, and
|
||
there am I too by your side.”
|
||
|
||
Trembling and bewildered, she held me fast, but the horror gradually
|
||
passed from her countenance; its paleness gave place to a glow of
|
||
shame.
|
||
|
||
“Oh, dear! I thought I was at home,” she sighed. “I thought I was lying
|
||
in my chamber at Wuthering Heights. Because I’m weak, my brain got
|
||
confused, and I screamed unconsciously. Don’t say anything; but stay
|
||
with me. I dread sleeping: my dreams appal me.”
|
||
|
||
“A sound sleep would do you good, ma’am,” I answered: “and I hope this
|
||
suffering will prevent your trying starving again.”
|
||
|
||
“Oh, if I were but in my own bed in the old house!” she went on
|
||
bitterly, wringing her hands. “And that wind sounding in the firs by
|
||
the lattice. Do let me feel it—it comes straight down the moor—do let
|
||
me have one breath!”
|
||
|
||
To pacify her I held the casement ajar a few seconds. A cold blast
|
||
rushed through; I closed it, and returned to my post. She lay still
|
||
now, her face bathed in tears. Exhaustion of body had entirely subdued
|
||
her spirit: our fiery Catherine was no better than a wailing child.
|
||
|
||
“How long is it since I shut myself in here?” she asked, suddenly
|
||
reviving.
|
||
|
||
“It was Monday evening,” I replied, “and this is Thursday night, or
|
||
rather Friday morning, at present.”
|
||
|
||
“What! of the same week?” she exclaimed. “Only that brief time?”
|
||
|
||
“Long enough to live on nothing but cold water and ill-temper,”
|
||
observed I.
|
||
|
||
“Well, it seems a weary number of hours,” she muttered doubtfully: “it
|
||
must be more. I remember being in the parlour after they had
|
||
quarrelled, and Edgar being cruelly provoking, and me running into this
|
||
room desperate. As soon as ever I had barred the door, utter blackness
|
||
overwhelmed me, and I fell on the floor. I couldn’t explain to Edgar
|
||
how certain I felt of having a fit, or going raging mad, if he
|
||
persisted in teasing me! I had no command of tongue, or brain, and he
|
||
did not guess my agony, perhaps: it barely left me sense to try to
|
||
escape from him and his voice. Before I recovered sufficiently to see
|
||
and hear, it began to be dawn, and, Nelly, I’ll tell you what I
|
||
thought, and what has kept recurring and recurring till I feared for my
|
||
reason. I thought as I lay there, with my head against that table leg,
|
||
and my eyes dimly discerning the grey square of the window, that I was
|
||
enclosed in the oak-panelled bed at home; and my heart ached with some
|
||
great grief which, just waking, I could not recollect. I pondered, and
|
||
worried myself to discover what it could be, and, most strangely, the
|
||
whole last seven years of my life grew a blank! I did not recall that
|
||
they had been at all. I was a child; my father was just buried, and my
|
||
misery arose from the separation that Hindley had ordered between me
|
||
and Heathcliff. I was laid alone, for the first time; and, rousing from
|
||
a dismal doze after a night of weeping, I lifted my hand to push the
|
||
panels aside: it struck the table-top! I swept it along the carpet, and
|
||
then memory burst in: my late anguish was swallowed in a paroxysm of
|
||
despair. I cannot say why I felt so wildly wretched: it must have been
|
||
temporary derangement; for there is scarcely cause. But, supposing at
|
||
twelve years old I had been wrenched from the Heights, and every early
|
||
association, and my all in all, as Heathcliff was at that time, and
|
||
been converted at a stroke into Mrs. Linton, the lady of Thrushcross
|
||
Grange, and the wife of a stranger: an exile, and outcast, thenceforth,
|
||
from what had been my world. You may fancy a glimpse of the abyss where
|
||
I grovelled! Shake your head as you will, Nelly, _you_ have helped to
|
||
unsettle me! You should have spoken to Edgar, indeed you should, and
|
||
compelled him to leave me quiet! Oh, I’m burning! I wish I were out of
|
||
doors! I wish I were a girl again, half savage and hardy, and free; and
|
||
laughing at injuries, not maddening under them! Why am I so changed?
|
||
why does my blood rush into a hell of tumult at a few words? I’m sure I
|
||
should be myself were I once among the heather on those hills. Open the
|
||
window again wide: fasten it open! Quick, why don’t you move?”
|
||
|
||
“Because I won’t give you your death of cold,” I answered.
|
||
|
||
“You won’t give me a chance of life, you mean,” she said sullenly.
|
||
“However, I’m not helpless yet; I’ll open it myself.”
|
||
|
||
And sliding from the bed before I could hinder her, she crossed the
|
||
room, walking very uncertainly, threw it back, and bent out, careless
|
||
of the frosty air that cut about her shoulders as keen as a knife. I
|
||
entreated, and finally attempted to force her to retire. But I soon
|
||
found her delirious strength much surpassed mine (she _was_ delirious,
|
||
I became convinced by her subsequent actions and ravings). There was no
|
||
moon, and everything beneath lay in misty darkness: not a light gleamed
|
||
from any house, far or near; all had been extinguished long ago: and
|
||
those at Wuthering Heights were never visible—still she asserted she
|
||
caught their shining.
|
||
|
||
“Look!” she cried eagerly, “that’s my room with the candle in it, and
|
||
the trees swaying before it; and the other candle is in Joseph’s
|
||
garret. Joseph sits up late, doesn’t he? He’s waiting till I come home
|
||
that he may lock the gate. Well, he’ll wait a while yet. It’s a rough
|
||
journey, and a sad heart to travel it; and we must pass by Gimmerton
|
||
Kirk to go that journey! We’ve braved its ghosts often together, and
|
||
dared each other to stand among the graves and ask them to come. But,
|
||
Heathcliff, if I dare you now, will you venture? If you do, I’ll keep
|
||
you. I’ll not lie there by myself: they may bury me twelve feet deep,
|
||
and throw the church down over me, but I won’t rest till you are with
|
||
me. I never will!”
|
||
|
||
She paused, and resumed with a strange smile. “He’s considering—he’d
|
||
rather I’d come to him! Find a way, then! not through that kirkyard.
|
||
You are slow! Be content, you always followed me!”
|
||
|
||
Perceiving it vain to argue against her insanity, I was planning how I
|
||
could reach something to wrap about her, without quitting my hold of
|
||
herself (for I could not trust her alone by the gaping lattice), when,
|
||
to my consternation, I heard the rattle of the door-handle, and Mr.
|
||
Linton entered. He had only then come from the library; and, in passing
|
||
through the lobby, had noticed our talking and been attracted by
|
||
curiosity, or fear, to examine what it signified, at that late hour.
|
||
|
||
“Oh, sir!” I cried, checking the exclamation risen to his lips at the
|
||
sight which met him, and the bleak atmosphere of the chamber. “My poor
|
||
mistress is ill, and she quite masters me: I cannot manage her at all;
|
||
pray, come and persuade her to go to bed. Forget your anger, for she’s
|
||
hard to guide any way but her own.”
|
||
|
||
“Catherine ill?” he said, hastening to us. “Shut the window, Ellen!
|
||
Catherine! why—”
|
||
|
||
He was silent. The haggardness of Mrs. Linton’s appearance smote him
|
||
speechless, and he could only glance from her to me in horrified
|
||
astonishment.
|
||
|
||
“She’s been fretting here,” I continued, “and eating scarcely anything,
|
||
and never complaining: she would admit none of us till this evening,
|
||
and so we couldn’t inform you of her state, as we were not aware of it
|
||
ourselves; but it is nothing.”
|
||
|
||
I felt I uttered my explanations awkwardly; the master frowned. “It is
|
||
nothing, is it, Ellen Dean?” he said sternly. “You shall account more
|
||
clearly for keeping me ignorant of this!” And he took his wife in his
|
||
arms, and looked at her with anguish.
|
||
|
||
At first she gave him no glance of recognition: he was invisible to her
|
||
abstracted gaze. The delirium was not fixed, however; having weaned her
|
||
eyes from contemplating the outer darkness, by degrees she centred her
|
||
attention on him, and discovered who it was that held her.
|
||
|
||
“Ah! you are come, are you, Edgar Linton?” she said, with angry
|
||
animation. “You are one of those things that are ever found when least
|
||
wanted, and when you are wanted, never! I suppose we shall have plenty
|
||
of lamentations now—I see we shall—but they can’t keep me from my
|
||
narrow home out yonder: my resting-place, where I’m bound before spring
|
||
is over! There it is: not among the Lintons, mind, under the
|
||
chapel-roof, but in the open air, with a head-stone; and you may please
|
||
yourself whether you go to them or come to me!”
|
||
|
||
“Catherine, what have you done?” commenced the master. “Am I nothing to
|
||
you any more? Do you love that wretch Heath—”
|
||
|
||
“Hush!” cried Mrs. Linton. “Hush, this moment! You mention that name
|
||
and I end the matter instantly by a spring from the window! What you
|
||
touch at present you may have; but my soul will be on that hill-top
|
||
before you lay hands on me again. I don’t want you, Edgar: I’m past
|
||
wanting you. Return to your books. I’m glad you possess a consolation,
|
||
for all you had in me is gone.”
|
||
|
||
“Her mind wanders, sir,” I interposed. “She has been talking nonsense
|
||
the whole evening; but let her have quiet, and proper attendance, and
|
||
she’ll rally. Hereafter, we must be cautious how we vex her.”
|
||
|
||
“I desire no further advice from you,” answered Mr. Linton. “You knew
|
||
your mistress’s nature, and you encouraged me to harass her. And not to
|
||
give me one hint of how she has been these three days! It was
|
||
heartless! Months of sickness could not cause such a change!”
|
||
|
||
I began to defend myself, thinking it too bad to be blamed for
|
||
another’s wicked waywardness. “I knew Mrs. Linton’s nature to be
|
||
headstrong and domineering,” cried I: “but I didn’t know that you
|
||
wished to foster her fierce temper! I didn’t know that, to humour her,
|
||
I should wink at Mr. Heathcliff. I performed the duty of a faithful
|
||
servant in telling you, and I have got a faithful servant’s wages!
|
||
Well, it will teach me to be careful next time. Next time you may
|
||
gather intelligence for yourself!”
|
||
|
||
“The next time you bring a tale to me you shall quit my service, Ellen
|
||
Dean,” he replied.
|
||
|
||
“You’d rather hear nothing about it, I suppose, then, Mr. Linton?” said
|
||
I. “Heathcliff has your permission to come a-courting to Miss, and to
|
||
drop in at every opportunity your absence offers, on purpose to poison
|
||
the mistress against you?”
|
||
|
||
Confused as Catherine was, her wits were alert at applying our
|
||
conversation.
|
||
|
||
“Ah! Nelly has played traitor,” she exclaimed, passionately. “Nelly is
|
||
my hidden enemy. You witch! So you do seek elf-bolts to hurt us! Let me
|
||
go, and I’ll make her rue! I’ll make her howl a recantation!”
|
||
|
||
A maniac’s fury kindled under her brows; she struggled desperately to
|
||
disengage herself from Linton’s arms. I felt no inclination to tarry
|
||
the event; and, resolving to seek medical aid on my own responsibility,
|
||
I quitted the chamber.
|
||
|
||
In passing the garden to reach the road, at a place where a bridle hook
|
||
is driven into the wall, I saw something white moved irregularly,
|
||
evidently by another agent than the wind. Notwithstanding my hurry, I
|
||
stayed to examine it, lest ever after I should have the conviction
|
||
impressed on my imagination that it was a creature of the other world.
|
||
My surprise and perplexity were great on discovering, by touch more
|
||
than vision, Miss Isabella’s springer, Fanny, suspended by a
|
||
handkerchief, and nearly at its last gasp. I quickly released the
|
||
animal, and lifted it into the garden. I had seen it follow its
|
||
mistress upstairs when she went to bed; and wondered much how it could
|
||
have got out there, and what mischievous person had treated it so.
|
||
While untying the knot round the hook, it seemed to me that I
|
||
repeatedly caught the beat of horses’ feet galloping at some distance;
|
||
but there were such a number of things to occupy my reflections that I
|
||
hardly gave the circumstance a thought: though it was a strange sound,
|
||
in that place, at two o’clock in the morning.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Kenneth was fortunately just issuing from his house to see a
|
||
patient in the village as I came up the street; and my account of
|
||
Catherine Linton’s malady induced him to accompany me back immediately.
|
||
He was a plain rough man; and he made no scruple to speak his doubts of
|
||
her surviving this second attack; unless she were more submissive to
|
||
his directions than she had shown herself before.
|
||
|
||
“Nelly Dean,” said he, “I can’t help fancying there’s an extra cause
|
||
for this. What has there been to do at the Grange? We’ve odd reports up
|
||
here. A stout, hearty lass like Catherine does not fall ill for a
|
||
trifle; and that sort of people should not either. It’s hard work
|
||
bringing them through fevers, and such things. How did it begin?”
|
||
|
||
“The master will inform you,” I answered; “but you are acquainted with
|
||
the Earnshaws’ violent dispositions, and Mrs. Linton caps them all. I
|
||
may say this; it commenced in a quarrel. She was struck during a
|
||
tempest of passion with a kind of fit. That’s her account, at least:
|
||
for she flew off in the height of it, and locked herself up.
|
||
Afterwards, she refused to eat, and now she alternately raves and
|
||
remains in a half dream; knowing those about her, but having her mind
|
||
filled with all sorts of strange ideas and illusions.”
|
||
|
||
“Mr. Linton will be sorry?” observed Kenneth, interrogatively.
|
||
|
||
“Sorry? he’ll break his heart should anything happen!” I replied.
|
||
“Don’t alarm him more than necessary.”
|
||
|
||
“Well, I told him to beware,” said my companion; “and he must bide the
|
||
consequences of neglecting my warning! Hasn’t he been intimate with Mr.
|
||
Heathcliff lately?”
|
||
|
||
“Heathcliff frequently visits at the Grange,” answered I, “though more
|
||
on the strength of the mistress having known him when a boy, than
|
||
because the master likes his company. At present he’s discharged from
|
||
the trouble of calling; owing to some presumptuous aspirations after
|
||
Miss Linton which he manifested. I hardly think he’ll be taken in
|
||
again.”
|
||
|
||
“And does Miss Linton turn a cold shoulder on him?” was the doctor’s
|
||
next question.
|
||
|
||
“I’m not in her confidence,” returned I, reluctant to continue the
|
||
subject.
|
||
|
||
“No, she’s a sly one,” he remarked, shaking his head. “She keeps her
|
||
own counsel! But she’s a real little fool. I have it from good
|
||
authority that last night (and a pretty night it was!) she and
|
||
Heathcliff were walking in the plantation at the back of your house
|
||
above two hours; and he pressed her not to go in again, but just mount
|
||
his horse and away with him! My informant said she could only put him
|
||
off by pledging her word of honour to be prepared on their first
|
||
meeting after that: when it was to be he didn’t hear; but you urge Mr.
|
||
Linton to look sharp!”
|
||
|
||
This news filled me with fresh fears; I outstripped Kenneth, and ran
|
||
most of the way back. The little dog was yelping in the garden yet. I
|
||
spared a minute to open the gate for it, but instead of going to the
|
||
house door, it coursed up and down snuffing the grass, and would have
|
||
escaped to the road, had I not seized it and conveyed it in with me. On
|
||
ascending to Isabella’s room, my suspicions were confirmed: it was
|
||
empty. Had I been a few hours sooner Mrs. Linton’s illness might have
|
||
arrested her rash step. But what could be done now? There was a bare
|
||
possibility of overtaking them if pursued instantly. _I_ could not
|
||
pursue them, however; and I dared not rouse the family, and fill the
|
||
place with confusion; still less unfold the business to my master,
|
||
absorbed as he was in his present calamity, and having no heart to
|
||
spare for a second grief! I saw nothing for it but to hold my tongue,
|
||
and suffer matters to take their course; and Kenneth being arrived, I
|
||
went with a badly composed countenance to announce him. Catherine lay
|
||
in a troubled sleep: her husband had succeeded in soothing the excess
|
||
of frenzy; he now hung over her pillow, watching every shade and every
|
||
change of her painfully expressive features.
|
||
|
||
The doctor, on examining the case for himself, spoke hopefully to him
|
||
of its having a favourable termination, if we could only preserve
|
||
around her perfect and constant tranquillity. To me, he signified the
|
||
threatening danger was not so much death, as permanent alienation of
|
||
intellect.
|
||
|
||
I did not close my eyes that night, nor did Mr. Linton: indeed, we
|
||
never went to bed; and the servants were all up long before the usual
|
||
hour, moving through the house with stealthy tread, and exchanging
|
||
whispers as they encountered each other in their vocations. Every one
|
||
was active but Miss Isabella; and they began to remark how sound she
|
||
slept: her brother, too, asked if she had risen, and seemed impatient
|
||
for her presence, and hurt that she showed so little anxiety for her
|
||
sister-in-law. I trembled lest he should send me to call her; but I was
|
||
spared the pain of being the first proclaimant of her flight. One of
|
||
the maids, a thoughtless girl, who had been on an early errand to
|
||
Gimmerton, came panting upstairs, open-mouthed, and dashed into the
|
||
chamber, crying: “Oh, dear, dear! What mun we have next? Master,
|
||
master, our young lady—”
|
||
|
||
“Hold your noise!” cried I hastily, enraged at her clamorous manner.
|
||
|
||
“Speak lower, Mary—What is the matter?” said Mr. Linton. “What ails
|
||
your young lady?”
|
||
|
||
“She’s gone, she’s gone! Yon’ Heathcliff’s run off wi’ her!” gasped the
|
||
girl.
|
||
|
||
“That is not true!” exclaimed Linton, rising in agitation. “It cannot
|
||
be: how has the idea entered your head? Ellen Dean, go and seek her. It
|
||
is incredible: it cannot be.”
|
||
|
||
As he spoke he took the servant to the door, and then repeated his
|
||
demand to know her reasons for such an assertion.
|
||
|
||
“Why, I met on the road a lad that fetches milk here,” she stammered,
|
||
“and he asked whether we weren’t in trouble at the Grange. I thought he
|
||
meant for missis’s sickness, so I answered, yes. Then says he, ‘There’s
|
||
somebody gone after ’em, I guess?’ I stared. He saw I knew nought about
|
||
it, and he told how a gentleman and lady had stopped to have a horse’s
|
||
shoe fastened at a blacksmith’s shop, two miles out of Gimmerton, not
|
||
very long after midnight! and how the blacksmith’s lass had got up to
|
||
spy who they were: she knew them both directly. And she noticed the
|
||
man—Heathcliff it was, she felt certain: nob’dy could mistake him,
|
||
besides—put a sovereign in her father’s hand for payment. The lady had
|
||
a cloak about her face; but having desired a sup of water, while she
|
||
drank it fell back, and she saw her very plain. Heathcliff held both
|
||
bridles as they rode on, and they set their faces from the village, and
|
||
went as fast as the rough roads would let them. The lass said nothing
|
||
to her father, but she told it all over Gimmerton this morning.”
|
||
|
||
I ran and peeped, for form’s sake, into Isabella’s room; confirming,
|
||
when I returned, the servant’s statement. Mr. Linton had resumed his
|
||
seat by the bed; on my re-entrance, he raised his eyes, read the
|
||
meaning of my blank aspect, and dropped them without giving an order,
|
||
or uttering a word.
|
||
|
||
“Are we to try any measures for overtaking and bringing her back,” I
|
||
inquired. “How should we do?”
|
||
|
||
“She went of her own accord,” answered the master; “she had a right to
|
||
go if she pleased. Trouble me no more about her. Hereafter she is only
|
||
my sister in name: not because I disown her, but because she has
|
||
disowned me.”
|
||
|
||
And that was all he said on the subject: he did not make a single inquiry
|
||
further, or mention her in any way, except directing me to send what
|
||
property she had in the house to her fresh home, wherever it was, when
|
||
I knew it.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XIII
|
||
|
||
|
||
For two months the fugitives remained absent; in those two months, Mrs.
|
||
Linton encountered and conquered the worst shock of what was
|
||
denominated a brain fever. No mother could have nursed an only child
|
||
more devotedly than Edgar tended her. Day and night he was watching,
|
||
and patiently enduring all the annoyances that irritable nerves and a
|
||
shaken reason could inflict; and, though Kenneth remarked that what he
|
||
saved from the grave would only recompense his care by forming the
|
||
source of constant future anxiety—in fact, that his health and strength
|
||
were being sacrificed to preserve a mere ruin of humanity—he knew no
|
||
limits in gratitude and joy when Catherine’s life was declared out of
|
||
danger; and hour after hour he would sit beside her, tracing the
|
||
gradual return to bodily health, and flattering his too sanguine hopes
|
||
with the illusion that her mind would settle back to its right balance
|
||
also, and she would soon be entirely her former self.
|
||
|
||
The first time she left her chamber was at the commencement of the
|
||
following March. Mr. Linton had put on her pillow, in the morning, a
|
||
handful of golden crocuses; her eye, long stranger to any gleam of
|
||
pleasure, caught them in waking, and shone delighted as she gathered
|
||
them eagerly together.
|
||
|
||
“These are the earliest flowers at the Heights,” she exclaimed. “They
|
||
remind me of soft thaw winds, and warm sunshine, and nearly melted
|
||
snow. Edgar, is there not a south wind, and is not the snow almost
|
||
gone?”
|
||
|
||
“The snow is quite gone down here, darling,” replied her husband; “and
|
||
I only see two white spots on the whole range of moors: the sky is
|
||
blue, and the larks are singing, and the becks and brooks are all brim
|
||
full. Catherine, last spring at this time, I was longing to have you
|
||
under this roof; now, I wish you were a mile or two up those hills: the
|
||
air blows so sweetly, I feel that it would cure you.”
|
||
|
||
“I shall never be there but once more,” said the invalid; “and then
|
||
you’ll leave me, and I shall remain for ever. Next spring you’ll long
|
||
again to have me under this roof, and you’ll look back and think you
|
||
were happy to-day.”
|
||
|
||
Linton lavished on her the kindest caresses, and tried to cheer her by
|
||
the fondest words; but, vaguely regarding the flowers, she let the
|
||
tears collect on her lashes and stream down her cheeks unheeding. We
|
||
knew she was really better, and, therefore, decided that long
|
||
confinement to a single place produced much of this despondency, and it
|
||
might be partially removed by a change of scene. The master told me to
|
||
light a fire in the many-weeks’ deserted parlour, and to set an
|
||
easy-chair in the sunshine by the window; and then he brought her down,
|
||
and she sat a long while enjoying the genial heat, and, as we expected,
|
||
revived by the objects round her: which, though familiar, were free
|
||
from the dreary associations investing her hated sick chamber. By
|
||
evening she seemed greatly exhausted; yet no arguments could persuade
|
||
her to return to that apartment, and I had to arrange the parlour sofa
|
||
for her bed, till another room could be prepared. To obviate the
|
||
fatigue of mounting and descending the stairs, we fitted up this, where
|
||
you lie at present—on the same floor with the parlour; and she was soon
|
||
strong enough to move from one to the other, leaning on Edgar’s arm.
|
||
Ah, I thought myself, she might recover, so waited on as she was. And
|
||
there was double cause to desire it, for on her existence depended that
|
||
of another: we cherished the hope that in a little while Mr. Linton’s
|
||
heart would be gladdened, and his lands secured from a stranger’s
|
||
gripe, by the birth of an heir.
|
||
|
||
I should mention that Isabella sent to her brother, some six weeks from
|
||
her departure, a short note, announcing her marriage with Heathcliff.
|
||
It appeared dry and cold; but at the bottom was dotted in with pencil
|
||
an obscure apology, and an entreaty for kind remembrance and
|
||
reconciliation, if her proceeding had offended him: asserting that she
|
||
could not help it then, and being done, she had now no power to repeal
|
||
it. Linton did not reply to this, I believe; and, in a fortnight more,
|
||
I got a long letter, which I considered odd, coming from the pen of a
|
||
bride just out of the honeymoon. I’ll read it: for I keep it yet. Any
|
||
relic of the dead is precious, if they were valued living.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
DEAR ELLEN, it begins,—I came last night to Wuthering Heights, and
|
||
heard, for the first time, that Catherine has been, and is yet, very
|
||
ill. I must not write to her, I suppose, and my brother is either too
|
||
angry or too distressed to answer what I sent him. Still, I must write
|
||
to somebody, and the only choice left me is you.
|
||
|
||
Inform Edgar that I’d give the world to see his face again—that my
|
||
heart returned to Thrushcross Grange in twenty-four hours after I left
|
||
it, and is there at this moment, full of warm feelings for him, and
|
||
Catherine! _I can’t follow it though_—(these words are underlined)—they
|
||
need not expect me, and they may draw what conclusions they please;
|
||
taking care, however, to lay nothing at the door of my weak will or
|
||
deficient affection.
|
||
|
||
The remainder of the letter is for yourself alone. I want to ask you
|
||
two questions: the first is,—How did you contrive to preserve the
|
||
common sympathies of human nature when you resided here? I cannot
|
||
recognise any sentiment which those around share with me.
|
||
|
||
The second question I have great interest in; it is this—Is Mr.
|
||
Heathcliff a man? If so, is he mad? And if not, is he a devil? I
|
||
sha’n’t tell my reasons for making this inquiry; but I beseech you to
|
||
explain, if you can, what I have married: that is, when you call to see
|
||
me; and you must call, Ellen, very soon. Don’t write, but come, and
|
||
bring me something from Edgar.
|
||
|
||
Now, you shall hear how I have been received in my new home, as I am
|
||
led to imagine the Heights will be. It is to amuse myself that I dwell
|
||
on such subjects as the lack of external comforts: they never occupy my
|
||
thoughts, except at the moment when I miss them. I should laugh and
|
||
dance for joy, if I found their absence was the total of my miseries,
|
||
and the rest was an unnatural dream!
|
||
|
||
The sun set behind the Grange as we turned on to the moors; by that, I
|
||
judged it to be six o’clock; and my companion halted half an hour, to
|
||
inspect the park, and the gardens, and, probably, the place itself, as
|
||
well as he could; so it was dark when we dismounted in the paved yard
|
||
of the farmhouse, and your old fellow-servant, Joseph, issued out to
|
||
receive us by the light of a dip candle. He did it with a courtesy that
|
||
redounded to his credit. His first act was to elevate his torch to a
|
||
level with my face, squint malignantly, project his under-lip, and turn
|
||
away. Then he took the two horses, and led them into the stables;
|
||
reappearing for the purpose of locking the outer gate, as if we lived
|
||
in an ancient castle.
|
||
|
||
Heathcliff stayed to speak to him, and I entered the kitchen—a dingy,
|
||
untidy hole; I daresay you would not know it, it is so changed since it
|
||
was in your charge. By the fire stood a ruffianly child, strong in limb
|
||
and dirty in garb, with a look of Catherine in his eyes and about his
|
||
mouth.
|
||
|
||
“This is Edgar’s legal nephew,” I reflected—“mine in a manner; I must
|
||
shake hands, and—yes—I must kiss him. It is right to establish a good
|
||
understanding at the beginning.”
|
||
|
||
I approached, and, attempting to take his chubby fist, said—“How do you
|
||
do, my dear?”
|
||
|
||
He replied in a jargon I did not comprehend.
|
||
|
||
“Shall you and I be friends, Hareton?” was my next essay at
|
||
conversation.
|
||
|
||
An oath, and a threat to set Throttler on me if I did not “frame off”
|
||
rewarded my perseverance.
|
||
|
||
“Hey, Throttler, lad!” whispered the little wretch, rousing a half-bred
|
||
bull-dog from its lair in a corner. “Now, wilt thou be ganging?” he
|
||
asked authoritatively.
|
||
|
||
Love for my life urged a compliance; I stepped over the threshold to
|
||
wait till the others should enter. Mr. Heathcliff was nowhere visible;
|
||
and Joseph, whom I followed to the stables, and requested to accompany
|
||
me in, after staring and muttering to himself, screwed up his nose and
|
||
replied—“Mim! mim! mim! Did iver Christian body hear aught like it?
|
||
Mincing un’ munching! How can I tell whet ye say?”
|
||
|
||
“I say, I wish you to come with me into the house!” I cried, thinking
|
||
him deaf, yet highly disgusted at his rudeness.
|
||
|
||
“None o’ me! I getten summut else to do,” he answered, and continued
|
||
his work; moving his lantern jaws meanwhile, and surveying my dress and
|
||
countenance (the former a great deal too fine, but the latter, I’m
|
||
sure, as sad as he could desire) with sovereign contempt.
|
||
|
||
I walked round the yard, and through a wicket, to another door, at
|
||
which I took the liberty of knocking, in hopes some more civil servant
|
||
might show himself. After a short suspense, it was opened by a tall,
|
||
gaunt man, without neckerchief, and otherwise extremely slovenly; his
|
||
features were lost in masses of shaggy hair that hung on his shoulders;
|
||
and _his_ eyes, too, were like a ghostly Catherine’s with all their
|
||
beauty annihilated.
|
||
|
||
“What’s your business here?” he demanded, grimly. “Who are you?”
|
||
|
||
“My name _was_ Isabella Linton,” I replied. “You’ve seen me before,
|
||
sir. I’m lately married to Mr. Heathcliff, and he has brought me here—I
|
||
suppose by your permission.”
|
||
|
||
“Is he come back, then?” asked the hermit, glaring like a hungry wolf.
|
||
|
||
“Yes—we came just now,” I said; “but he left me by the kitchen door;
|
||
and when I would have gone in, your little boy played sentinel over the
|
||
place, and frightened me off by the help of a bull-dog.”
|
||
|
||
“It’s well the hellish villain has kept his word!” growled my future
|
||
host, searching the darkness beyond me in expectation of discovering
|
||
Heathcliff; and then he indulged in a soliloquy of execrations, and
|
||
threats of what he would have done had the “fiend” deceived him.
|
||
|
||
I repented having tried this second entrance, and was almost inclined
|
||
to slip away before he finished cursing, but ere I could execute that
|
||
intention, he ordered me in, and shut and re-fastened the door. There
|
||
was a great fire, and that was all the light in the huge apartment,
|
||
whose floor had grown a uniform grey; and the once brilliant
|
||
pewter-dishes, which used to attract my gaze when I was a girl, partook
|
||
of a similar obscurity, created by tarnish and dust. I inquired whether
|
||
I might call the maid, and be conducted to a bedroom! Mr. Earnshaw
|
||
vouchsafed no answer. He walked up and down, with his hands in his
|
||
pockets, apparently quite forgetting my presence; and his abstraction
|
||
was evidently so deep, and his whole aspect so misanthropical, that I
|
||
shrank from disturbing him again.
|
||
|
||
You’ll not be surprised, Ellen, at my feeling particularly cheerless,
|
||
seated in worse than solitude on that inhospitable hearth, and
|
||
remembering that four miles distant lay my delightful home, containing
|
||
the only people I loved on earth; and there might as well be the
|
||
Atlantic to part us, instead of those four miles: I could not overpass
|
||
them! I questioned with myself—where must I turn for comfort? and—mind
|
||
you don’t tell Edgar, or Catherine—above every sorrow beside, this rose
|
||
pre-eminent: despair at finding nobody who could or would be my ally
|
||
against Heathcliff! I had sought shelter at Wuthering Heights, almost
|
||
gladly, because I was secured by that arrangement from living alone
|
||
with him; but he knew the people we were coming amongst, and he did not
|
||
fear their intermeddling.
|
||
|
||
I sat and thought a doleful time: the clock struck eight, and nine, and
|
||
still my companion paced to and fro, his head bent on his breast, and
|
||
perfectly silent, unless a groan or a bitter ejaculation forced itself
|
||
out at intervals. I listened to detect a woman’s voice in the house,
|
||
and filled the interim with wild regrets and dismal anticipations,
|
||
which, at last, spoke audibly in irrepressible sighing and weeping. I
|
||
was not aware how openly I grieved, till Earnshaw halted opposite, in
|
||
his measured walk, and gave me a stare of newly-awakened surprise.
|
||
Taking advantage of his recovered attention, I exclaimed—“I’m tired
|
||
with my journey, and I want to go to bed! Where is the maid-servant?
|
||
Direct me to her, as she won’t come to me!”
|
||
|
||
“We have none,” he answered; “you must wait on yourself!”
|
||
|
||
“Where must I sleep, then?” I sobbed; I was beyond regarding
|
||
self-respect, weighed down by fatigue and wretchedness.
|
||
|
||
“Joseph will show you Heathcliff’s chamber,” said he; “open that
|
||
door—he’s in there.”
|
||
|
||
I was going to obey, but he suddenly arrested me, and added in the
|
||
strangest tone—“Be so good as to turn your lock, and draw your
|
||
bolt—don’t omit it!”
|
||
|
||
“Well!” I said. “But why, Mr. Earnshaw?” I did not relish the notion of
|
||
deliberately fastening myself in with Heathcliff.
|
||
|
||
“Look here!” he replied, pulling from his waistcoat a
|
||
curiously-constructed pistol, having a double-edged spring knife
|
||
attached to the barrel. “That’s a great tempter to a desperate man, is
|
||
it not? I cannot resist going up with this every night, and trying his
|
||
door. If once I find it open he’s done for; I do it invariably, even
|
||
though the minute before I have been recalling a hundred reasons that
|
||
should make me refrain: it is some devil that urges me to thwart my own
|
||
schemes by killing him. You fight against that devil for love as long
|
||
as you may; when the time comes, not all the angels in heaven shall
|
||
save him!”
|
||
|
||
I surveyed the weapon inquisitively. A hideous notion struck me: how
|
||
powerful I should be possessing such an instrument! I took it from his
|
||
hand, and touched the blade. He looked astonished at the expression my
|
||
face assumed during a brief second: it was not horror, it was
|
||
covetousness. He snatched the pistol back, jealously; shut the knife,
|
||
and returned it to its concealment.
|
||
|
||
“I don’t care if you tell him,” said he. “Put him on his guard, and
|
||
watch for him. You know the terms we are on, I see: his danger does not
|
||
shock you.”
|
||
|
||
“What has Heathcliff done to you?” I asked. “In what has he wronged
|
||
you, to warrant this appalling hatred? Wouldn’t it be wiser to bid him
|
||
quit the house?”
|
||
|
||
“No!” thundered Earnshaw; “should he offer to leave me, he’s a dead
|
||
man: persuade him to attempt it, and you are a murderess! Am I to lose
|
||
_all_, without a chance of retrieval? Is Hareton to be a beggar? Oh,
|
||
damnation! I _will_ have it back; and I’ll have _his_ gold too; and
|
||
then his blood; and hell shall have his soul! It will be ten times
|
||
blacker with that guest than ever it was before!”
|
||
|
||
You’ve acquainted me, Ellen, with your old master’s habits. He is
|
||
clearly on the verge of madness: he was so last night at least. I
|
||
shuddered to be near him, and thought on the servant’s ill-bred
|
||
moroseness as comparatively agreeable. He now recommenced his moody
|
||
walk, and I raised the latch, and escaped into the kitchen. Joseph was
|
||
bending over the fire, peering into a large pan that swung above it;
|
||
and a wooden bowl of oatmeal stood on the settle close by. The contents
|
||
of the pan began to boil, and he turned to plunge his hand into the
|
||
bowl; I conjectured that this preparation was probably for our supper,
|
||
and, being hungry, I resolved it should be eatable; so, crying out
|
||
sharply, “_I’ll_ make the porridge!” I removed the vessel out of his
|
||
reach, and proceeded to take off my hat and riding-habit. “Mr.
|
||
Earnshaw,” I continued, “directs me to wait on myself: I will. I’m not
|
||
going to act the lady among you, for fear I should starve.”
|
||
|
||
“Gooid Lord!” he muttered, sitting down, and stroking his ribbed
|
||
stockings from the knee to the ankle. “If there’s to be fresh
|
||
ortherings—just when I getten used to two maisters, if I mun hev’ a
|
||
_mistress_ set o’er my heead, it’s like time to be flitting. I niver
|
||
_did_ think to see t’ day that I mud lave th’ owld place—but I doubt
|
||
it’s nigh at hand!”
|
||
|
||
This lamentation drew no notice from me: I went briskly to work,
|
||
sighing to remember a period when it would have been all merry fun; but
|
||
compelled speedily to drive off the remembrance. It racked me to recall
|
||
past happiness and the greater peril there was of conjuring up its
|
||
apparition, the quicker the thible ran round, and the faster the
|
||
handfuls of meal fell into the water. Joseph beheld my style of cookery
|
||
with growing indignation.
|
||
|
||
“Thear!” he ejaculated. “Hareton, thou willn’t sup thy porridge
|
||
to-neeght; they’ll be naught but lumps as big as my neive. Thear,
|
||
agean! I’d fling in bowl un’ all, if I wer ye! There, pale t’ guilp
|
||
off, un’ then ye’ll hae done wi’t. Bang, bang. It’s a mercy t’ bothom
|
||
isn’t deaved out!”
|
||
|
||
It _was_ rather a rough mess, I own, when poured into the basins; four
|
||
had been provided, and a gallon pitcher of new milk was brought from
|
||
the dairy, which Hareton seized and commenced drinking and spilling
|
||
from the expansive lip. I expostulated, and desired that he should have
|
||
his in a mug; affirming that I could not taste the liquid treated so
|
||
dirtily. The old cynic chose to be vastly offended at this nicety;
|
||
assuring me, repeatedly, that “the barn was every bit as good” as I,
|
||
“and every bit as wollsome,” and wondering how I could fashion to be so
|
||
conceited. Meanwhile, the infant ruffian continued sucking; and
|
||
glowered up at me defyingly, as he slavered into the jug.
|
||
|
||
“I shall have my supper in another room,” I said. “Have you no place
|
||
you call a parlour?”
|
||
|
||
“_Parlour_!” he echoed, sneeringly, “_parlour_! Nay, we’ve noa
|
||
_parlours_. If yah dunnut loike wer company, there’s maister’s; un’ if
|
||
yah dunnut loike maister, there’s us.”
|
||
|
||
“Then I shall go upstairs,” I answered; “show me a chamber.”
|
||
|
||
I put my basin on a tray, and went myself to fetch some more milk. With
|
||
great grumblings, the fellow rose, and preceded me in my ascent: we
|
||
mounted to the garrets; he opened a door, now and then, to look into
|
||
the apartments we passed.
|
||
|
||
“Here’s a rahm,” he said, at last, flinging back a cranky board on
|
||
hinges. “It’s weel eneugh to ate a few porridge in. There’s a pack o’
|
||
corn i’ t’ corner, thear, meeterly clane; if ye’re feared o’ muckying
|
||
yer grand silk cloes, spread yer hankerchir o’ t’ top on’t.”
|
||
|
||
The “rahm” was a kind of lumber-hole smelling strong of malt and grain;
|
||
various sacks of which articles were piled around, leaving a wide, bare
|
||
space in the middle.
|
||
|
||
“Why, man,” I exclaimed, facing him angrily, “this is not a place to
|
||
sleep in. I wish to see my bed-room.”
|
||
|
||
“_Bed-rume_!” he repeated, in a tone of mockery. “Yah’s see all t’
|
||
_bed-rumes_ thear is—yon’s mine.”
|
||
|
||
He pointed into the second garret, only differing from the first in
|
||
being more naked about the walls, and having a large, low, curtainless
|
||
bed, with an indigo-coloured quilt, at one end.
|
||
|
||
“What do I want with yours?” I retorted. “I suppose Mr. Heathcliff does
|
||
not lodge at the top of the house, does he?”
|
||
|
||
“Oh! it’s Maister _Hathecliff’s_ ye’re wanting?” cried he, as if making
|
||
a new discovery. “Couldn’t ye ha’ said soa, at onst? un’ then, I mud
|
||
ha’ telled ye, baht all this wark, that that’s just one ye cannut
|
||
see—he allas keeps it locked, un’ nob’dy iver mells on’t but hisseln.”
|
||
|
||
“You’ve a nice house, Joseph,” I could not refrain from observing, “and
|
||
pleasant inmates; and I think the concentrated essence of all the
|
||
madness in the world took up its abode in my brain the day I linked my
|
||
fate with theirs! However, that is not to the present purpose—there are
|
||
other rooms. For heaven’s sake be quick, and let me settle somewhere!”
|
||
|
||
He made no reply to this adjuration; only plodding doggedly down the
|
||
wooden steps, and halting before an apartment which, from that halt
|
||
and the superior quality of its furniture, I conjectured to be the best
|
||
one. There was a carpet—a good one, but the pattern was obliterated by
|
||
dust; a fireplace hung with cut-paper, dropping to pieces; a handsome
|
||
oak-bedstead with ample crimson curtains of rather expensive material
|
||
and modern make; but they had evidently experienced rough usage: the
|
||
vallances hung in festoons, wrenched from their rings, and the iron rod
|
||
supporting them was bent in an arc on one side, causing the drapery to
|
||
trail upon the floor. The chairs were also damaged, many of them
|
||
severely; and deep indentations deformed the panels of the walls. I was
|
||
endeavouring to gather resolution for entering and taking possession,
|
||
when my fool of a guide announced,—“This here is t’ maister’s.” My
|
||
supper by this time was cold, my appetite gone, and my patience
|
||
exhausted. I insisted on being provided instantly with a place of
|
||
refuge, and means of repose.
|
||
|
||
“Whear the divil?” began the religious elder. “The Lord bless us! The
|
||
Lord forgie us! Whear the _hell_ wold ye gang? ye marred, wearisome
|
||
nowt! Ye’ve seen all but Hareton’s bit of a cham’er. There’s not
|
||
another hoile to lig down in i’ th’ hahse!”
|
||
|
||
I was so vexed, I flung my tray and its contents on the ground; and
|
||
then seated myself at the stairs’-head, hid my face in my hands, and
|
||
cried.
|
||
|
||
“Ech! ech!” exclaimed Joseph. “Weel done, Miss Cathy! weel done, Miss
|
||
Cathy! Howsiver, t’ maister sall just tum’le o’er them brocken pots;
|
||
un’ then we’s hear summut; we’s hear how it’s to be. Gooid-for-naught
|
||
madling! ye desarve pining fro’ this to Churstmas, flinging t’ precious
|
||
gifts uh God under fooit i’ yer flaysome rages! But I’m mista’en if ye
|
||
shew yer sperrit lang. Will Hathecliff bide sich bonny ways, think ye?
|
||
I nobbut wish he may catch ye i’ that plisky. I nobbut wish he may.”
|
||
|
||
And so he went on scolding to his den beneath, taking the candle with
|
||
him; and I remained in the dark. The period of reflection succeeding
|
||
this silly action compelled me to admit the necessity of smothering my
|
||
pride and choking my wrath, and bestirring myself to remove its
|
||
effects. An unexpected aid presently appeared in the shape of
|
||
Throttler, whom I now recognised as a son of our old Skulker: it had
|
||
spent its whelphood at the Grange, and was given by my father to Mr.
|
||
Hindley. I fancy it knew me: it pushed its nose against mine by way of
|
||
salute, and then hastened to devour the porridge; while I groped from
|
||
step to step, collecting the shattered earthenware, and drying the
|
||
spatters of milk from the banister with my pocket-handkerchief. Our
|
||
labours were scarcely over when I heard Earnshaw’s tread in the
|
||
passage; my assistant tucked in his tail, and pressed to the wall; I
|
||
stole into the nearest doorway. The dog’s endeavour to avoid him was
|
||
unsuccessful; as I guessed by a scutter downstairs, and a prolonged,
|
||
piteous yelping. I had better luck: he passed on, entered his chamber,
|
||
and shut the door. Directly after Joseph came up with Hareton, to put
|
||
him to bed. I had found shelter in Hareton’s room, and the old man, on
|
||
seeing me, said,—“They’s rahm for boath ye un’ yer pride, now, I sud
|
||
think i’ the hahse. It’s empty; ye may hev’ it all to yerseln, un’ Him
|
||
as allas maks a third, i’ sich ill company!”
|
||
|
||
Gladly did I take advantage of this intimation; and the minute I flung
|
||
myself into a chair, by the fire, I nodded, and slept. My slumber was
|
||
deep and sweet, though over far too soon. Mr. Heathcliff awoke me; he
|
||
had just come in, and demanded, in his loving manner, what I was doing
|
||
there? I told him the cause of my staying up so late—that he had the
|
||
key of our room in his pocket. The adjective _our_ gave mortal offence.
|
||
He swore it was not, nor ever should be, mine; and he’d—but I’ll not
|
||
repeat his language, nor describe his habitual conduct: he is ingenious
|
||
and unresting in seeking to gain my abhorrence! I sometimes wonder at
|
||
him with an intensity that deadens my fear: yet, I assure you, a tiger
|
||
or a venomous serpent could not rouse terror in me equal to that which
|
||
he wakens. He told me of Catherine’s illness, and accused my brother of
|
||
causing it; promising that I should be Edgar’s proxy in suffering, till
|
||
he could get hold of him.
|
||
|
||
I do hate him—I am wretched—I have been a fool! Beware of uttering one
|
||
breath of this to any one at the Grange. I shall expect you every
|
||
day—don’t disappoint me!—ISABELLA.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XIV
|
||
|
||
|
||
As soon as I had perused this epistle I went to the master, and
|
||
informed him that his sister had arrived at the Heights, and sent me a
|
||
letter expressing her sorrow for Mrs. Linton’s situation, and her
|
||
ardent desire to see him; with a wish that he would transmit to her, as
|
||
early as possible, some token of forgiveness by me.
|
||
|
||
“Forgiveness!” said Linton. “I have nothing to forgive her, Ellen. You
|
||
may call at Wuthering Heights this afternoon, if you like, and say that
|
||
I am not _angry_, but I’m _sorry_ to have lost her; especially as I can
|
||
never think she’ll be happy. It is out of the question my going to see
|
||
her, however: we are eternally divided; and should she really wish to
|
||
oblige me, let her persuade the villain she has married to leave the
|
||
country.”
|
||
|
||
“And you won’t write her a little note, sir?” I asked, imploringly.
|
||
|
||
“No,” he answered. “It is needless. My communication with Heathcliff’s
|
||
family shall be as sparing as his with mine. It shall not exist!”
|
||
|
||
Mr. Edgar’s coldness depressed me exceedingly; and all the way from the
|
||
Grange I puzzled my brains how to put more heart into what he said,
|
||
when I repeated it; and how to soften his refusal of even a few lines
|
||
to console Isabella. I daresay she had been on the watch for me since
|
||
morning: I saw her looking through the lattice as I came up the garden
|
||
causeway, and I nodded to her; but she drew back, as if afraid of being
|
||
observed. I entered without knocking. There never was such a dreary,
|
||
dismal scene as the formerly cheerful house presented! I must confess,
|
||
that if I had been in the young lady’s place, I would, at least, have
|
||
swept the hearth, and wiped the tables with a duster. But she already
|
||
partook of the pervading spirit of neglect which encompassed her. Her
|
||
pretty face was wan and listless; her hair uncurled: some locks hanging
|
||
lankly down, and some carelessly twisted round her head. Probably she
|
||
had not touched her dress since yester evening. Hindley was not there.
|
||
Mr. Heathcliff sat at a table, turning over some papers in his
|
||
pocket-book; but he rose when I appeared, asked me how I did, quite
|
||
friendly, and offered me a chair. He was the only thing there that
|
||
seemed decent; and I thought he never looked better. So much had
|
||
circumstances altered their positions, that he would certainly have
|
||
struck a stranger as a born and bred gentleman; and his wife as a
|
||
thorough little slattern! She came forward eagerly to greet me, and
|
||
held out one hand to take the expected letter. I shook my head. She
|
||
wouldn’t understand the hint, but followed me to a sideboard, where I
|
||
went to lay my bonnet, and importuned me in a whisper to give her
|
||
directly what I had brought. Heathcliff guessed the meaning of her
|
||
manœuvres, and said—“If you have got anything for Isabella (as no
|
||
doubt you have, Nelly), give it to her. You needn’t make a secret of
|
||
it: we have no secrets between us.”
|
||
|
||
“Oh, I have nothing,” I replied, thinking it best to speak the truth at
|
||
once. “My master bid me tell his sister that she must not expect either
|
||
a letter or a visit from him at present. He sends his love, ma’am, and
|
||
his wishes for your happiness, and his pardon for the grief you have
|
||
occasioned; but he thinks that after this time his household and the
|
||
household here should drop intercommunication, as nothing could come of
|
||
keeping it up.”
|
||
|
||
Mrs. Heathcliff’s lip quivered slightly, and she returned to her seat
|
||
in the window. Her husband took his stand on the hearthstone, near me,
|
||
and began to put questions concerning Catherine. I told him as much as
|
||
I thought proper of her illness, and he extorted from me, by
|
||
cross-examination, most of the facts connected with its origin. I
|
||
blamed her, as she deserved, for bringing it all on herself; and ended
|
||
by hoping that he would follow Mr. Linton’s example and avoid future
|
||
interference with his family, for good or evil.
|
||
|
||
“Mrs. Linton is now just recovering,” I said; “she’ll never be like she
|
||
was, but her life is spared; and if you really have a regard for her,
|
||
you’ll shun crossing her way again: nay, you’ll move out of this
|
||
country entirely; and that you may not regret it, I’ll inform you
|
||
Catherine Linton is as different now from your old friend Catherine
|
||
Earnshaw, as that young lady is different from me. Her appearance is
|
||
changed greatly, her character much more so; and the person who is
|
||
compelled, of necessity, to be her companion, will only sustain his
|
||
affection hereafter by the remembrance of what she once was, by common
|
||
humanity, and a sense of duty!”
|
||
|
||
“That is quite possible,” remarked Heathcliff, forcing himself to seem
|
||
calm: “quite possible that your master should have nothing but common
|
||
humanity and a sense of duty to fall back upon. But do you imagine that
|
||
I shall leave Catherine to his _duty_ and _humanity_? and can you
|
||
compare my feelings respecting Catherine to his? Before you leave this
|
||
house, I must exact a promise from you that you’ll get me an interview
|
||
with her: consent, or refuse, I _will_ see her! What do you say?”
|
||
|
||
“I say, Mr. Heathcliff,” I replied, “you must not: you never shall,
|
||
through my means. Another encounter between you and the master would
|
||
kill her altogether.”
|
||
|
||
“With your aid that may be avoided,” he continued; “and should there be
|
||
danger of such an event—should he be the cause of adding a single
|
||
trouble more to her existence—why, I think I shall be justified in
|
||
going to extremes! I wish you had sincerity enough to tell me whether
|
||
Catherine would suffer greatly from his loss: the fear that she would
|
||
restrains me. And there you see the distinction between our feelings:
|
||
had he been in my place, and I in his, though I hated him with a hatred
|
||
that turned my life to gall, I never would have raised a hand against
|
||
him. You may look incredulous, if you please! I never would have
|
||
banished him from her society as long as she desired his. The moment
|
||
her regard ceased, I would have torn his heart out, and drunk his
|
||
blood! But, till then—if you don’t believe me, you don’t know me—till
|
||
then, I would have died by inches before I touched a single hair of his
|
||
head!”
|
||
|
||
“And yet,” I interrupted, “you have no scruples in completely ruining
|
||
all hopes of her perfect restoration, by thrusting yourself into her
|
||
remembrance now, when she has nearly forgotten you, and involving her
|
||
in a new tumult of discord and distress.”
|
||
|
||
“You suppose she has nearly forgotten me?” he said. “Oh, Nelly! you
|
||
know she has not! You know as well as I do, that for every thought she
|
||
spends on Linton she spends a thousand on me! At a most miserable
|
||
period of my life, I had a notion of the kind: it haunted me on my
|
||
return to the neighbourhood last summer; but only her own assurance
|
||
could make me admit the horrible idea again. And then, Linton would be
|
||
nothing, nor Hindley, nor all the dreams that ever I dreamt. Two words
|
||
would comprehend my future—_death_ and _hell_: existence, after losing
|
||
her, would be hell. Yet I was a fool to fancy for a moment that she
|
||
valued Edgar Linton’s attachment more than mine. If he loved with all
|
||
the powers of his puny being, he couldn’t love as much in eighty years
|
||
as I could in a day. And Catherine has a heart as deep as I have: the
|
||
sea could be as readily contained in that horse-trough as her whole
|
||
affection be monopolised by him. Tush! He is scarcely a degree dearer
|
||
to her than her dog, or her horse. It is not in him to be loved like
|
||
me: how can she love in him what he has not?”
|
||
|
||
“Catherine and Edgar are as fond of each other as any two people can
|
||
be,” cried Isabella, with sudden vivacity. “No one has a right to talk
|
||
in that manner, and I won’t hear my brother depreciated in silence!”
|
||
|
||
“Your brother is wondrous fond of you too, isn’t he?” observed
|
||
Heathcliff, scornfully. “He turns you adrift on the world with
|
||
surprising alacrity.”
|
||
|
||
“He is not aware of what I suffer,” she replied. “I didn’t tell him
|
||
that.”
|
||
|
||
“You have been telling him something, then: you have written, have
|
||
you?”
|
||
|
||
“To say that I was married, I did write—you saw the note.”
|
||
|
||
“And nothing since?”
|
||
|
||
“No.”
|
||
|
||
“My young lady is looking sadly the worse for her change of condition,”
|
||
I remarked. “Somebody’s love comes short in her case, obviously; whose,
|
||
I may guess; but, perhaps, I shouldn’t say.”
|
||
|
||
“I should guess it was her own,” said Heathcliff. “She degenerates into
|
||
a mere slut! She is tired of trying to please me uncommonly early.
|
||
You’d hardly credit it, but the very morrow of our wedding she was
|
||
weeping to go home. However, she’ll suit this house so much the better
|
||
for not being over nice, and I’ll take care she does not disgrace me by
|
||
rambling abroad.”
|
||
|
||
“Well, sir,” returned I, “I hope you’ll consider that Mrs. Heathcliff
|
||
is accustomed to be looked after and waited on; and that she has been
|
||
brought up like an only daughter, whom every one was ready to serve.
|
||
You must let her have a maid to keep things tidy about her, and you
|
||
must treat her kindly. Whatever be your notion of Mr. Edgar, you cannot
|
||
doubt that she has a capacity for strong attachments, or she wouldn’t
|
||
have abandoned the elegancies, and comforts, and friends of her former
|
||
home, to fix contentedly, in such a wilderness as this, with you.”
|
||
|
||
“She abandoned them under a delusion,” he answered; “picturing in me a
|
||
hero of romance, and expecting unlimited indulgences from my chivalrous
|
||
devotion. I can hardly regard her in the light of a rational creature,
|
||
so obstinately has she persisted in forming a fabulous notion of my
|
||
character and acting on the false impressions she cherished. But, at
|
||
last, I think she begins to know me: I don’t perceive the silly smiles
|
||
and grimaces that provoked me at first; and the senseless incapability
|
||
of discerning that I was in earnest when I gave her my opinion of her
|
||
infatuation and herself. It was a marvellous effort of perspicacity to
|
||
discover that I did not love her. I believed, at one time, no lessons
|
||
could teach her that! And yet it is poorly learnt; for this morning she
|
||
announced, as a piece of appalling intelligence, that I had actually
|
||
succeeded in making her hate me! A positive labour of Hercules, I
|
||
assure you! If it be achieved, I have cause to return thanks. Can I
|
||
trust your assertion, Isabella? Are you sure you hate me? If I let you
|
||
alone for half a day, won’t you come sighing and wheedling to me again?
|
||
I daresay she would rather I had seemed all tenderness before you: it
|
||
wounds her vanity to have the truth exposed. But I don’t care who knows
|
||
that the passion was wholly on one side: and I never told her a lie
|
||
about it. She cannot accuse me of showing one bit of deceitful
|
||
softness. The first thing she saw me do, on coming out of the Grange,
|
||
was to hang up her little dog; and when she pleaded for it, the first
|
||
words I uttered were a wish that I had the hanging of every being
|
||
belonging to her, except one: possibly she took that exception for
|
||
herself. But no brutality disgusted her: I suppose she has an innate
|
||
admiration of it, if only her precious person were secure from injury!
|
||
Now, was it not the depth of absurdity—of genuine idiocy, for that
|
||
pitiful, slavish, mean-minded brach to dream that I could love her?
|
||
Tell your master, Nelly, that I never, in all my life, met with such an
|
||
abject thing as she is. She even disgraces the name of Linton; and I’ve
|
||
sometimes relented, from pure lack of invention, in my experiments on
|
||
what she could endure, and still creep shamefully cringing back! But
|
||
tell him, also, to set his fraternal and magisterial heart at ease:
|
||
that I keep strictly within the limits of the law. I have avoided, up
|
||
to this period, giving her the slightest right to claim a separation;
|
||
and, what’s more, she’d thank nobody for dividing us. If she desired to
|
||
go, she might: the nuisance of her presence outweighs the gratification
|
||
to be derived from tormenting her!”
|
||
|
||
“Mr. Heathcliff,” said I, “this is the talk of a madman; your wife,
|
||
most likely, is convinced you are mad; and, for that reason, she has
|
||
borne with you hitherto: but now that you say she may go, she’ll
|
||
doubtless avail herself of the permission. You are not so bewitched,
|
||
ma’am, are you, as to remain with him of your own accord?”
|
||
|
||
“Take care, Ellen!” answered Isabella, her eyes sparkling irefully;
|
||
there was no misdoubting by their expression the full success of her
|
||
partner’s endeavours to make himself detested. “Don’t put faith in a
|
||
single word he speaks. He’s a lying fiend! a monster, and not a human
|
||
being! I’ve been told I might leave him before; and I’ve made the
|
||
attempt, but I dare not repeat it! Only, Ellen, promise you’ll not
|
||
mention a syllable of his infamous conversation to my brother or
|
||
Catherine. Whatever he may pretend, he wishes to provoke Edgar to
|
||
desperation: he says he has married me on purpose to obtain power over
|
||
him; and he sha’n’t obtain it—I’ll die first! I just hope, I pray, that
|
||
he may forget his diabolical prudence and kill me! The single pleasure
|
||
I can imagine is to die, or to see him dead!”
|
||
|
||
“There—that will do for the present!” said Heathcliff. “If you are
|
||
called upon in a court of law, you’ll remember her language, Nelly! And
|
||
take a good look at that countenance: she’s near the point which would
|
||
suit me. No; you’re not fit to be your own guardian, Isabella, now; and
|
||
I, being your legal protector, must retain you in my custody, however
|
||
distasteful the obligation may be. Go upstairs; I have something to say
|
||
to Ellen Dean in private. That’s not the way: upstairs, I tell you!
|
||
Why, this is the road upstairs, child!”
|
||
|
||
He seized, and thrust her from the room; and returned muttering—“I have
|
||
no pity! I have no pity! The more the worms writhe, the more I yearn to
|
||
crush out their entrails! It is a moral teething; and I grind with
|
||
greater energy in proportion to the increase of pain.”
|
||
|
||
“Do you understand what the word pity means?” I said, hastening to
|
||
resume my bonnet. “Did you ever feel a touch of it in your life?”
|
||
|
||
“Put that down!” he interrupted, perceiving my intention to depart.
|
||
“You are not going yet. Come here now, Nelly: I must either persuade or
|
||
compel you to aid me in fulfilling my determination to see Catherine,
|
||
and that without delay. I swear that I meditate no harm: I don’t desire
|
||
to cause any disturbance, or to exasperate or insult Mr. Linton; I only
|
||
wish to hear from herself how she is, and why she has been ill; and to
|
||
ask if anything that I could do would be of use to her. Last night I
|
||
was in the Grange garden six hours, and I’ll return there to-night; and
|
||
every night I’ll haunt the place, and every day, till I find an
|
||
opportunity of entering. If Edgar Linton meets me, I shall not hesitate
|
||
to knock him down, and give him enough to insure his quiescence while I
|
||
stay. If his servants oppose me, I shall threaten them off with these
|
||
pistols. But wouldn’t it be better to prevent my coming in contact with
|
||
them, or their master? And you could do it so easily. I’d warn you when
|
||
I came, and then you might let me in unobserved, as soon as she was
|
||
alone, and watch till I departed, your conscience quite calm: you would
|
||
be hindering mischief.”
|
||
|
||
I protested against playing that treacherous part in my employer’s
|
||
house: and, besides, I urged the cruelty and selfishness of his
|
||
destroying Mrs. Linton’s tranquillity for his satisfaction. “The
|
||
commonest occurrence startles her painfully,” I said. “She’s all
|
||
nerves, and she couldn’t bear the surprise, I’m positive. Don’t
|
||
persist, sir! or else I shall be obliged to inform my master of your
|
||
designs; and he’ll take measures to secure his house and its inmates
|
||
from any such unwarrantable intrusions!”
|
||
|
||
“In that case I’ll take measures to secure you, woman!” exclaimed
|
||
Heathcliff; “you shall not leave Wuthering Heights till to-morrow
|
||
morning. It is a foolish story to assert that Catherine could not bear
|
||
to see me; and as to surprising her, I don’t desire it: you must
|
||
prepare her—ask her if I may come. You say she never mentions my name,
|
||
and that I am never mentioned to her. To whom should she mention me if
|
||
I am a forbidden topic in the house? She thinks you are all spies for
|
||
her husband. Oh, I’ve no doubt she’s in hell among you! I guess by her
|
||
silence, as much as anything, what she feels. You say she is often
|
||
restless, and anxious-looking: is that a proof of tranquillity? You
|
||
talk of her mind being unsettled. How the devil could it be otherwise
|
||
in her frightful isolation? And that insipid, paltry creature attending
|
||
her from _duty_ and _humanity_! From _pity_ and _charity_! He might as
|
||
well plant an oak in a flower-pot, and expect it to thrive, as imagine
|
||
he can restore her to vigour in the soil of his shallow cares! Let us
|
||
settle it at once: will you stay here, and am I to fight my way to
|
||
Catherine over Linton and his footman? Or will you be my friend, as you
|
||
have been hitherto, and do what I request? Decide! because there is no
|
||
reason for my lingering another minute, if you persist in your stubborn
|
||
ill-nature!”
|
||
|
||
Well, Mr. Lockwood, I argued and complained, and flatly refused him
|
||
fifty times; but in the long run he forced me to an agreement. I
|
||
engaged to carry a letter from him to my mistress; and should she
|
||
consent, I promised to let him have intelligence of Linton’s next
|
||
absence from home, when he might come, and get in as he was able: I
|
||
wouldn’t be there, and my fellow-servants should be equally out of the
|
||
way. Was it right or wrong? I fear it was wrong, though expedient. I
|
||
thought I prevented another explosion by my compliance; and I thought,
|
||
too, it might create a favourable crisis in Catherine’s mental illness:
|
||
and then I remembered Mr. Edgar’s stern rebuke of my carrying tales;
|
||
and I tried to smooth away all disquietude on the subject, by
|
||
affirming, with frequent iteration, that that betrayal of trust, if it
|
||
merited so harsh an appellation, should be the last. Notwithstanding,
|
||
my journey homeward was sadder than my journey thither; and many
|
||
misgivings I had, ere I could prevail on myself to put the missive into
|
||
Mrs. Linton’s hand.
|
||
|
||
But here is Kenneth; I’ll go down, and tell him how much better you
|
||
are. My history is _dree_, as we say, and will serve to while away
|
||
another morning.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
Dree, and dreary! I reflected as the good woman descended to receive
|
||
the doctor: and not exactly of the kind which I should have chosen to
|
||
amuse me. But never mind! I’ll extract wholesome medicines from Mrs.
|
||
Dean’s bitter herbs; and firstly, let me beware of the fascination that
|
||
lurks in Catherine Heathcliff’s brilliant eyes. I should be in a
|
||
curious taking if I surrendered my heart to that young person, and the
|
||
daughter turned out a second edition of the mother.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XV
|
||
|
||
|
||
Another week over—and I am so many days nearer health, and spring! I
|
||
have now heard all my neighbour’s history, at different sittings, as
|
||
the housekeeper could spare time from more important occupations. I’ll
|
||
continue it in her own words, only a little condensed. She is, on the
|
||
whole, a very fair narrator, and I don’t think I could improve her
|
||
style.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
In the evening, she said, the evening of my visit to the Heights, I
|
||
knew, as well as if I saw him, that Mr. Heathcliff was about the place;
|
||
and I shunned going out, because I still carried his letter in my
|
||
pocket, and didn’t want to be threatened or teased any more. I had made
|
||
up my mind not to give it till my master went somewhere, as I could not
|
||
guess how its receipt would affect Catherine. The consequence was, that
|
||
it did not reach her before the lapse of three days. The fourth was
|
||
Sunday, and I brought it into her room after the family were gone to
|
||
church. There was a man servant left to keep the house with me, and we
|
||
generally made a practice of locking the doors during the hours of
|
||
service; but on that occasion the weather was so warm and pleasant that
|
||
I set them wide open, and, to fulfil my engagement, as I knew who would
|
||
be coming, I told my companion that the mistress wished very much for
|
||
some oranges, and he must run over to the village and get a few, to be
|
||
paid for on the morrow. He departed, and I went upstairs.
|
||
|
||
Mrs. Linton sat in a loose white dress, with a light shawl over her
|
||
shoulders, in the recess of the open window, as usual. Her thick, long
|
||
hair had been partly removed at the beginning of her illness, and now
|
||
she wore it simply combed in its natural tresses over her temples and
|
||
neck. Her appearance was altered, as I had told Heathcliff; but when
|
||
she was calm, there seemed unearthly beauty in the change. The flash of
|
||
her eyes had been succeeded by a dreamy and melancholy softness; they
|
||
no longer gave the impression of looking at the objects around her:
|
||
they appeared always to gaze beyond, and far beyond—you would have said
|
||
out of this world. Then, the paleness of her face—its haggard aspect
|
||
having vanished as she recovered flesh—and the peculiar expression
|
||
arising from her mental state, though painfully suggestive of their
|
||
causes, added to the touching interest which she awakened;
|
||
and—invariably to me, I know, and to any person who saw her, I should
|
||
think—refuted more tangible proofs of convalescence, and stamped her as
|
||
one doomed to decay.
|
||
|
||
A book lay spread on the sill before her, and the scarcely perceptible
|
||
wind fluttered its leaves at intervals. I believe Linton had laid it
|
||
there: for she never endeavoured to divert herself with reading, or
|
||
occupation of any kind, and he would spend many an hour in trying to
|
||
entice her attention to some subject which had formerly been her
|
||
amusement. She was conscious of his aim, and in her better moods
|
||
endured his efforts placidly, only showing their uselessness by now and
|
||
then suppressing a wearied sigh, and checking him at last with the
|
||
saddest of smiles and kisses. At other times, she would turn petulantly
|
||
away, and hide her face in her hands, or even push him off angrily; and
|
||
then he took care to let her alone, for he was certain of doing no
|
||
good.
|
||
|
||
Gimmerton chapel bells were still ringing; and the full, mellow flow of
|
||
the beck in the valley came soothingly on the ear. It was a sweet
|
||
substitute for the yet absent murmur of the summer foliage, which
|
||
drowned that music about the Grange when the trees were in leaf. At
|
||
Wuthering Heights it always sounded on quiet days following a great
|
||
thaw or a season of steady rain. And of Wuthering Heights Catherine was
|
||
thinking as she listened: that is, if she thought or listened at all;
|
||
but she had the vague, distant look I mentioned before, which expressed
|
||
no recognition of material things either by ear or eye.
|
||
|
||
“There’s a letter for you, Mrs. Linton,” I said, gently inserting it in
|
||
one hand that rested on her knee. “You must read it immediately,
|
||
because it wants an answer. Shall I break the seal?” “Yes,” she
|
||
answered, without altering the direction of her eyes. I opened it—it
|
||
was very short. “Now,” I continued, “read it.” She drew away her hand,
|
||
and let it fall. I replaced it in her lap, and stood waiting till it
|
||
should please her to glance down; but that movement was so long delayed
|
||
that at last I resumed—“Must I read it, ma’am? It is from Mr.
|
||
Heathcliff.”
|
||
|
||
There was a start and a troubled gleam of recollection, and a struggle
|
||
to arrange her ideas. She lifted the letter, and seemed to peruse it;
|
||
and when she came to the signature she sighed: yet still I found she
|
||
had not gathered its import, for, upon my desiring to hear her reply,
|
||
she merely pointed to the name, and gazed at me with mournful and
|
||
questioning eagerness.
|
||
|
||
“Well, he wishes to see you,” said I, guessing her need of an
|
||
interpreter. “He’s in the garden by this time, and impatient to know
|
||
what answer I shall bring.”
|
||
|
||
As I spoke, I observed a large dog lying on the sunny grass beneath
|
||
raise its ears as if about to bark, and then smoothing them back,
|
||
announce, by a wag of the tail, that some one approached whom it did
|
||
not consider a stranger. Mrs. Linton bent forward, and listened
|
||
breathlessly. The minute after a step traversed the hall; the open
|
||
house was too tempting for Heathcliff to resist walking in: most likely
|
||
he supposed that I was inclined to shirk my promise, and so resolved to
|
||
trust to his own audacity. With straining eagerness Catherine gazed
|
||
towards the entrance of her chamber. He did not hit the right room
|
||
directly: she motioned me to admit him, but he found it out ere I could
|
||
reach the door, and in a stride or two was at her side, and had her
|
||
grasped in his arms.
|
||
|
||
He neither spoke nor loosed his hold for some five minutes, during
|
||
which period he bestowed more kisses than ever he gave in his life
|
||
before, I daresay: but then my mistress had kissed him first, and I
|
||
plainly saw that he could hardly bear, for downright agony, to look
|
||
into her face! The same conviction had stricken him as me, from the
|
||
instant he beheld her, that there was no prospect of ultimate recovery
|
||
there—she was fated, sure to die.
|
||
|
||
“Oh, Cathy! Oh, my life! how can I bear it?” was the first sentence he
|
||
uttered, in a tone that did not seek to disguise his despair. And now
|
||
he stared at her so earnestly that I thought the very intensity of his
|
||
gaze would bring tears into his eyes; but they burned with anguish:
|
||
they did not melt.
|
||
|
||
“What now?” said Catherine, leaning back, and returning his look with a
|
||
suddenly clouded brow: her humour was a mere vane for constantly
|
||
varying caprices. “You and Edgar have broken my heart, Heathcliff! And
|
||
you both come to bewail the deed to me, as if you were the people to be
|
||
pitied! I shall not pity you, not I. You have killed me—and thriven on
|
||
it, I think. How strong you are! How many years do you mean to live
|
||
after I am gone?”
|
||
|
||
Heathcliff had knelt on one knee to embrace her; he attempted to rise,
|
||
but she seized his hair, and kept him down.
|
||
|
||
“I wish I could hold you,” she continued, bitterly, “till we were both
|
||
dead! I shouldn’t care what you suffered. I care nothing for your
|
||
sufferings. Why shouldn’t you suffer? I do! Will you forget me? Will
|
||
you be happy when I am in the earth? Will you say twenty years hence,
|
||
‘That’s the grave of Catherine Earnshaw? I loved her long ago, and was
|
||
wretched to lose her; but it is past. I’ve loved many others since: my
|
||
children are dearer to me than she was; and, at death, I shall not
|
||
rejoice that I am going to her: I shall be sorry that I must leave
|
||
them!’ Will you say so, Heathcliff?”
|
||
|
||
“Don’t torture me till I’m as mad as yourself,” cried he, wrenching his
|
||
head free, and grinding his teeth.
|
||
|
||
The two, to a cool spectator, made a strange and fearful picture. Well
|
||
might Catherine deem that heaven would be a land of exile to her,
|
||
unless with her mortal body she cast away her moral character also. Her
|
||
present countenance had a wild vindictiveness in its white cheek, and a
|
||
bloodless lip and scintillating eye; and she retained in her closed
|
||
fingers a portion of the locks she had been grasping. As to her
|
||
companion, while raising himself with one hand, he had taken her arm
|
||
with the other; and so inadequate was his stock of gentleness to the
|
||
requirements of her condition, that on his letting go I saw four
|
||
distinct impressions left blue in the colourless skin.
|
||
|
||
“Are you possessed with a devil,” he pursued, savagely, “to talk in
|
||
that manner to me when you are dying? Do you reflect that all those
|
||
words will be branded in my memory, and eating deeper eternally after
|
||
you have left me? You know you lie to say I have killed you: and,
|
||
Catherine, you know that I could as soon forget you as my existence! Is
|
||
it not sufficient for your infernal selfishness, that while you are at
|
||
peace I shall writhe in the torments of hell?”
|
||
|
||
“I shall not be at peace,” moaned Catherine, recalled to a sense of
|
||
physical weakness by the violent, unequal throbbing of her heart, which
|
||
beat visibly and audibly under this excess of agitation. She said
|
||
nothing further till the paroxysm was over; then she continued, more
|
||
kindly—
|
||
|
||
“I’m not wishing you greater torment than I have, Heathcliff. I only
|
||
wish us never to be parted: and should a word of mine distress you
|
||
hereafter, think I feel the same distress underground, and for my own
|
||
sake, forgive me! Come here and kneel down again! You never harmed me
|
||
in your life. Nay, if you nurse anger, that will be worse to remember
|
||
than my harsh words! Won’t you come here again? Do!”
|
||
|
||
Heathcliff went to the back of her chair, and leant over, but not so
|
||
far as to let her see his face, which was livid with emotion. She bent
|
||
round to look at him; he would not permit it: turning abruptly, he
|
||
walked to the fireplace, where he stood, silent, with his back towards
|
||
us. Mrs. Linton’s glance followed him suspiciously: every movement woke
|
||
a new sentiment in her. After a pause and a prolonged gaze, she
|
||
resumed; addressing me in accents of indignant disappointment:—
|
||
|
||
“Oh, you see, Nelly, he would not relent a moment to keep me out of the
|
||
grave. _That_ is how I’m loved! Well, never mind. That is not _my_
|
||
Heathcliff. I shall love mine yet; and take him with me: he’s in my
|
||
soul. And,” added she musingly, “the thing that irks me most is this
|
||
shattered prison, after all. I’m tired of being enclosed here. I’m
|
||
wearying to escape into that glorious world, and to be always there:
|
||
not seeing it dimly through tears, and yearning for it through the
|
||
walls of an aching heart: but really with it, and in it. Nelly, you
|
||
think you are better and more fortunate than I; in full health and
|
||
strength: you are sorry for me—very soon that will be altered. I shall
|
||
be sorry for _you_. I shall be incomparably beyond and above you all. I
|
||
_wonder_ he won’t be near me!” She went on to herself. “I thought he
|
||
wished it. Heathcliff, dear! you should not be sullen now. Do come to
|
||
me, Heathcliff.”
|
||
|
||
In her eagerness she rose and supported herself on the arm of the
|
||
chair. At that earnest appeal he turned to her, looking absolutely
|
||
desperate. His eyes, wide and wet, at last flashed fiercely on her; his
|
||
breast heaved convulsively. An instant they held asunder, and then how
|
||
they met I hardly saw, but Catherine made a spring, and he caught her,
|
||
and they were locked in an embrace from which I thought my mistress
|
||
would never be released alive: in fact, to my eyes, she seemed directly
|
||
insensible. He flung himself into the nearest seat, and on my
|
||
approaching hurriedly to ascertain if she had fainted, he gnashed at
|
||
me, and foamed like a mad dog, and gathered her to him with greedy
|
||
jealousy. I did not feel as if I were in the company of a creature of
|
||
my own species: it appeared that he would not understand, though I
|
||
spoke to him; so I stood off, and held my tongue, in great perplexity.
|
||
|
||
A movement of Catherine’s relieved me a little presently: she put up
|
||
her hand to clasp his neck, and bring her cheek to his as he held her;
|
||
while he, in return, covering her with frantic caresses, said wildly—
|
||
|
||
“You teach me now how cruel you’ve been—cruel and false. _Why_ did you
|
||
despise me? _Why_ did you betray your own heart, Cathy? I have not one
|
||
word of comfort. You deserve this. You have killed yourself. Yes, you
|
||
may kiss me, and cry; and wring out my kisses and tears: they’ll blight
|
||
you—they’ll damn you. You loved me—then what _right_ had you to leave
|
||
me? What right—answer me—for the poor fancy you felt for Linton?
|
||
Because misery and degradation, and death, and nothing that God or
|
||
Satan could inflict would have parted us, _you_, of your own will, did
|
||
it. I have not broken your heart—_you_ have broken it; and in breaking
|
||
it, you have broken mine. So much the worse for me that I am strong. Do
|
||
I want to live? What kind of living will it be when you—oh, God! would
|
||
_you_ like to live with your soul in the grave?”
|
||
|
||
“Let me alone. Let me alone,” sobbed Catherine. “If I’ve done wrong,
|
||
I’m dying for it. It is enough! You left me too: but I won’t upbraid
|
||
you! I forgive you. Forgive me!”
|
||
|
||
“It is hard to forgive, and to look at those eyes, and feel those
|
||
wasted hands,” he answered. “Kiss me again; and don’t let me see your
|
||
eyes! I forgive what you have done to me. I love _my_ murderer—but
|
||
_yours_! How can I?”
|
||
|
||
They were silent—their faces hid against each other, and washed by each
|
||
other’s tears. At least, I suppose the weeping was on both sides; as it
|
||
seemed Heathcliff _could_ weep on a great occasion like this.
|
||
|
||
I grew very uncomfortable, meanwhile; for the afternoon wore fast away,
|
||
the man whom I had sent off returned from his errand, and I could
|
||
distinguish, by the shine of the western sun up the valley, a concourse
|
||
thickening outside Gimmerton chapel porch.
|
||
|
||
“Service is over,” I announced. “My master will be here in half an
|
||
hour.”
|
||
|
||
Heathcliff groaned a curse, and strained Catherine closer: she never
|
||
moved.
|
||
|
||
Ere long I perceived a group of the servants passing up the road
|
||
towards the kitchen wing. Mr. Linton was not far behind; he opened the
|
||
gate himself and sauntered slowly up, probably enjoying the lovely
|
||
afternoon that breathed as soft as summer.
|
||
|
||
“Now he is here,” I exclaimed. “For heaven’s sake, hurry down! You’ll
|
||
not meet any one on the front stairs. Do be quick; and stay among the
|
||
trees till he is fairly in.”
|
||
|
||
“I must go, Cathy,” said Heathcliff, seeking to extricate himself from
|
||
his companion’s arms. “But if I live, I’ll see you again before you are
|
||
asleep. I won’t stray five yards from your window.”
|
||
|
||
“You must not go!” she answered, holding him as firmly as her strength
|
||
allowed. “You _shall_ not, I tell you.”
|
||
|
||
“For one hour,” he pleaded earnestly.
|
||
|
||
“Not for one minute,” she replied.
|
||
|
||
“I _must_—Linton will be up immediately,” persisted the alarmed
|
||
intruder.
|
||
|
||
He would have risen, and unfixed her fingers by the act—she clung fast,
|
||
gasping: there was mad resolution in her face.
|
||
|
||
“No!” she shrieked. “Oh, don’t, don’t go. It is the last time! Edgar
|
||
will not hurt us. Heathcliff, I shall die! I shall die!”
|
||
|
||
“Damn the fool! There he is,” cried Heathcliff, sinking back into his
|
||
seat. “Hush, my darling! Hush, hush, Catherine! I’ll stay. If he shot
|
||
me so, I’d expire with a blessing on my lips.”
|
||
|
||
And there they were fast again. I heard my master mounting the
|
||
stairs—the cold sweat ran from my forehead: I was horrified.
|
||
|
||
“Are you going to listen to her ravings?” I said, passionately. “She
|
||
does not know what she says. Will you ruin her, because she has not wit
|
||
to help herself? Get up! You could be free instantly. That is the most
|
||
diabolical deed that ever you did. We are all done for—master,
|
||
mistress, and servant.”
|
||
|
||
I wrung my hands, and cried out; and Mr. Linton hastened his step at
|
||
the noise. In the midst of my agitation, I was sincerely glad to
|
||
observe that Catherine’s arms had fallen relaxed, and her head hung
|
||
down.
|
||
|
||
“She’s fainted, or dead,” I thought: “so much the better. Far better
|
||
that she should be dead, than lingering a burden and a misery-maker to
|
||
all about her.”
|
||
|
||
Edgar sprang to his unbidden guest, blanched with astonishment and
|
||
rage. What he meant to do I cannot tell; however, the other stopped all
|
||
demonstrations, at once, by placing the lifeless-looking form in his
|
||
arms.
|
||
|
||
“Look there!” he said. “Unless you be a fiend, help her first—then you
|
||
shall speak to me!”
|
||
|
||
He walked into the parlour, and sat down. Mr. Linton summoned me, and
|
||
with great difficulty, and after resorting to many means, we managed to
|
||
restore her to sensation; but she was all bewildered; she sighed, and
|
||
moaned, and knew nobody. Edgar, in his anxiety for her, forgot her
|
||
hated friend. I did not. I went, at the earliest opportunity, and
|
||
besought him to depart; affirming that Catherine was better, and he
|
||
should hear from me in the morning how she passed the night.
|
||
|
||
“I shall not refuse to go out of doors,” he answered; “but I shall stay
|
||
in the garden: and, Nelly, mind you keep your word to-morrow. I shall
|
||
be under those larch-trees. Mind! or I pay another visit, whether
|
||
Linton be in or not.”
|
||
|
||
He sent a rapid glance through the half-open door of the chamber, and,
|
||
ascertaining that what I stated was apparently true, delivered the
|
||
house of his luckless presence.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XVI
|
||
|
||
|
||
About twelve o’clock that night was born the Catherine you saw at
|
||
Wuthering Heights: a puny, seven-months’ child; and two hours after the
|
||
mother died, having never recovered sufficient consciousness to miss
|
||
Heathcliff, or know Edgar. The latter’s distraction at his bereavement
|
||
is a subject too painful to be dwelt on; its after-effects showed how
|
||
deep the sorrow sunk. A great addition, in my eyes, was his being left
|
||
without an heir. I bemoaned that, as I gazed on the feeble orphan; and
|
||
I mentally abused old Linton for (what was only natural partiality) the
|
||
securing his estate to his own daughter, instead of his son’s. An
|
||
unwelcomed infant it was, poor thing! It might have wailed out of life,
|
||
and nobody cared a morsel, during those first hours of existence. We
|
||
redeemed the neglect afterwards; but its beginning was as friendless as
|
||
its end is likely to be.
|
||
|
||
Next morning—bright and cheerful out of doors—stole softened in through
|
||
the blinds of the silent room, and suffused the couch and its occupant
|
||
with a mellow, tender glow. Edgar Linton had his head laid on the
|
||
pillow, and his eyes shut. His young and fair features were almost as
|
||
deathlike as those of the form beside him, and almost as fixed: but
|
||
_his_ was the hush of exhausted anguish, and _hers_ of perfect peace.
|
||
Her brow smooth, her lids closed, her lips wearing the expression of a
|
||
smile; no angel in heaven could be more beautiful than she appeared.
|
||
And I partook of the infinite calm in which she lay: my mind was never
|
||
in a holier frame than while I gazed on that untroubled image of Divine
|
||
rest. I instinctively echoed the words she had uttered a few hours
|
||
before: “Incomparably beyond and above us all! Whether still on earth
|
||
or now in heaven, her spirit is at home with God!”
|
||
|
||
I don’t know if it be a peculiarity in me, but I am seldom otherwise
|
||
than happy while watching in the chamber of death, should no frenzied
|
||
or despairing mourner share the duty with me. I see a repose that
|
||
neither earth nor hell can break, and I feel an assurance of the
|
||
endless and shadowless hereafter—the Eternity they have entered—where
|
||
life is boundless in its duration, and love in its sympathy, and joy in
|
||
its fulness. I noticed on that occasion how much selfishness there is
|
||
even in a love like Mr. Linton’s, when he so regretted Catherine’s
|
||
blessed release! To be sure, one might have doubted, after the wayward
|
||
and impatient existence she had led, whether she merited a haven of
|
||
peace at last. One might doubt in seasons of cold reflection; but not
|
||
then, in the presence of her corpse. It asserted its own tranquillity,
|
||
which seemed a pledge of equal quiet to its former inhabitant.
|
||
|
||
Do you believe such people _are_ happy in the other world, sir? I’d
|
||
give a great deal to know.
|
||
|
||
I declined answering Mrs. Dean’s question, which struck me as something
|
||
heterodox. She proceeded:
|
||
|
||
Retracing the course of Catherine Linton, I fear we have no right to
|
||
think she is; but we’ll leave her with her Maker.
|
||
|
||
The master looked asleep, and I ventured soon after sunrise to quit the
|
||
room and steal out to the pure refreshing air. The servants thought me
|
||
gone to shake off the drowsiness of my protracted watch; in reality, my
|
||
chief motive was seeing Mr. Heathcliff. If he had remained among the
|
||
larches all night, he would have heard nothing of the stir at the
|
||
Grange; unless, perhaps, he might catch the gallop of the messenger
|
||
going to Gimmerton. If he had come nearer, he would probably be aware,
|
||
from the lights flitting to and fro, and the opening and shutting of
|
||
the outer doors, that all was not right within. I wished, yet feared,
|
||
to find him. I felt the terrible news must be told, and I longed to get
|
||
it over; but _how_ to do it I did not know. He was there—at least, a
|
||
few yards further in the park; leant against an old ash-tree, his hat
|
||
off, and his hair soaked with the dew that had gathered on the budded
|
||
branches, and fell pattering round him. He had been standing a long
|
||
time in that position, for I saw a pair of ousels passing and repassing
|
||
scarcely three feet from him, busy in building their nest, and
|
||
regarding his proximity no more than that of a piece of timber. They
|
||
flew off at my approach, and he raised his eyes and spoke:—“She’s
|
||
dead!” he said; “I’ve not waited for you to learn that. Put your
|
||
handkerchief away—don’t snivel before me. Damn you all! she wants none
|
||
of _your_ tears!”
|
||
|
||
I was weeping as much for him as her: we do sometimes pity creatures
|
||
that have none of the feeling either for themselves or others. When I
|
||
first looked into his face, I perceived that he had got intelligence of
|
||
the catastrophe; and a foolish notion struck me that his heart was
|
||
quelled and he prayed, because his lips moved and his gaze was bent on
|
||
the ground.
|
||
|
||
“Yes, she’s dead!” I answered, checking my sobs and drying my cheeks.
|
||
“Gone to heaven, I hope; where we may, every one, join her, if we take
|
||
due warning and leave our evil ways to follow good!”
|
||
|
||
“Did _she_ take due warning, then?” asked Heathcliff, attempting a
|
||
sneer. “Did she die like a saint? Come, give me a true history of the
|
||
event. How did—?”
|
||
|
||
He endeavoured to pronounce the name, but could not manage it; and
|
||
compressing his mouth he held a silent combat with his inward agony,
|
||
defying, meanwhile, my sympathy with an unflinching, ferocious stare.
|
||
“How did she die?” he resumed, at last—fain, notwithstanding his
|
||
hardihood, to have a support behind him; for, after the struggle, he
|
||
trembled, in spite of himself, to his very finger-ends.
|
||
|
||
“Poor wretch!” I thought; “you have a heart and nerves the same as your
|
||
brother men! Why should you be anxious to conceal them? Your pride
|
||
cannot blind God! You tempt him to wring them, till he forces a cry of
|
||
humiliation.”
|
||
|
||
“Quietly as a lamb!” I answered, aloud. “She drew a sigh, and stretched
|
||
herself, like a child reviving, and sinking again to sleep; and five
|
||
minutes after I felt one little pulse at her heart, and nothing more!”
|
||
|
||
“And—did she ever mention me?” he asked, hesitating, as if he dreaded
|
||
the answer to his question would introduce details that he could not
|
||
bear to hear.
|
||
|
||
“Her senses never returned: she recognised nobody from the time you
|
||
left her,” I said. “She lies with a sweet smile on her face; and her
|
||
latest ideas wandered back to pleasant early days. Her life closed in a
|
||
gentle dream—may she wake as kindly in the other world!”
|
||
|
||
“May she wake in torment!” he cried, with frightful vehemence, stamping
|
||
his foot, and groaning in a sudden paroxysm of ungovernable passion.
|
||
“Why, she’s a liar to the end! Where is she? Not _there_—not in
|
||
heaven—not perished—where? Oh! you said you cared nothing for my
|
||
sufferings! And I pray one prayer—I repeat it till my tongue
|
||
stiffens—Catherine Earnshaw, may you not rest as long as I am living;
|
||
you said I killed you—haunt me, then! The murdered _do_ haunt their
|
||
murderers, I believe. I know that ghosts _have_ wandered on earth. Be
|
||
with me always—take any form—drive me mad! only _do_ not leave me in
|
||
this abyss, where I cannot find you! Oh, God! it is unutterable! I
|
||
_cannot_ live without my life! I _cannot_ live without my soul!”
|
||
|
||
He dashed his head against the knotted trunk; and, lifting up his eyes,
|
||
howled, not like a man, but like a savage beast being goaded to death
|
||
with knives and spears. I observed several splashes of blood about the
|
||
bark of the tree, and his hand and forehead were both stained; probably
|
||
the scene I witnessed was a repetition of others acted during the
|
||
night. It hardly moved my compassion—it appalled me: still, I felt
|
||
reluctant to quit him so. But the moment he recollected himself enough
|
||
to notice me watching, he thundered a command for me to go, and I
|
||
obeyed. He was beyond my skill to quiet or console!
|
||
|
||
Mrs. Linton’s funeral was appointed to take place on the Friday
|
||
following her decease; and till then her coffin remained uncovered, and
|
||
strewn with flowers and scented leaves, in the great drawing-room.
|
||
Linton spent his days and nights there, a sleepless guardian; and—a
|
||
circumstance concealed from all but me—Heathcliff spent his nights, at
|
||
least, outside, equally a stranger to repose. I held no communication
|
||
with him; still, I was conscious of his design to enter, if he could;
|
||
and on the Tuesday, a little after dark, when my master, from sheer
|
||
fatigue, had been compelled to retire a couple of hours, I went and
|
||
opened one of the windows; moved by his perseverance to give him a
|
||
chance of bestowing on the faded image of his idol one final adieu. He
|
||
did not omit to avail himself of the opportunity, cautiously and
|
||
briefly; too cautiously to betray his presence by the slightest noise.
|
||
Indeed, I shouldn’t have discovered that he had been there, except for
|
||
the disarrangement of the drapery about the corpse’s face, and for
|
||
observing on the floor a curl of light hair, fastened with a silver
|
||
thread; which, on examination, I ascertained to have been taken from a
|
||
locket hung round Catherine’s neck. Heathcliff had opened the trinket
|
||
and cast out its contents, replacing them by a black lock of his own. I
|
||
twisted the two, and enclosed them together.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Earnshaw was, of course, invited to attend the remains of his
|
||
sister to the grave; he sent no excuse, but he never came; so that,
|
||
besides her husband, the mourners were wholly composed of tenants and
|
||
servants. Isabella was not asked.
|
||
|
||
The place of Catherine’s interment, to the surprise of the villagers,
|
||
was neither in the chapel under the carved monument of the Lintons, nor
|
||
yet by the tombs of her own relations, outside. It was dug on a green
|
||
slope in a corner of the kirkyard, where the wall is so low that heath
|
||
and bilberry-plants have climbed over it from the moor; and peat-mould
|
||
almost buries it. Her husband lies in the same spot now; and they have
|
||
each a simple headstone above, and a plain grey block at their feet, to
|
||
mark the graves.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XVII
|
||
|
||
|
||
That Friday made the last of our fine days for a month. In the evening
|
||
the weather broke: the wind shifted from south to north-east, and
|
||
brought rain first, and then sleet and snow. On the morrow one could
|
||
hardly imagine that there had been three weeks of summer: the primroses
|
||
and crocuses were hidden under wintry drifts; the larks were silent,
|
||
the young leaves of the early trees smitten and blackened. And dreary,
|
||
and chill, and dismal, that morrow did creep over! My master kept his
|
||
room; I took possession of the lonely parlour, converting it into a
|
||
nursery: and there I was, sitting with the moaning doll of a child laid
|
||
on my knee; rocking it to and fro, and watching, meanwhile, the still
|
||
driving flakes build up the uncurtained window, when the door opened,
|
||
and some person entered, out of breath and laughing! My anger was
|
||
greater than my astonishment for a minute. I supposed it one of the
|
||
maids, and I cried—“Have done! How dare you show your giddiness here?
|
||
What would Mr. Linton say if he heard you?”
|
||
|
||
“Excuse me!” answered a familiar voice; “but I know Edgar is in bed,
|
||
and I cannot stop myself.”
|
||
|
||
With that the speaker came forward to the fire, panting and holding her
|
||
hand to her side.
|
||
|
||
“I have run the whole way from Wuthering Heights!” she continued, after
|
||
a pause; “except where I’ve flown. I couldn’t count the number of falls
|
||
I’ve had. Oh, I’m aching all over! Don’t be alarmed! There shall be an
|
||
explanation as soon as I can give it; only just have the goodness to
|
||
step out and order the carriage to take me on to Gimmerton, and tell a
|
||
servant to seek up a few clothes in my wardrobe.”
|
||
|
||
The intruder was Mrs. Heathcliff. She certainly seemed in no laughing
|
||
predicament: her hair streamed on her shoulders, dripping with snow and
|
||
water; she was dressed in the girlish dress she commonly wore,
|
||
befitting her age more than her position: a low frock with short
|
||
sleeves, and nothing on either head or neck. The frock was of light
|
||
silk, and clung to her with wet, and her feet were protected merely by
|
||
thin slippers; add to this a deep cut under one ear, which only the
|
||
cold prevented from bleeding profusely, a white face scratched and
|
||
bruised, and a frame hardly able to support itself through fatigue; and
|
||
you may fancy my first fright was not much allayed when I had had
|
||
leisure to examine her.
|
||
|
||
“My dear young lady,” I exclaimed, “I’ll stir nowhere, and hear
|
||
nothing, till you have removed every article of your clothes, and put
|
||
on dry things; and certainly you shall not go to Gimmerton to-night, so
|
||
it is needless to order the carriage.”
|
||
|
||
“Certainly I shall,” she said; “walking or riding: yet I’ve no
|
||
objection to dress myself decently. And—ah, see how it flows down my
|
||
neck now! The fire does make it smart.”
|
||
|
||
She insisted on my fulfilling her directions, before she would let me
|
||
touch her; and not till after the coachman had been instructed to get
|
||
ready, and a maid set to pack up some necessary attire, did I obtain
|
||
her consent for binding the wound and helping to change her garments.
|
||
|
||
“Now, Ellen,” she said, when my task was finished and she was seated in
|
||
an easy-chair on the hearth, with a cup of tea before her, “you sit
|
||
down opposite me, and put poor Catherine’s baby away: I don’t like to
|
||
see it! You mustn’t think I care little for Catherine, because I
|
||
behaved so foolishly on entering: I’ve cried, too, bitterly—yes, more
|
||
than any one else has reason to cry. We parted unreconciled, you
|
||
remember, and I sha’n’t forgive myself. But, for all that, I was not
|
||
going to sympathise with him—the brute beast! Oh, give me the poker!
|
||
This is the last thing of his I have about me:” she slipped the gold
|
||
ring from her third finger, and threw it on the floor. “I’ll smash it!”
|
||
she continued, striking it with childish spite, “and then I’ll burn
|
||
it!” and she took and dropped the misused article among the coals.
|
||
“There! he shall buy another, if he gets me back again. He’d be capable
|
||
of coming to seek me, to tease Edgar. I dare not stay, lest that notion
|
||
should possess his wicked head! And besides, Edgar has not been kind,
|
||
has he? And I won’t come suing for his assistance; nor will I bring him
|
||
into more trouble. Necessity compelled me to seek shelter here; though,
|
||
if I had not learned he was out of the way, I’d have halted at the
|
||
kitchen, washed my face, warmed myself, got you to bring what I wanted,
|
||
and departed again to anywhere out of the reach of my accursed—of that
|
||
incarnate goblin! Ah, he was in such a fury! If he had caught me! It’s
|
||
a pity Earnshaw is not his match in strength: I wouldn’t have run till
|
||
I’d seen him all but demolished, had Hindley been able to do it!”
|
||
|
||
“Well, don’t talk so fast, Miss!” I interrupted; “you’ll disorder the
|
||
handkerchief I have tied round your face, and make the cut bleed again.
|
||
Drink your tea, and take breath, and give over laughing: laughter is
|
||
sadly out of place under this roof, and in your condition!”
|
||
|
||
“An undeniable truth,” she replied. “Listen to that child! It maintains
|
||
a constant wail—send it out of my hearing for an hour; I sha’n’t stay
|
||
any longer.”
|
||
|
||
I rang the bell, and committed it to a servant’s care; and then I
|
||
inquired what had urged her to escape from Wuthering Heights in such an
|
||
unlikely plight, and where she meant to go, as she refused remaining
|
||
with us.
|
||
|
||
“I ought, and I wished to remain,” answered she, “to cheer Edgar and
|
||
take care of the baby, for two things, and because the Grange is my
|
||
right home. But I tell you he wouldn’t let me! Do you think he could
|
||
bear to see me grow fat and merry—could bear to think that we were
|
||
tranquil, and not resolve on poisoning our comfort? Now, I have the
|
||
satisfaction of being sure that he detests me, to the point of its
|
||
annoying him seriously to have me within ear-shot or eyesight: I
|
||
notice, when I enter his presence, the muscles of his countenance are
|
||
involuntarily distorted into an expression of hatred; partly arising
|
||
from his knowledge of the good causes I have to feel that sentiment for
|
||
him, and partly from original aversion. It is strong enough to make me
|
||
feel pretty certain that he would not chase me over England, supposing
|
||
I contrived a clear escape; and therefore I must get quite away. I’ve
|
||
recovered from my first desire to be killed by him: I’d rather he’d
|
||
kill himself! He has extinguished my love effectually, and so I’m at my
|
||
ease. I can recollect yet how I loved him; and can dimly imagine that I
|
||
could still be loving him, if—no, no! Even if he had doted on me, the
|
||
devilish nature would have revealed its existence somehow. Catherine
|
||
had an awfully perverted taste to esteem him so dearly, knowing him so
|
||
well. Monster! would that he could be blotted out of creation, and out
|
||
of my memory!”
|
||
|
||
“Hush, hush! He’s a human being,” I said. “Be more charitable: there
|
||
are worse men than he is yet!”
|
||
|
||
“He’s not a human being,” she retorted; “and he has no claim on my
|
||
charity. I gave him my heart, and he took and pinched it to death, and
|
||
flung it back to me. People feel with their hearts, Ellen: and since he
|
||
has destroyed mine, I have not power to feel for him: and I would not,
|
||
though he groaned from this to his dying day, and wept tears of blood
|
||
for Catherine! No, indeed, indeed, I wouldn’t!” And here Isabella began
|
||
to cry; but, immediately dashing the water from her lashes, she
|
||
recommenced. “You asked, what has driven me to flight at last? I was
|
||
compelled to attempt it, because I had succeeded in rousing his rage a
|
||
pitch above his malignity. Pulling out the nerves with red hot pincers
|
||
requires more coolness than knocking on the head. He was worked up to
|
||
forget the fiendish prudence he boasted of, and proceeded to murderous
|
||
violence. I experienced pleasure in being able to exasperate him: the
|
||
sense of pleasure woke my instinct of self-preservation, so I fairly
|
||
broke free; and if ever I come into his hands again he is welcome to a
|
||
signal revenge.
|
||
|
||
“Yesterday, you know, Mr. Earnshaw should have been at the funeral. He
|
||
kept himself sober for the purpose—tolerably sober: not going to bed
|
||
mad at six o’clock and getting up drunk at twelve. Consequently, he
|
||
rose, in suicidal low spirits, as fit for the church as for a dance;
|
||
and instead, he sat down by the fire and swallowed gin or brandy by
|
||
tumblerfuls.
|
||
|
||
“Heathcliff—I shudder to name him! has been a stranger in the house
|
||
from last Sunday till to-day. Whether the angels have fed him, or his
|
||
kin beneath, I cannot tell; but he has not eaten a meal with us for
|
||
nearly a week. He has just come home at dawn, and gone upstairs to his
|
||
chamber; locking himself in—as if anybody dreamt of coveting his
|
||
company! There he has continued, praying like a Methodist: only the
|
||
deity he implored is senseless dust and ashes; and God, when addressed,
|
||
was curiously confounded with his own black father! After concluding
|
||
these precious orisons—and they lasted generally till he grew hoarse
|
||
and his voice was strangled in his throat—he would be off again; always
|
||
straight down to the Grange! I wonder Edgar did not send for a
|
||
constable, and give him into custody! For me, grieved as I was about
|
||
Catherine, it was impossible to avoid regarding this season of
|
||
deliverance from degrading oppression as a holiday.
|
||
|
||
“I recovered spirits sufficient to hear Joseph’s eternal lectures
|
||
without weeping, and to move up and down the house less with the foot
|
||
of a frightened thief than formerly. You wouldn’t think that I should
|
||
cry at anything Joseph could say; but he and Hareton are detestable
|
||
companions. I’d rather sit with Hindley, and hear his awful talk, than
|
||
with ‘t’ little maister’ and his staunch supporter, that odious old
|
||
man! When Heathcliff is in, I’m often obliged to seek the kitchen and
|
||
their society, or starve among the damp uninhabited chambers; when he
|
||
is not, as was the case this week, I establish a table and chair at one
|
||
corner of the house fire, and never mind how Mr. Earnshaw may occupy
|
||
himself; and he does not interfere with my arrangements. He is quieter
|
||
now than he used to be, if no one provokes him: more sullen and
|
||
depressed, and less furious. Joseph affirms he’s sure he’s an altered
|
||
man: that the Lord has touched his heart, and he is saved ‘so as by
|
||
fire.’ I’m puzzled to detect signs of the favourable change: but it is
|
||
not my business.
|
||
|
||
“Yester-evening I sat in my nook reading some old books till late on
|
||
towards twelve. It seemed so dismal to go upstairs, with the wild snow
|
||
blowing outside, and my thoughts continually reverting to the kirkyard
|
||
and the new-made grave! I dared hardly lift my eyes from the page
|
||
before me, that melancholy scene so instantly usurped its place.
|
||
Hindley sat opposite, his head leant on his hand; perhaps meditating on
|
||
the same subject. He had ceased drinking at a point below
|
||
irrationality, and had neither stirred nor spoken during two or three
|
||
hours. There was no sound through the house but the moaning wind, which
|
||
shook the windows every now and then, the faint crackling of the coals,
|
||
and the click of my snuffers as I removed at intervals the long wick of
|
||
the candle. Hareton and Joseph were probably fast asleep in bed. It was
|
||
very, very sad: and while I read I sighed, for it seemed as if all joy
|
||
had vanished from the world, never to be restored.
|
||
|
||
“The doleful silence was broken at length by the sound of the kitchen
|
||
latch: Heathcliff had returned from his watch earlier than usual;
|
||
owing, I suppose, to the sudden storm. That entrance was fastened, and
|
||
we heard him coming round to get in by the other. I rose with an
|
||
irrepressible expression of what I felt on my lips, which induced my
|
||
companion, who had been staring towards the door, to turn and look at
|
||
me.
|
||
|
||
“‘I’ll keep him out five minutes,’ he exclaimed. ‘You won’t object?’
|
||
|
||
“‘No, you may keep him out the whole night for me,’ I answered. ‘Do!
|
||
put the key in the lock, and draw the bolts.’
|
||
|
||
“Earnshaw accomplished this ere his guest reached the front; he then
|
||
came and brought his chair to the other side of my table, leaning over
|
||
it, and searching in my eyes for a sympathy with the burning hate that
|
||
gleamed from his: as he both looked and felt like an assassin, he
|
||
couldn’t exactly find that; but he discovered enough to encourage him
|
||
to speak.
|
||
|
||
“‘You, and I,’ he said, ‘have each a great debt to settle with the man
|
||
out yonder! If we were neither of us cowards, we might combine to
|
||
discharge it. Are you as soft as your brother? Are you willing to
|
||
endure to the last, and not once attempt a repayment?’
|
||
|
||
“‘I’m weary of enduring now,’ I replied; ‘and I’d be glad of a
|
||
retaliation that wouldn’t recoil on myself; but treachery and violence
|
||
are spears pointed at both ends; they wound those who resort to them
|
||
worse than their enemies.’
|
||
|
||
“‘Treachery and violence are a just return for treachery and violence!’
|
||
cried Hindley. ‘Mrs. Heathcliff, I’ll ask you to do nothing; but sit
|
||
still and be dumb. Tell me now, can you? I’m sure you would have as
|
||
much pleasure as I in witnessing the conclusion of the fiend’s
|
||
existence; he’ll be _your_ death unless you overreach him; and he’ll be
|
||
_my_ ruin. Damn the hellish villain! He knocks at the door as if he
|
||
were master here already! Promise to hold your tongue, and before that
|
||
clock strikes—it wants three minutes of one—you’re a free woman!’
|
||
|
||
“He took the implements which I described to you in my letter from his
|
||
breast, and would have turned down the candle. I snatched it away,
|
||
however, and seized his arm.
|
||
|
||
“‘I’ll not hold my tongue!’ I said; ‘you mustn’t touch him. Let the
|
||
door remain shut, and be quiet!’
|
||
|
||
“‘No! I’ve formed my resolution, and by God I’ll execute it!’ cried the
|
||
desperate being. ‘I’ll do you a kindness in spite of yourself, and
|
||
Hareton justice! And you needn’t trouble your head to screen me;
|
||
Catherine is gone. Nobody alive would regret me, or be ashamed, though
|
||
I cut my throat this minute—and it’s time to make an end!’
|
||
|
||
“I might as well have struggled with a bear, or reasoned with a
|
||
lunatic. The only resource left me was to run to a lattice and warn his
|
||
intended victim of the fate which awaited him.
|
||
|
||
“‘You’d better seek shelter somewhere else to-night!’ I exclaimed, in
|
||
rather a triumphant tone. ‘Mr. Earnshaw has a mind to shoot you, if you
|
||
persist in endeavouring to enter.’
|
||
|
||
“‘You’d better open the door, you—’ he answered, addressing me by some
|
||
elegant term that I don’t care to repeat.
|
||
|
||
“‘I shall not meddle in the matter,’ I retorted again. ‘Come in and get
|
||
shot, if you please. I’ve done my duty.’
|
||
|
||
“With that I shut the window and returned to my place by the fire;
|
||
having too small a stock of hypocrisy at my command to pretend any
|
||
anxiety for the danger that menaced him. Earnshaw swore passionately at
|
||
me: affirming that I loved the villain yet; and calling me all sorts of
|
||
names for the base spirit I evinced. And I, in my secret heart (and
|
||
conscience never reproached me), thought what a blessing it would be
|
||
for _him_ should Heathcliff put him out of misery; and what a blessing
|
||
for _me_ should he send Heathcliff to his right abode! As I sat nursing
|
||
these reflections, the casement behind me was banged on to the floor by
|
||
a blow from the latter individual, and his black countenance looked
|
||
blightingly through. The stanchions stood too close to suffer his
|
||
shoulders to follow, and I smiled, exulting in my fancied security. His
|
||
hair and clothes were whitened with snow, and his sharp cannibal teeth,
|
||
revealed by cold and wrath, gleamed through the dark.
|
||
|
||
“‘Isabella, let me in, or I’ll make you repent!’ he ‘girned,’ as Joseph
|
||
calls it.
|
||
|
||
“‘I cannot commit murder,’ I replied. ‘Mr. Hindley stands sentinel with
|
||
a knife and loaded pistol.’
|
||
|
||
“‘Let me in by the kitchen door,’ he said.
|
||
|
||
“‘Hindley will be there before me,’ I answered: ‘and that’s a poor love
|
||
of yours that cannot bear a shower of snow! We were left at peace in
|
||
our beds as long as the summer moon shone, but the moment a blast of
|
||
winter returns, you must run for shelter! Heathcliff, if I were you,
|
||
I’d go stretch myself over her grave and die like a faithful dog. The
|
||
world is surely not worth living in now, is it? You had distinctly
|
||
impressed on me the idea that Catherine was the whole joy of your life:
|
||
I can’t imagine how you think of surviving her loss.’
|
||
|
||
“‘He’s there, is he?’ exclaimed my companion, rushing to the gap. ‘If I
|
||
can get my arm out I can hit him!’
|
||
|
||
“I’m afraid, Ellen, you’ll set me down as really wicked; but you don’t
|
||
know all, so don’t judge. I wouldn’t have aided or abetted an attempt
|
||
on even _his_ life for anything. Wish that he were dead, I must; and
|
||
therefore I was fearfully disappointed, and unnerved by terror for the
|
||
consequences of my taunting speech, when he flung himself on Earnshaw’s
|
||
weapon and wrenched it from his grasp.
|
||
|
||
“The charge exploded, and the knife, in springing back, closed into its
|
||
owner’s wrist. Heathcliff pulled it away by main force, slitting up the
|
||
flesh as it passed on, and thrust it dripping into his pocket. He then
|
||
took a stone, struck down the division between two windows, and sprang
|
||
in. His adversary had fallen senseless with excessive pain and the flow
|
||
of blood, that gushed from an artery or a large vein. The ruffian
|
||
kicked and trampled on him, and dashed his head repeatedly against the
|
||
flags, holding me with one hand, meantime, to prevent me summoning
|
||
Joseph. He exerted preterhuman self-denial in abstaining from finishing
|
||
him completely; but getting out of breath, he finally desisted, and
|
||
dragged the apparently inanimate body on to the settle. There he tore
|
||
off the sleeve of Earnshaw’s coat, and bound up the wound with brutal
|
||
roughness; spitting and cursing during the operation as energetically
|
||
as he had kicked before. Being at liberty, I lost no time in seeking
|
||
the old servant; who, having gathered by degrees the purport of my
|
||
hasty tale, hurried below, gasping, as he descended the steps two at
|
||
once.
|
||
|
||
“‘What is ther to do, now? what is ther to do, now?’
|
||
|
||
“‘There’s this to do,’ thundered Heathcliff, ‘that your master’s mad;
|
||
and should he last another month, I’ll have him to an asylum. And how
|
||
the devil did you come to fasten me out, you toothless hound? Don’t
|
||
stand muttering and mumbling there. Come, I’m not going to nurse him.
|
||
Wash that stuff away; and mind the sparks of your candle—it is more
|
||
than half brandy!’
|
||
|
||
“‘And so ye’ve been murthering on him?’ exclaimed Joseph, lifting his
|
||
hands and eyes in horror. ‘If iver I seed a seeght loike this! May the
|
||
Lord—’
|
||
|
||
“Heathcliff gave him a push on to his knees in the middle of the blood,
|
||
and flung a towel to him; but instead of proceeding to dry it up, he
|
||
joined his hands and began a prayer, which excited my laughter from its
|
||
odd phraseology. I was in the condition of mind to be shocked at
|
||
nothing: in fact, I was as reckless as some malefactors show themselves
|
||
at the foot of the gallows.
|
||
|
||
“‘Oh, I forgot you,’ said the tyrant. ‘You shall do that. Down with
|
||
you. And you conspire with him against me, do you, viper? There, that
|
||
is work fit for you!’
|
||
|
||
“He shook me till my teeth rattled, and pitched me beside Joseph, who
|
||
steadily concluded his supplications, and then rose, vowing he would
|
||
set off for the Grange directly. Mr. Linton was a magistrate, and
|
||
though he had fifty wives dead, he should inquire into this. He was so
|
||
obstinate in his resolution, that Heathcliff deemed it expedient to
|
||
compel from my lips a recapitulation of what had taken place; standing
|
||
over me, heaving with malevolence, as I reluctantly delivered the
|
||
account in answer to his questions. It required a great deal of labour
|
||
to satisfy the old man that Heathcliff was not the aggressor;
|
||
especially with my hardly-wrung replies. However, Mr. Earnshaw soon
|
||
convinced him that he was alive still; Joseph hastened to administer a
|
||
dose of spirits, and by their succour his master presently regained
|
||
motion and consciousness. Heathcliff, aware that his opponent was
|
||
ignorant of the treatment received while insensible, called him
|
||
deliriously intoxicated; and said he should not notice his atrocious
|
||
conduct further, but advised him to get to bed. To my joy, he left us,
|
||
after giving this judicious counsel, and Hindley stretched himself on
|
||
the hearthstone. I departed to my own room, marvelling that I had
|
||
escaped so easily.
|
||
|
||
“This morning, when I came down, about half an hour before noon, Mr.
|
||
Earnshaw was sitting by the fire, deadly sick; his evil genius, almost
|
||
as gaunt and ghastly, leant against the chimney. Neither appeared
|
||
inclined to dine, and, having waited till all was cold on the table, I
|
||
commenced alone. Nothing hindered me from eating heartily, and I
|
||
experienced a certain sense of satisfaction and superiority, as, at
|
||
intervals, I cast a look towards my silent companions, and felt the
|
||
comfort of a quiet conscience within me. After I had done, I ventured
|
||
on the unusual liberty of drawing near the fire, going round Earnshaw’s
|
||
seat, and kneeling in the corner beside him.
|
||
|
||
“Heathcliff did not glance my way, and I gazed up, and contemplated his
|
||
features almost as confidently as if they had been turned to stone. His
|
||
forehead, that I once thought so manly, and that I now think so
|
||
diabolical, was shaded with a heavy cloud; his basilisk eyes were
|
||
nearly quenched by sleeplessness, and weeping, perhaps, for the lashes
|
||
were wet then: his lips devoid of their ferocious sneer, and sealed in
|
||
an expression of unspeakable sadness. Had it been another, I would have
|
||
covered my face in the presence of such grief. In _his_ case, I was
|
||
gratified; and, ignoble as it seems to insult a fallen enemy, I
|
||
couldn’t miss this chance of sticking in a dart: his weakness was the
|
||
only time when I could taste the delight of paying wrong for wrong.”
|
||
|
||
“Fie, fie, Miss!” I interrupted. “One might suppose you had never
|
||
opened a Bible in your life. If God afflict your enemies, surely that
|
||
ought to suffice you. It is both mean and presumptuous to add your
|
||
torture to his!”
|
||
|
||
“In general I’ll allow that it would be, Ellen,” she continued; “but
|
||
what misery laid on Heathcliff could content me, unless I have a hand
|
||
in it? I’d rather he suffered _less_, if I might cause his sufferings
|
||
and he might _know_ that I was the cause. Oh, I owe him so much. On
|
||
only one condition can I hope to forgive him. It is, if I may take an
|
||
eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth; for every wrench of agony return a
|
||
wrench: reduce him to my level. As he was the first to injure, make him
|
||
the first to implore pardon; and then—why then, Ellen, I might show you
|
||
some generosity. But it is utterly impossible I can ever be revenged,
|
||
and therefore I cannot forgive him. Hindley wanted some water, and I
|
||
handed him a glass, and asked him how he was.
|
||
|
||
“‘Not as ill as I wish,’ he replied. ‘But leaving out my arm, every
|
||
inch of me is as sore as if I had been fighting with a legion of imps!’
|
||
|
||
“‘Yes, no wonder,’ was my next remark. ‘Catherine used to boast that
|
||
she stood between you and bodily harm: she meant that certain persons
|
||
would not hurt you for fear of offending her. It’s well people don’t
|
||
_really_ rise from their grave, or, last night, she might have
|
||
witnessed a repulsive scene! Are not you bruised, and cut over your
|
||
chest and shoulders?’
|
||
|
||
“‘I can’t say,’ he answered; ‘but what do you mean? Did he dare to
|
||
strike me when I was down?’
|
||
|
||
“‘He trampled on and kicked you, and dashed you on the ground,’ I
|
||
whispered. ‘And his mouth watered to tear you with his teeth; because
|
||
he’s only half man: not so much, and the rest fiend.’
|
||
|
||
“Mr. Earnshaw looked up, like me, to the countenance of our mutual foe;
|
||
who, absorbed in his anguish, seemed insensible to anything around him:
|
||
the longer he stood, the plainer his reflections revealed their
|
||
blackness through his features.
|
||
|
||
“‘Oh, if God would but give me strength to strangle him in my last
|
||
agony, I’d go to hell with joy,’ groaned the impatient man, writhing to
|
||
rise, and sinking back in despair, convinced of his inadequacy for the
|
||
struggle.
|
||
|
||
“‘Nay, it’s enough that he has murdered one of you,’ I observed aloud.
|
||
‘At the Grange, every one knows your sister would have been living now
|
||
had it not been for Mr. Heathcliff. After all, it is preferable to be
|
||
hated than loved by him. When I recollect how happy we were—how happy
|
||
Catherine was before he came—I’m fit to curse the day.’
|
||
|
||
“Most likely, Heathcliff noticed more the truth of what was said, than
|
||
the spirit of the person who said it. His attention was roused, I saw,
|
||
for his eyes rained down tears among the ashes, and he drew his breath
|
||
in suffocating sighs. I stared full at him, and laughed scornfully. The
|
||
clouded windows of hell flashed a moment towards me; the fiend which
|
||
usually looked out, however, was so dimmed and drowned that I did not
|
||
fear to hazard another sound of derision.
|
||
|
||
“‘Get up, and begone out of my sight,’ said the mourner.
|
||
|
||
“I guessed he uttered those words, at least, though his voice was
|
||
hardly intelligible.
|
||
|
||
“‘I beg your pardon,’ I replied. ‘But I loved Catherine too; and her
|
||
brother requires attendance, which, for her sake, I shall supply. Now
|
||
that she’s dead, I see her in Hindley: Hindley has exactly her eyes, if
|
||
you had not tried to gouge them out, and made them black and red; and
|
||
her—’
|
||
|
||
“‘Get up, wretched idiot, before I stamp you to death!’ he cried,
|
||
making a movement that caused me to make one also.
|
||
|
||
“‘But then,’ I continued, holding myself ready to flee, ‘if poor
|
||
Catherine had trusted you, and assumed the ridiculous, contemptible,
|
||
degrading title of Mrs. Heathcliff, she would soon have presented a
|
||
similar picture! _She_ wouldn’t have borne your abominable behaviour
|
||
quietly: her detestation and disgust must have found voice.’
|
||
|
||
“The back of the settle and Earnshaw’s person interposed between me and
|
||
him; so instead of endeavouring to reach me, he snatched a dinner-knife
|
||
from the table and flung it at my head. It struck beneath my ear, and
|
||
stopped the sentence I was uttering; but, pulling it out, I sprang to
|
||
the door and delivered another; which I hope went a little deeper than
|
||
his missile. The last glimpse I caught of him was a furious rush on his
|
||
part, checked by the embrace of his host; and both fell locked together
|
||
on the hearth. In my flight through the kitchen I bid Joseph speed to
|
||
his master; I knocked over Hareton, who was hanging a litter of puppies
|
||
from a chair-back in the doorway; and, blessed as a soul escaped from
|
||
purgatory, I bounded, leaped, and flew down the steep road; then,
|
||
quitting its windings, shot direct across the moor, rolling over banks,
|
||
and wading through marshes: precipitating myself, in fact, towards the
|
||
beacon-light of the Grange. And far rather would I be condemned to a
|
||
perpetual dwelling in the infernal regions than, even for one night,
|
||
abide beneath the roof of Wuthering Heights again.”
|
||
|
||
Isabella ceased speaking, and took a drink of tea; then she rose, and
|
||
bidding me put on her bonnet, and a great shawl I had brought, and
|
||
turning a deaf ear to my entreaties for her to remain another hour, she
|
||
stepped on to a chair, kissed Edgar’s and Catherine’s portraits,
|
||
bestowed a similar salute on me, and descended to the carriage,
|
||
accompanied by Fanny, who yelped wild with joy at recovering her
|
||
mistress. She was driven away, never to revisit this neighbourhood: but
|
||
a regular correspondence was established between her and my master when
|
||
things were more settled. I believe her new abode was in the south,
|
||
near London; there she had a son born a few months subsequent to her
|
||
escape. He was christened Linton, and, from the first, she reported him
|
||
to be an ailing, peevish creature.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Heathcliff, meeting me one day in the village, inquired where she
|
||
lived. I refused to tell. He remarked that it was not of any moment,
|
||
only she must beware of coming to her brother: she should not be with
|
||
him, if he had to keep her himself. Though I would give no information,
|
||
he discovered, through some of the other servants, both her place of
|
||
residence and the existence of the child. Still, he didn’t molest her:
|
||
for which forbearance she might thank his aversion, I suppose. He often
|
||
asked about the infant, when he saw me; and on hearing its name, smiled
|
||
grimly, and observed: “They wish me to hate it too, do they?”
|
||
|
||
“I don’t think they wish you to know anything about it,” I answered.
|
||
|
||
“But I’ll have it,” he said, “when I want it. They may reckon on that!”
|
||
|
||
Fortunately its mother died before the time arrived; some thirteen
|
||
years after the decease of Catherine, when Linton was twelve, or a
|
||
little more.
|
||
|
||
On the day succeeding Isabella’s unexpected visit I had no opportunity
|
||
of speaking to my master: he shunned conversation, and was fit for
|
||
discussing nothing. When I could get him to listen, I saw it pleased
|
||
him that his sister had left her husband; whom he abhorred with an
|
||
intensity which the mildness of his nature would scarcely seem to
|
||
allow. So deep and sensitive was his aversion, that he refrained from
|
||
going anywhere where he was likely to see or hear of Heathcliff. Grief,
|
||
and that together, transformed him into a complete hermit: he threw up
|
||
his office of magistrate, ceased even to attend church, avoided the
|
||
village on all occasions, and spent a life of entire seclusion within
|
||
the limits of his park and grounds; only varied by solitary rambles on
|
||
the moors, and visits to the grave of his wife, mostly at evening, or
|
||
early morning before other wanderers were abroad. But he was too good
|
||
to be thoroughly unhappy long. _He_ didn’t pray for Catherine’s soul to
|
||
haunt him. Time brought resignation, and a melancholy sweeter than
|
||
common joy. He recalled her memory with ardent, tender love, and
|
||
hopeful aspiring to the better world; where he doubted not she was
|
||
gone.
|
||
|
||
And he had earthly consolation and affections also. For a few days, I
|
||
said, he seemed regardless of the puny successor to the departed: that
|
||
coldness melted as fast as snow in April, and ere the tiny thing could
|
||
stammer a word or totter a step it wielded a despot’s sceptre in his
|
||
heart. It was named Catherine; but he never called it the name in full,
|
||
as he had never called the first Catherine short: probably because
|
||
Heathcliff had a habit of doing so. The little one was always Cathy: it
|
||
formed to him a distinction from the mother, and yet a connection with
|
||
her; and his attachment sprang from its relation to her, far more than
|
||
from its being his own.
|
||
|
||
I used to draw a comparison between him and Hindley Earnshaw, and
|
||
perplex myself to explain satisfactorily why their conduct was so
|
||
opposite in similar circumstances. They had both been fond husbands,
|
||
and were both attached to their children; and I could not see how they
|
||
shouldn’t both have taken the same road, for good or evil. But, I
|
||
thought in my mind, Hindley, with apparently the stronger head, has
|
||
shown himself sadly the worse and the weaker man. When his ship struck,
|
||
the captain abandoned his post; and the crew, instead of trying to save
|
||
her, rushed into riot and confusion, leaving no hope for their luckless
|
||
vessel. Linton, on the contrary, displayed the true courage of a loyal
|
||
and faithful soul: he trusted God; and God comforted him. One hoped,
|
||
and the other despaired: they chose their own lots, and were
|
||
righteously doomed to endure them. But you’ll not want to hear my
|
||
moralising, Mr. Lockwood; you’ll judge, as well as I can, all these
|
||
things: at least, you’ll think you will, and that’s the same. The end
|
||
of Earnshaw was what might have been expected; it followed fast on his
|
||
sister’s: there were scarcely six months between them. We, at the
|
||
Grange, never got a very succinct account of his state preceding it;
|
||
all that I did learn was on occasion of going to aid in the
|
||
preparations for the funeral. Mr. Kenneth came to announce the event to
|
||
my master.
|
||
|
||
“Well, Nelly,” said he, riding into the yard one morning, too early not
|
||
to alarm me with an instant presentiment of bad news, “it’s yours and
|
||
my turn to go into mourning at present. Who’s given us the slip now, do
|
||
you think?”
|
||
|
||
“Who?” I asked in a flurry.
|
||
|
||
“Why, guess!” he returned, dismounting, and slinging his bridle on a
|
||
hook by the door. “And nip up the corner of your apron: I’m certain
|
||
you’ll need it.”
|
||
|
||
“Not Mr. Heathcliff, surely?” I exclaimed.
|
||
|
||
“What! would you have tears for him?” said the doctor. “No,
|
||
Heathcliff’s a tough young fellow: he looks blooming to-day. I’ve just
|
||
seen him. He’s rapidly regaining flesh since he lost his better half.”
|
||
|
||
“Who is it, then, Mr. Kenneth?” I repeated impatiently.
|
||
|
||
“Hindley Earnshaw! Your old friend Hindley,” he replied, “and my wicked
|
||
gossip: though he’s been too wild for me this long while. There! I said
|
||
we should draw water. But cheer up! He died true to his character:
|
||
drunk as a lord. Poor lad! I’m sorry, too. One can’t help missing an
|
||
old companion: though he had the worst tricks with him that ever man
|
||
imagined, and has done me many a rascally turn. He’s barely
|
||
twenty-seven, it seems; that’s your own age: who would have thought you
|
||
were born in one year?”
|
||
|
||
I confess this blow was greater to me than the shock of Mrs. Linton’s
|
||
death: ancient associations lingered round my heart; I sat down in the
|
||
porch and wept as for a blood relation, desiring Mr. Kenneth to get
|
||
another servant to introduce him to the master. I could not hinder
|
||
myself from pondering on the question—“Had he had fair play?” Whatever
|
||
I did, that idea would bother me: it was so tiresomely pertinacious
|
||
that I resolved on requesting leave to go to Wuthering Heights, and
|
||
assist in the last duties to the dead. Mr. Linton was extremely
|
||
reluctant to consent, but I pleaded eloquently for the friendless
|
||
condition in which he lay; and I said my old master and foster-brother
|
||
had a claim on my services as strong as his own. Besides, I reminded
|
||
him that the child Hareton was his wife’s nephew, and, in the absence
|
||
of nearer kin, he ought to act as its guardian; and he ought to and
|
||
must inquire how the property was left, and look over the concerns of
|
||
his brother-in-law. He was unfit for attending to such matters then,
|
||
but he bid me speak to his lawyer; and at length permitted me to go.
|
||
His lawyer had been Earnshaw’s also: I called at the village, and asked
|
||
him to accompany me. He shook his head, and advised that Heathcliff
|
||
should be let alone; affirming, if the truth were known, Hareton would
|
||
be found little else than a beggar.
|
||
|
||
“His father died in debt,” he said; “the whole property is mortgaged,
|
||
and the sole chance for the natural heir is to allow him an opportunity
|
||
of creating some interest in the creditor’s heart, that he may be
|
||
inclined to deal leniently towards him.”
|
||
|
||
When I reached the Heights, I explained that I had come to see
|
||
everything carried on decently; and Joseph, who appeared in sufficient
|
||
distress, expressed satisfaction at my presence. Mr. Heathcliff said he
|
||
did not perceive that I was wanted; but I might stay and order the
|
||
arrangements for the funeral, if I chose.
|
||
|
||
“Correctly,” he remarked, “that fool’s body should be buried at the
|
||
cross-roads, without ceremony of any kind. I happened to leave him ten
|
||
minutes yesterday afternoon, and in that interval he fastened the two
|
||
doors of the house against me, and he has spent the night in drinking
|
||
himself to death deliberately! We broke in this morning, for we heard
|
||
him snorting like a horse; and there he was, laid over the settle:
|
||
flaying and scalping would not have wakened him. I sent for Kenneth,
|
||
and he came; but not till the beast had changed into carrion: he was
|
||
both dead and cold, and stark; and so you’ll allow it was useless
|
||
making more stir about him!”
|
||
|
||
The old servant confirmed this statement, but muttered:
|
||
|
||
“I’d rayther he’d goan hisseln for t’ doctor! I sud ha’ taen tent o’ t’
|
||
maister better nor him—and he warn’t deead when I left, naught o’ t’
|
||
soart!”
|
||
|
||
I insisted on the funeral being respectable. Mr. Heathcliff said I
|
||
might have my own way there too: only, he desired me to remember that
|
||
the money for the whole affair came out of his pocket. He maintained a
|
||
hard, careless deportment, indicative of neither joy nor sorrow: if
|
||
anything, it expressed a flinty gratification at a piece of difficult
|
||
work successfully executed. I observed once, indeed, something like
|
||
exultation in his aspect: it was just when the people were bearing the
|
||
coffin from the house. He had the hypocrisy to represent a mourner: and
|
||
previous to following with Hareton, he lifted the unfortunate child on
|
||
to the table and muttered, with peculiar gusto, “Now, my bonny lad, you
|
||
are _mine_! And we’ll see if one tree won’t grow as crooked as another,
|
||
with the same wind to twist it!” The unsuspecting thing was pleased at
|
||
this speech: he played with Heathcliff’s whiskers, and stroked his
|
||
cheek; but I divined its meaning, and observed tartly, “That boy must
|
||
go back with me to Thrushcross Grange, sir. There is nothing in the
|
||
world less yours than he is!”
|
||
|
||
“Does Linton say so?” he demanded.
|
||
|
||
“Of course—he has ordered me to take him,” I replied.
|
||
|
||
“Well,” said the scoundrel, “we’ll not argue the subject now: but I
|
||
have a fancy to try my hand at rearing a young one; so intimate to your
|
||
master that I must supply the place of this with my own, if he attempt
|
||
to remove it. I don’t engage to let Hareton go undisputed; but I’ll be
|
||
pretty sure to make the other come! Remember to tell him.”
|
||
|
||
This hint was enough to bind our hands. I repeated its substance on my
|
||
return; and Edgar Linton, little interested at the commencement, spoke
|
||
no more of interfering. I’m not aware that he could have done it to any
|
||
purpose, had he been ever so willing.
|
||
|
||
The guest was now the master of Wuthering Heights: he held firm
|
||
possession, and proved to the attorney—who, in his turn, proved it to
|
||
Mr. Linton—that Earnshaw had mortgaged every yard of land he owned for
|
||
cash to supply his mania for gaming; and he, Heathcliff, was the
|
||
mortgagee. In that manner Hareton, who should now be the first
|
||
gentleman in the neighbourhood, was reduced to a state of complete
|
||
dependence on his father’s inveterate enemy; and lives in his own house
|
||
as a servant, deprived of the advantage of wages: quite unable to right
|
||
himself, because of his friendlessness, and his ignorance that he has
|
||
been wronged.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XVIII
|
||
|
||
|
||
The twelve years, continued Mrs. Dean, following that dismal period
|
||
were the happiest of my life: my greatest troubles in their passage
|
||
rose from our little lady’s trifling illnesses, which she had to
|
||
experience in common with all children, rich and poor. For the rest,
|
||
after the first six months, she grew like a larch, and could walk and
|
||
talk too, in her own way, before the heath blossomed a second time over
|
||
Mrs. Linton’s dust. She was the most winning thing that ever brought
|
||
sunshine into a desolate house: a real beauty in face, with the
|
||
Earnshaws’ handsome dark eyes, but the Lintons’ fair skin and small
|
||
features, and yellow curling hair. Her spirit was high, though not
|
||
rough, and qualified by a heart sensitive and lively to excess in its
|
||
affections. That capacity for intense attachments reminded me of her
|
||
mother: still she did not resemble her: for she could be soft and mild
|
||
as a dove, and she had a gentle voice and pensive expression: her anger
|
||
was never furious; her love never fierce: it was deep and tender.
|
||
However, it must be acknowledged, she had faults to foil her gifts. A
|
||
propensity to be saucy was one; and a perverse will, that indulged
|
||
children invariably acquire, whether they be good tempered or cross. If
|
||
a servant chanced to vex her, it was always—“I shall tell papa!” And if
|
||
he reproved her, even by a look, you would have thought it a
|
||
heart-breaking business: I don’t believe he ever did speak a harsh word
|
||
to her. He took her education entirely on himself, and made it an
|
||
amusement. Fortunately, curiosity and a quick intellect made her an apt
|
||
scholar: she learned rapidly and eagerly, and did honour to his
|
||
teaching.
|
||
|
||
Till she reached the age of thirteen she had not once been beyond the
|
||
range of the park by herself. Mr. Linton would take her with him a mile
|
||
or so outside, on rare occasions; but he trusted her to no one else.
|
||
Gimmerton was an unsubstantial name in her ears; the chapel, the only
|
||
building she had approached or entered, except her own home. Wuthering
|
||
Heights and Mr. Heathcliff did not exist for her: she was a perfect
|
||
recluse; and, apparently, perfectly contented. Sometimes, indeed, while
|
||
surveying the country from her nursery window, she would observe—
|
||
|
||
“Ellen, how long will it be before I can walk to the top of those
|
||
hills? I wonder what lies on the other side—is it the sea?”
|
||
|
||
“No, Miss Cathy,” I would answer; “it is hills again, just like these.”
|
||
|
||
“And what are those golden rocks like when you stand under them?” she
|
||
once asked.
|
||
|
||
The abrupt descent of Penistone Crags particularly attracted her
|
||
notice; especially when the setting sun shone on it and the topmost
|
||
heights, and the whole extent of landscape besides lay in shadow. I
|
||
explained that they were bare masses of stone, with hardly enough earth
|
||
in their clefts to nourish a stunted tree.
|
||
|
||
“And why are they bright so long after it is evening here?” she
|
||
pursued.
|
||
|
||
“Because they are a great deal higher up than we are,” replied I; “you
|
||
could not climb them, they are too high and steep. In winter the frost
|
||
is always there before it comes to us; and deep into summer I have
|
||
found snow under that black hollow on the north-east side!”
|
||
|
||
“Oh, you have been on them!” she cried gleefully. “Then I can go, too,
|
||
when I am a woman. Has papa been, Ellen?”
|
||
|
||
“Papa would tell you, Miss,” I answered, hastily, “that they are not
|
||
worth the trouble of visiting. The moors, where you ramble with him,
|
||
are much nicer; and Thrushcross Park is the finest place in the world.”
|
||
|
||
“But I know the park, and I don’t know those,” she murmured to herself.
|
||
“And I should delight to look round me from the brow of that tallest
|
||
point: my little pony Minny shall take me some time.”
|
||
|
||
One of the maids mentioning the Fairy Cave, quite turned her head with
|
||
a desire to fulfil this project: she teased Mr. Linton about it; and he
|
||
promised she should have the journey when she got older. But Miss
|
||
Catherine measured her age by months, and, “Now, am I old enough to go
|
||
to Penistone Crags?” was the constant question in her mouth. The road
|
||
thither wound close by Wuthering Heights. Edgar had not the heart to
|
||
pass it; so she received as constantly the answer, “Not yet, love: not
|
||
yet.”
|
||
|
||
I said Mrs. Heathcliff lived above a dozen years after quitting her
|
||
husband. Her family were of a delicate constitution: she and Edgar both
|
||
lacked the ruddy health that you will generally meet in these parts.
|
||
What her last illness was, I am not certain: I conjecture, they died of
|
||
the same thing, a kind of fever, slow at its commencement, but
|
||
incurable, and rapidly consuming life towards the close. She wrote to
|
||
inform her brother of the probable conclusion of a four-months’
|
||
indisposition under which she had suffered, and entreated him to come
|
||
to her, if possible; for she had much to settle, and she wished to bid
|
||
him adieu, and deliver Linton safely into his hands. Her hope was that
|
||
Linton might be left with him, as he had been with her: his father, she
|
||
would fain convince herself, had no desire to assume the burden of his
|
||
maintenance or education. My master hesitated not a moment in complying
|
||
with her request: reluctant as he was to leave home at ordinary calls,
|
||
he flew to answer this; commending Catherine to my peculiar vigilance,
|
||
in his absence, with reiterated orders that she must not wander out of
|
||
the park, even under my escort: he did not calculate on her going
|
||
unaccompanied.
|
||
|
||
He was away three weeks. The first day or two my charge sat in a corner
|
||
of the library, too sad for either reading or playing: in that quiet
|
||
state she caused me little trouble; but it was succeeded by an interval
|
||
of impatient, fretful weariness; and being too busy, and too old then,
|
||
to run up and down amusing her, I hit on a method by which she might
|
||
entertain herself. I used to send her on her travels round the
|
||
grounds—now on foot, and now on a pony; indulging her with a patient
|
||
audience of all her real and imaginary adventures when she returned.
|
||
|
||
The summer shone in full prime; and she took such a taste for this
|
||
solitary rambling that she often contrived to remain out from breakfast
|
||
till tea; and then the evenings were spent in recounting her fanciful
|
||
tales. I did not fear her breaking bounds; because the gates were
|
||
generally locked, and I thought she would scarcely venture forth alone,
|
||
if they had stood wide open. Unluckily, my confidence proved misplaced.
|
||
Catherine came to me, one morning, at eight o’clock, and said she was
|
||
that day an Arabian merchant, going to cross the Desert with his
|
||
caravan; and I must give her plenty of provision for herself and
|
||
beasts: a horse, and three camels, personated by a large hound and a
|
||
couple of pointers. I got together good store of dainties, and slung
|
||
them in a basket on one side of the saddle; and she sprang up as gay as
|
||
a fairy, sheltered by her wide-brimmed hat and gauze veil from the July
|
||
sun, and trotted off with a merry laugh, mocking my cautious counsel to
|
||
avoid galloping, and come back early. The naughty thing never made her
|
||
appearance at tea. One traveller, the hound, being an old dog and fond
|
||
of its ease, returned; but neither Cathy, nor the pony, nor the two
|
||
pointers were visible in any direction: I despatched emissaries down
|
||
this path, and that path, and at last went wandering in search of her
|
||
myself. There was a labourer working at a fence round a plantation, on
|
||
the borders of the grounds. I inquired of him if he had seen our young
|
||
lady.
|
||
|
||
“I saw her at morn,” he replied: “she would have me to cut her a hazel
|
||
switch, and then she leapt her Galloway over the hedge yonder, where it
|
||
is lowest, and galloped out of sight.”
|
||
|
||
You may guess how I felt at hearing this news. It struck me directly
|
||
she must have started for Penistone Crags. “What will become of her?” I
|
||
ejaculated, pushing through a gap which the man was repairing, and
|
||
making straight to the high-road. I walked as if for a wager, mile
|
||
after mile, till a turn brought me in view of the Heights; but no
|
||
Catherine could I detect, far or near. The Crags lie about a mile and a
|
||
half beyond Mr. Heathcliff’s place, and that is four from the Grange,
|
||
so I began to fear night would fall ere I could reach them. “And what
|
||
if she should have slipped in clambering among them,” I reflected, “and
|
||
been killed, or broken some of her bones?” My suspense was truly
|
||
painful; and, at first, it gave me delightful relief to observe, in
|
||
hurrying by the farmhouse, Charlie, the fiercest of the pointers, lying
|
||
under a window, with swelled head and bleeding ear. I opened the wicket
|
||
and ran to the door, knocking vehemently for admittance. A woman whom I
|
||
knew, and who formerly lived at Gimmerton, answered: she had been
|
||
servant there since the death of Mr. Earnshaw.
|
||
|
||
“Ah,” said she, “you are come a-seeking your little mistress! Don’t be
|
||
frightened. She’s here safe: but I’m glad it isn’t the master.”
|
||
|
||
“He is not at home then, is he?” I panted, quite breathless with quick
|
||
walking and alarm.
|
||
|
||
“No, no,” she replied: “both he and Joseph are off, and I think they
|
||
won’t return this hour or more. Step in and rest you a bit.”
|
||
|
||
I entered, and beheld my stray lamb seated on the hearth, rocking
|
||
herself in a little chair that had been her mother’s when a child. Her
|
||
hat was hung against the wall, and she seemed perfectly at home,
|
||
laughing and chattering, in the best spirits imaginable, to Hareton—now
|
||
a great, strong lad of eighteen—who stared at her with considerable
|
||
curiosity and astonishment: comprehending precious little of the fluent
|
||
succession of remarks and questions which her tongue never ceased
|
||
pouring forth.
|
||
|
||
“Very well, Miss!” I exclaimed, concealing my joy under an angry
|
||
countenance. “This is your last ride, till papa comes back. I’ll not
|
||
trust you over the threshold again, you naughty, naughty girl!”
|
||
|
||
“Aha, Ellen!” she cried, gaily, jumping up and running to my side. “I
|
||
shall have a pretty story to tell to-night; and so you’ve found me out.
|
||
Have you ever been here in your life before?”
|
||
|
||
“Put that hat on, and home at once,” said I. “I’m dreadfully grieved at
|
||
you, Miss Cathy: you’ve done extremely wrong! It’s no use pouting and
|
||
crying: that won’t repay the trouble I’ve had, scouring the country
|
||
after you. To think how Mr. Linton charged me to keep you in; and you
|
||
stealing off so! It shows you are a cunning little fox, and nobody will
|
||
put faith in you any more.”
|
||
|
||
“What have I done?” sobbed she, instantly checked. “Papa charged me
|
||
nothing: he’ll not scold me, Ellen—he’s never cross, like you!”
|
||
|
||
“Come, come!” I repeated. “I’ll tie the riband. Now, let us have no
|
||
petulance. Oh, for shame! You thirteen years old, and such a baby!”
|
||
|
||
This exclamation was caused by her pushing the hat from her head, and
|
||
retreating to the chimney out of my reach.
|
||
|
||
“Nay,” said the servant, “don’t be hard on the bonny lass, Mrs. Dean.
|
||
We made her stop: she’d fain have ridden forwards, afeard you should be
|
||
uneasy. Hareton offered to go with her, and I thought he should: it’s a
|
||
wild road over the hills.”
|
||
|
||
Hareton, during the discussion, stood with his hands in his pockets,
|
||
too awkward to speak; though he looked as if he did not relish my
|
||
intrusion.
|
||
|
||
“How long am I to wait?” I continued, disregarding the woman’s
|
||
interference. “It will be dark in ten minutes. Where is the pony, Miss
|
||
Cathy? And where is Phoenix? I shall leave you, unless you be quick; so
|
||
please yourself.”
|
||
|
||
“The pony is in the yard,” she replied, “and Phoenix is shut in there.
|
||
He’s bitten—and so is Charlie. I was going to tell you all about it;
|
||
but you are in a bad temper, and don’t deserve to hear.”
|
||
|
||
I picked up her hat, and approached to reinstate it; but perceiving
|
||
that the people of the house took her part, she commenced capering
|
||
round the room; and on my giving chase, ran like a mouse over and under
|
||
and behind the furniture, rendering it ridiculous for me to pursue.
|
||
Hareton and the woman laughed, and she joined them, and waxed more
|
||
impertinent still; till I cried, in great irritation,—“Well, Miss
|
||
Cathy, if you were aware whose house this is you’d be glad enough to
|
||
get out.”
|
||
|
||
“It’s _your_ father’s, isn’t it?” said she, turning to Hareton.
|
||
|
||
“Nay,” he replied, looking down, and blushing bashfully.
|
||
|
||
He could not stand a steady gaze from her eyes, though they were just
|
||
his own.
|
||
|
||
“Whose then—your master’s?” she asked.
|
||
|
||
He coloured deeper, with a different feeling, muttered an oath, and
|
||
turned away.
|
||
|
||
“Who is his master?” continued the tiresome girl, appealing to me. “He
|
||
talked about ‘our house,’ and ‘our folk.’ I thought he had been the
|
||
owner’s son. And he never said Miss: he should have done, shouldn’t he,
|
||
if he’s a servant?”
|
||
|
||
Hareton grew black as a thunder-cloud at this childish speech. I
|
||
silently shook my questioner, and at last succeeded in equipping her
|
||
for departure.
|
||
|
||
“Now, get my horse,” she said, addressing her unknown kinsman as she
|
||
would one of the stable-boys at the Grange. “And you may come with me.
|
||
I want to see where the goblin-hunter rises in the marsh, and to hear
|
||
about the _fairishes_, as you call them: but make haste! What’s the
|
||
matter? Get my horse, I say.”
|
||
|
||
“I’ll see thee damned before I be _thy_ servant!” growled the lad.
|
||
|
||
“You’ll see me _what?_” asked Catherine in surprise.
|
||
|
||
“Damned—thou saucy witch!” he replied.
|
||
|
||
“There, Miss Cathy! you see you have got into pretty company,” I
|
||
interposed. “Nice words to be used to a young lady! Pray don’t begin to
|
||
dispute with him. Come, let us seek for Minny ourselves, and begone.”
|
||
|
||
“But, Ellen,” cried she, staring fixed in astonishment, “how dare he
|
||
speak so to me? Mustn’t he be made to do as I ask him? You wicked
|
||
creature, I shall tell papa what you said.—Now, then!”
|
||
|
||
Hareton did not appear to feel this threat; so the tears sprang into
|
||
her eyes with indignation. “You bring the pony,” she exclaimed, turning
|
||
to the woman, “and let my dog free this moment!”
|
||
|
||
“Softly, Miss,” answered the addressed. “You’ll lose nothing by being
|
||
civil. Though Mr. Hareton, there, be not the master’s son, he’s your
|
||
cousin: and I was never hired to serve you.”
|
||
|
||
“_He_ my cousin!” cried Cathy, with a scornful laugh.
|
||
|
||
“Yes, indeed,” responded her reprover.
|
||
|
||
“Oh, Ellen! don’t let them say such things,” she pursued in great
|
||
trouble. “Papa is gone to fetch my cousin from London: my cousin is a
|
||
gentleman’s son. That my—” she stopped, and wept outright; upset at the
|
||
bare notion of relationship with such a clown.
|
||
|
||
“Hush, hush!” I whispered; “people can have many cousins and of all
|
||
sorts, Miss Cathy, without being any the worse for it; only they
|
||
needn’t keep their company, if they be disagreeable and bad.”
|
||
|
||
“He’s not—he’s not my cousin, Ellen!” she went on, gathering fresh
|
||
grief from reflection, and flinging herself into my arms for refuge
|
||
from the idea.
|
||
|
||
I was much vexed at her and the servant for their mutual revelations;
|
||
having no doubt of Linton’s approaching arrival, communicated by the
|
||
former, being reported to Mr. Heathcliff; and feeling as confident that
|
||
Catherine’s first thought on her father’s return would be to seek an
|
||
explanation of the latter’s assertion concerning her rude-bred kindred.
|
||
Hareton, recovering from his disgust at being taken for a servant,
|
||
seemed moved by her distress; and, having fetched the pony round to the
|
||
door, he took, to propitiate her, a fine crooked-legged terrier whelp
|
||
from the kennel, and putting it into her hand, bid her whist! for he
|
||
meant nought. Pausing in her lamentations, she surveyed him with a
|
||
glance of awe and horror, then burst forth anew.
|
||
|
||
I could scarcely refrain from smiling at this antipathy to the poor
|
||
fellow; who was a well-made, athletic youth, good-looking in features,
|
||
and stout and healthy, but attired in garments befitting his daily
|
||
occupations of working on the farm and lounging among the moors after
|
||
rabbits and game. Still, I thought I could detect in his physiognomy a
|
||
mind owning better qualities than his father ever possessed. Good
|
||
things lost amid a wilderness of weeds, to be sure, whose rankness far
|
||
over-topped their neglected growth; yet, notwithstanding, evidence of a
|
||
wealthy soil, that might yield luxuriant crops under other and
|
||
favourable circumstances. Mr. Heathcliff, I believe, had not treated
|
||
him physically ill; thanks to his fearless nature, which offered no
|
||
temptation to that course of oppression: he had none of the timid
|
||
susceptibility that would have given zest to ill-treatment, in
|
||
Heathcliff’s judgment. He appeared to have bent his malevolence on
|
||
making him a brute: he was never taught to read or write; never rebuked
|
||
for any bad habit which did not annoy his keeper; never led a single
|
||
step towards virtue, or guarded by a single precept against vice. And
|
||
from what I heard, Joseph contributed much to his deterioration, by a
|
||
narrow-minded partiality which prompted him to flatter and pet him, as
|
||
a boy, because he was the head of the old family. And as he had been in
|
||
the habit of accusing Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff, when children,
|
||
of putting the master past his patience, and compelling him to seek
|
||
solace in drink by what he termed their “offald ways,” so at present he
|
||
laid the whole burden of Hareton’s faults on the shoulders of the
|
||
usurper of his property. If the lad swore, he wouldn’t correct him: nor
|
||
however culpably he behaved. It gave Joseph satisfaction, apparently,
|
||
to watch him go the worst lengths: he allowed that the lad was ruined:
|
||
that his soul was abandoned to perdition; but then he reflected that
|
||
Heathcliff must answer for it. Hareton’s blood would be required at his
|
||
hands; and there lay immense consolation in that thought. Joseph had
|
||
instilled into him a pride of name, and of his lineage; he would, had
|
||
he dared, have fostered hate between him and the present owner of the
|
||
Heights: but his dread of that owner amounted to superstition; and he
|
||
confined his feelings regarding him to muttered innuendoes and private
|
||
comminations. I don’t pretend to be intimately acquainted with the mode
|
||
of living customary in those days at Wuthering Heights: I only speak
|
||
from hearsay; for I saw little. The villagers affirmed Mr. Heathcliff
|
||
was _near_, and a cruel hard landlord to his tenants; but the house,
|
||
inside, had regained its ancient aspect of comfort under female
|
||
management, and the scenes of riot common in Hindley’s time were not
|
||
now enacted within its walls. The master was too gloomy to seek
|
||
companionship with any people, good or bad; and he is yet.
|
||
|
||
This, however, is not making progress with my story. Miss Cathy
|
||
rejected the peace-offering of the terrier, and demanded her own dogs,
|
||
Charlie and Phoenix. They came limping and hanging their heads; and we
|
||
set out for home, sadly out of sorts, every one of us. I could not
|
||
wring from my little lady how she had spent the day; except that, as I
|
||
supposed, the goal of her pilgrimage was Penistone Crags; and she
|
||
arrived without adventure to the gate of the farmhouse, when Hareton
|
||
happened to issue forth, attended by some canine followers, who
|
||
attacked her train. They had a smart battle, before their owners could
|
||
separate them: that formed an introduction. Catherine told Hareton who
|
||
she was, and where she was going; and asked him to show her the way:
|
||
finally, beguiling him to accompany her. He opened the mysteries of the
|
||
Fairy Cave, and twenty other queer places. But, being in disgrace, I
|
||
was not favoured with a description of the interesting objects she saw.
|
||
I could gather, however, that her guide had been a favourite till she
|
||
hurt his feelings by addressing him as a servant; and Heathcliff’s
|
||
housekeeper hurt hers by calling him her cousin. Then the language he
|
||
had held to her rankled in her heart; she who was always “love,” and
|
||
“darling,” and “queen,” and “angel,” with everybody at the Grange, to
|
||
be insulted so shockingly by a stranger! She did not comprehend it; and
|
||
hard work I had to obtain a promise that she would not lay the
|
||
grievance before her father. I explained how he objected to the whole
|
||
household at the Heights, and how sorry he would be to find she had
|
||
been there; but I insisted most on the fact, that if she revealed my
|
||
negligence of his orders, he would perhaps be so angry that I should
|
||
have to leave; and Cathy couldn’t bear that prospect: she pledged her
|
||
word, and kept it for my sake. After all, she was a sweet little girl.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XIX
|
||
|
||
|
||
A letter, edged with black, announced the day of my master’s return.
|
||
Isabella was dead; and he wrote to bid me get mourning for his
|
||
daughter, and arrange a room, and other accommodations, for his
|
||
youthful nephew. Catherine ran wild with joy at the idea of welcoming
|
||
her father back; and indulged most sanguine anticipations of the
|
||
innumerable excellencies of her “real” cousin. The evening of their
|
||
expected arrival came. Since early morning she had been busy ordering
|
||
her own small affairs; and now attired in her new black frock—poor
|
||
thing! her aunt’s death impressed her with no definite sorrow—she
|
||
obliged me, by constant worrying, to walk with her down through the
|
||
grounds to meet them.
|
||
|
||
“Linton is just six months younger than I am,” she chattered, as we
|
||
strolled leisurely over the swells and hollows of mossy turf, under
|
||
shadow of the trees. “How delightful it will be to have him for a
|
||
playfellow! Aunt Isabella sent papa a beautiful lock of his hair; it
|
||
was lighter than mine—more flaxen, and quite as fine. I have it
|
||
carefully preserved in a little glass box; and I’ve often thought what
|
||
a pleasure it would be to see its owner. Oh! I am happy—and papa, dear,
|
||
dear papa! Come, Ellen, let us run! come, run.”
|
||
|
||
She ran, and returned and ran again, many times before my sober
|
||
footsteps reached the gate, and then she seated herself on the grassy
|
||
bank beside the path, and tried to wait patiently; but that was
|
||
impossible: she couldn’t be still a minute.
|
||
|
||
“How long they are!” she exclaimed. “Ah, I see some dust on the
|
||
road—they are coming! No! When will they be here? May we not go a
|
||
little way—half a mile, Ellen, only just half a mile? Do say yes, to
|
||
that clump of birches at the turn!”
|
||
|
||
I refused staunchly. At length her suspense was ended: the travelling
|
||
carriage rolled in sight. Miss Cathy shrieked and stretched out her
|
||
arms as soon as she caught her father’s face looking from the window.
|
||
He descended, nearly as eager as herself; and a considerable interval
|
||
elapsed ere they had a thought to spare for any but themselves. While
|
||
they exchanged caresses I took a peep in to see after Linton. He was
|
||
asleep in a corner, wrapped in a warm, fur-lined cloak, as if it had
|
||
been winter. A pale, delicate, effeminate boy, who might have been
|
||
taken for my master’s younger brother, so strong was the resemblance:
|
||
but there was a sickly peevishness in his aspect that Edgar Linton
|
||
never had. The latter saw me looking; and having shaken hands, advised
|
||
me to close the door, and leave him undisturbed; for the journey had
|
||
fatigued him. Cathy would fain have taken one glance, but her father
|
||
told her to come, and they walked together up the park, while I
|
||
hastened before to prepare the servants.
|
||
|
||
“Now, darling,” said Mr. Linton, addressing his daughter, as they
|
||
halted at the bottom of the front steps: “your cousin is not so strong
|
||
or so merry as you are, and he has lost his mother, remember, a very
|
||
short time since; therefore, don’t expect him to play and run about
|
||
with you directly. And don’t harass him much by talking: let him be
|
||
quiet this evening, at least, will you?”
|
||
|
||
“Yes, yes, papa,” answered Catherine: “but I do want to see him; and he
|
||
hasn’t once looked out.”
|
||
|
||
The carriage stopped; and the sleeper being roused, was lifted to the
|
||
ground by his uncle.
|
||
|
||
“This is your cousin Cathy, Linton,” he said, putting their little
|
||
hands together. “She’s fond of you already; and mind you don’t grieve
|
||
her by crying to-night. Try to be cheerful now; the travelling is at an
|
||
end, and you have nothing to do but rest and amuse yourself as you
|
||
please.”
|
||
|
||
“Let me go to bed, then,” answered the boy, shrinking from Catherine’s
|
||
salute; and he put his fingers to his eyes to remove incipient tears.
|
||
|
||
“Come, come, there’s a good child,” I whispered, leading him in.
|
||
“You’ll make her weep too—see how sorry she is for you!”
|
||
|
||
I do not know whether it was sorrow for him, but his cousin put on as
|
||
sad a countenance as himself, and returned to her father. All three
|
||
entered, and mounted to the library, where tea was laid ready. I
|
||
proceeded to remove Linton’s cap and mantle, and placed him on a chair
|
||
by the table; but he was no sooner seated than he began to cry afresh.
|
||
My master inquired what was the matter.
|
||
|
||
“I can’t sit on a chair,” sobbed the boy.
|
||
|
||
“Go to the sofa, then, and Ellen shall bring you some tea,” answered
|
||
his uncle patiently.
|
||
|
||
He had been greatly tried, during the journey, I felt convinced, by his
|
||
fretful ailing charge. Linton slowly trailed himself off, and lay down.
|
||
Cathy carried a footstool and her cup to his side. At first she sat
|
||
silent; but that could not last: she had resolved to make a pet of her
|
||
little cousin, as she would have him to be; and she commenced stroking
|
||
his curls, and kissing his cheek, and offering him tea in her saucer,
|
||
like a baby. This pleased him, for he was not much better: he dried his
|
||
eyes, and lightened into a faint smile.
|
||
|
||
“Oh, he’ll do very well,” said the master to me, after watching them a
|
||
minute. “Very well, if we can keep him, Ellen. The company of a child
|
||
of his own age will instil new spirit into him soon, and by wishing for
|
||
strength he’ll gain it.”
|
||
|
||
“Ay, if we can keep him!” I mused to myself; and sore misgivings came
|
||
over me that there was slight hope of that. And then, I thought, how
|
||
ever will that weakling live at Wuthering Heights? Between his father
|
||
and Hareton, what playmates and instructors they’ll be. Our doubts were
|
||
presently decided—even earlier than I expected. I had just taken the
|
||
children upstairs, after tea was finished, and seen Linton asleep—he
|
||
would not suffer me to leave him till that was the case—I had come
|
||
down, and was standing by the table in the hall, lighting a bedroom
|
||
candle for Mr. Edgar, when a maid stepped out of the kitchen and
|
||
informed me that Mr. Heathcliff’s servant Joseph was at the door, and
|
||
wished to speak with the master.
|
||
|
||
“I shall ask him what he wants first,” I said, in considerable
|
||
trepidation. “A very unlikely hour to be troubling people, and the
|
||
instant they have returned from a long journey. I don’t think the
|
||
master can see him.”
|
||
|
||
Joseph had advanced through the kitchen as I uttered these words, and
|
||
now presented himself in the hall. He was donned in his Sunday
|
||
garments, with his most sanctimonious and sourest face, and, holding
|
||
his hat in one hand, and his stick in the other, he proceeded to clean
|
||
his shoes on the mat.
|
||
|
||
“Good-evening, Joseph,” I said, coldly. “What business brings you here
|
||
to-night?”
|
||
|
||
“It’s Maister Linton I mun spake to,” he answered, waving me
|
||
disdainfully aside.
|
||
|
||
“Mr. Linton is going to bed; unless you have something particular to
|
||
say, I’m sure he won’t hear it now,” I continued. “You had better sit
|
||
down in there, and entrust your message to me.”
|
||
|
||
“Which is his rahm?” pursued the fellow, surveying the range of closed
|
||
doors.
|
||
|
||
I perceived he was bent on refusing my mediation, so very reluctantly I
|
||
went up to the library, and announced the unseasonable visitor,
|
||
advising that he should be dismissed till next day. Mr. Linton had no
|
||
time to empower me to do so, for Joseph mounted close at my heels, and,
|
||
pushing into the apartment, planted himself at the far side of the
|
||
table, with his two fists clapped on the head of his stick, and began
|
||
in an elevated tone, as if anticipating opposition—
|
||
|
||
“Hathecliff has sent me for his lad, and I munn’t goa back ’bout him.”
|
||
|
||
Edgar Linton was silent a minute; an expression of exceeding sorrow
|
||
overcast his features: he would have pitied the child on his own
|
||
account; but, recalling Isabella’s hopes and fears, and anxious wishes
|
||
for her son, and her commendations of him to his care, he grieved
|
||
bitterly at the prospect of yielding him up, and searched in his heart
|
||
how it might be avoided. No plan offered itself: the very exhibition of
|
||
any desire to keep him would have rendered the claimant more
|
||
peremptory: there was nothing left but to resign him. However, he was
|
||
not going to rouse him from his sleep.
|
||
|
||
“Tell Mr. Heathcliff,” he answered calmly, “that his son shall come to
|
||
Wuthering Heights to-morrow. He is in bed, and too tired to go the
|
||
distance now. You may also tell him that the mother of Linton desired
|
||
him to remain under my guardianship; and, at present, his health is
|
||
very precarious.”
|
||
|
||
“Noa!” said Joseph, giving a thud with his prop on the floor, and
|
||
assuming an authoritative air. “Noa! that means naught. Hathecliff maks
|
||
noa ’count o’ t’ mother, nor ye norther; but he’ll hev his lad; und I
|
||
mun tak’ him—soa now ye knaw!”
|
||
|
||
“You shall not to-night!” answered Linton decisively. “Walk down stairs
|
||
at once, and repeat to your master what I have said. Ellen, show him
|
||
down. Go—”
|
||
|
||
And, aiding the indignant elder with a lift by the arm, he rid the room
|
||
of him and closed the door.
|
||
|
||
“Varrah weell!” shouted Joseph, as he slowly drew off. “To-morn, he’s
|
||
come hisseln, and thrust _him_ out, if ye darr!”
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XX
|
||
|
||
|
||
To obviate the danger of this threat being fulfilled, Mr. Linton
|
||
commissioned me to take the boy home early, on Catherine’s pony; and,
|
||
said he—“As we shall now have no influence over his destiny, good or
|
||
bad, you must say nothing of where he is gone to my daughter: she
|
||
cannot associate with him hereafter, and it is better for her to remain
|
||
in ignorance of his proximity; lest she should be restless, and anxious
|
||
to visit the Heights. Merely tell her his father sent for him suddenly,
|
||
and he has been obliged to leave us.”
|
||
|
||
Linton was very reluctant to be roused from his bed at five o’clock,
|
||
and astonished to be informed that he must prepare for further
|
||
travelling; but I softened off the matter by stating that he was going
|
||
to spend some time with his father, Mr. Heathcliff, who wished to see
|
||
him so much, he did not like to defer the pleasure till he should
|
||
recover from his late journey.
|
||
|
||
“My father!” he cried, in strange perplexity. “Mamma never told me I
|
||
had a father. Where does he live? I’d rather stay with uncle.”
|
||
|
||
“He lives a little distance from the Grange,” I replied; “just beyond
|
||
those hills: not so far, but you may walk over here when you get
|
||
hearty. And you should be glad to go home, and to see him. You must try
|
||
to love him, as you did your mother, and then he will love you.”
|
||
|
||
“But why have I not heard of him before?” asked Linton. “Why didn’t
|
||
mamma and he live together, as other people do?”
|
||
|
||
“He had business to keep him in the north,” I answered, “and your
|
||
mother’s health required her to reside in the south.”
|
||
|
||
“And why didn’t mamma speak to me about him?” persevered the child.
|
||
“She often talked of uncle, and I learnt to love him long ago. How am I
|
||
to love papa? I don’t know him.”
|
||
|
||
“Oh, all children love their parents,” I said. “Your mother, perhaps,
|
||
thought you would want to be with him if she mentioned him often to
|
||
you. Let us make haste. An early ride on such a beautiful morning is
|
||
much preferable to an hour’s more sleep.”
|
||
|
||
“Is _she_ to go with us,” he demanded, “the little girl I saw
|
||
yesterday?”
|
||
|
||
“Not now,” replied I.
|
||
|
||
“Is uncle?” he continued.
|
||
|
||
“No, I shall be your companion there,” I said.
|
||
|
||
Linton sank back on his pillow and fell into a brown study.
|
||
|
||
“I won’t go without uncle,” he cried at length: “I can’t tell where you
|
||
mean to take me.”
|
||
|
||
I attempted to persuade him of the naughtiness of showing reluctance to
|
||
meet his father; still he obstinately resisted any progress towards
|
||
dressing, and I had to call for my master’s assistance in coaxing him
|
||
out of bed. The poor thing was finally got off, with several delusive
|
||
assurances that his absence should be short: that Mr. Edgar and Cathy
|
||
would visit him, and other promises, equally ill-founded, which I
|
||
invented and reiterated at intervals throughout the way. The pure
|
||
heather-scented air, the bright sunshine, and the gentle canter of
|
||
Minny, relieved his despondency after a while. He began to put
|
||
questions concerning his new home, and its inhabitants, with greater
|
||
interest and liveliness.
|
||
|
||
“Is Wuthering Heights as pleasant a place as Thrushcross Grange?” he
|
||
inquired, turning to take a last glance into the valley, whence a light
|
||
mist mounted and formed a fleecy cloud on the skirts of the blue.
|
||
|
||
“It is not so buried in trees,” I replied, “and it is not quite so
|
||
large, but you can see the country beautifully all round; and the air
|
||
is healthier for you—fresher and drier. You will, perhaps, think the
|
||
building old and dark at first; though it is a respectable house: the
|
||
next best in the neighbourhood. And you will have such nice rambles on
|
||
the moors. Hareton Earnshaw—that is, Miss Cathy’s other cousin, and so
|
||
yours in a manner—will show you all the sweetest spots; and you can
|
||
bring a book in fine weather, and make a green hollow your study; and,
|
||
now and then, your uncle may join you in a walk: he does, frequently,
|
||
walk out on the hills.”
|
||
|
||
“And what is my father like?” he asked. “Is he as young and handsome as
|
||
uncle?”
|
||
|
||
“He’s as young,” said I; “but he has black hair and eyes, and looks
|
||
sterner; and he is taller and bigger altogether. He’ll not seem to you
|
||
so gentle and kind at first, perhaps, because it is not his way: still,
|
||
mind you, be frank and cordial with him; and naturally he’ll be fonder
|
||
of you than any uncle, for you are his own.”
|
||
|
||
“Black hair and eyes!” mused Linton. “I can’t fancy him. Then I am not
|
||
like him, am I?”
|
||
|
||
“Not much,” I answered: not a morsel, I thought, surveying with regret
|
||
the white complexion and slim frame of my companion, and his large
|
||
languid eyes—his mother’s eyes, save that, unless a morbid touchiness
|
||
kindled them a moment, they had not a vestige of her sparkling spirit.
|
||
|
||
“How strange that he should never come to see mamma and me!” he
|
||
murmured. “Has he ever seen me? If he has, I must have been a baby. I
|
||
remember not a single thing about him!”
|
||
|
||
“Why, Master Linton,” said I, “three hundred miles is a great distance;
|
||
and ten years seem very different in length to a grown-up person
|
||
compared with what they do to you. It is probable Mr. Heathcliff
|
||
proposed going from summer to summer, but never found a convenient
|
||
opportunity; and now it is too late. Don’t trouble him with questions
|
||
on the subject: it will disturb him, for no good.”
|
||
|
||
The boy was fully occupied with his own cogitations for the remainder
|
||
of the ride, till we halted before the farmhouse garden-gate. I watched
|
||
to catch his impressions in his countenance. He surveyed the carved
|
||
front and low-browed lattices, the straggling gooseberry-bushes and
|
||
crooked firs, with solemn intentness, and then shook his head: his
|
||
private feelings entirely disapproved of the exterior of his new abode.
|
||
But he had sense to postpone complaining: there might be compensation
|
||
within. Before he dismounted, I went and opened the door. It was
|
||
half-past six; the family had just finished breakfast: the servant was
|
||
clearing and wiping down the table. Joseph stood by his master’s chair
|
||
telling some tale concerning a lame horse; and Hareton was preparing
|
||
for the hayfield.
|
||
|
||
“Hallo, Nelly!” said Mr. Heathcliff, when he saw me. “I feared I should
|
||
have to come down and fetch my property myself. You’ve brought it, have
|
||
you? Let us see what we can make of it.”
|
||
|
||
He got up and strode to the door: Hareton and Joseph followed in gaping
|
||
curiosity. Poor Linton ran a frightened eye over the faces of the
|
||
three.
|
||
|
||
“Sure-ly,” said Joseph after a grave inspection, “he’s swopped wi’ ye,
|
||
Maister, an’ yon’s his lass!”
|
||
|
||
Heathcliff, having stared his son into an ague of confusion, uttered a
|
||
scornful laugh.
|
||
|
||
“God! what a beauty! what a lovely, charming thing!” he exclaimed.
|
||
“Hav’n’t they reared it on snails and sour milk, Nelly? Oh, damn my
|
||
soul! but that’s worse than I expected—and the devil knows I was not
|
||
sanguine!”
|
||
|
||
I bid the trembling and bewildered child get down, and enter. He did
|
||
not thoroughly comprehend the meaning of his father’s speech, or
|
||
whether it were intended for him: indeed, he was not yet certain that
|
||
the grim, sneering stranger was his father. But he clung to me with
|
||
growing trepidation; and on Mr. Heathcliff’s taking a seat and bidding
|
||
him “come hither” he hid his face on my shoulder and wept.
|
||
|
||
“Tut, tut!” said Heathcliff, stretching out a hand and dragging him
|
||
roughly between his knees, and then holding up his head by the chin.
|
||
“None of that nonsense! We’re not going to hurt thee, Linton—isn’t that
|
||
thy name? Thou art thy mother’s child, entirely! Where is _my_ share in
|
||
thee, puling chicken?”
|
||
|
||
He took off the boy’s cap and pushed back his thick flaxen curls, felt
|
||
his slender arms and his small fingers; during which examination Linton
|
||
ceased crying, and lifted his great blue eyes to inspect the inspector.
|
||
|
||
“Do you know me?” asked Heathcliff, having satisfied himself that the
|
||
limbs were all equally frail and feeble.
|
||
|
||
“No,” said Linton, with a gaze of vacant fear.
|
||
|
||
“You’ve heard of me, I daresay?”
|
||
|
||
“No,” he replied again.
|
||
|
||
“No! What a shame of your mother, never to waken your filial regard for
|
||
me! You are my son, then, I’ll tell you; and your mother was a wicked
|
||
slut to leave you in ignorance of the sort of father you possessed.
|
||
Now, don’t wince, and colour up! Though it _is_ something to see you
|
||
have not white blood. Be a good lad; and I’ll do for you. Nelly, if you
|
||
be tired you may sit down; if not, get home again. I guess you’ll
|
||
report what you hear and see to the cipher at the Grange; and this
|
||
thing won’t be settled while you linger about it.”
|
||
|
||
“Well,” replied I, “I hope you’ll be kind to the boy, Mr. Heathcliff,
|
||
or you’ll not keep him long; and he’s all you have akin in the wide
|
||
world, that you will ever know—remember.”
|
||
|
||
“I’ll be _very_ kind to him, you needn’t fear,” he said, laughing.
|
||
“Only nobody else must be kind to him: I’m jealous of monopolising his
|
||
affection. And, to begin my kindness, Joseph, bring the lad some
|
||
breakfast. Hareton, you infernal calf, begone to your work. Yes, Nell,”
|
||
he added, when they had departed, “my son is prospective owner of your
|
||
place, and I should not wish him to die till I was certain of being his
|
||
successor. Besides, he’s _mine_, and I want the triumph of seeing _my_
|
||
descendant fairly lord of their estates; my child hiring their children
|
||
to till their fathers’ lands for wages. That is the sole consideration
|
||
which can make me endure the whelp: I despise him for himself, and hate
|
||
him for the memories he revives! But that consideration is sufficient:
|
||
he’s as safe with me, and shall be tended as carefully as your master
|
||
tends his own. I have a room upstairs, furnished for him in handsome
|
||
style; I’ve engaged a tutor, also, to come three times a week, from
|
||
twenty miles’ distance, to teach him what he pleases to learn. I’ve
|
||
ordered Hareton to obey him: and in fact I’ve arranged everything with
|
||
a view to preserve the superior and the gentleman in him, above his
|
||
associates. I do regret, however, that he so little deserves the
|
||
trouble: if I wished any blessing in the world, it was to find him a
|
||
worthy object of pride; and I’m bitterly disappointed with the
|
||
whey-faced, whining wretch!”
|
||
|
||
While he was speaking, Joseph returned bearing a basin of
|
||
milk-porridge, and placed it before Linton: who stirred round the
|
||
homely mess with a look of aversion, and affirmed he could not eat it.
|
||
I saw the old man-servant shared largely in his master’s scorn of the
|
||
child; though he was compelled to retain the sentiment in his heart,
|
||
because Heathcliff plainly meant his underlings to hold him in honour.
|
||
|
||
“Cannot ate it?” repeated he, peering in Linton’s face, and subduing
|
||
his voice to a whisper, for fear of being overheard. “But Maister
|
||
Hareton nivir ate naught else, when he wer a little ’un; and what wer
|
||
gooid eneugh for him’s gooid eneugh for ye, I’s rayther think!”
|
||
|
||
“I _sha’n’t_ eat it!” answered Linton, snappishly. “Take it away.”
|
||
|
||
Joseph snatched up the food indignantly, and brought it to us.
|
||
|
||
“Is there aught ails th’ victuals?” he asked, thrusting the tray under
|
||
Heathcliff’s nose.
|
||
|
||
“What should ail them?” he said.
|
||
|
||
“Wah!” answered Joseph, “yon dainty chap says he cannut ate ’em. But I
|
||
guess it’s raight! His mother wer just soa—we wer a’most too mucky to
|
||
sow t’ corn for makking her breead.”
|
||
|
||
“Don’t mention his mother to me,” said the master, angrily. “Get him
|
||
something that he can eat, that’s all. What is his usual food, Nelly?”
|
||
|
||
I suggested boiled milk or tea; and the housekeeper received
|
||
instructions to prepare some. Come, I reflected, his father’s
|
||
selfishness may contribute to his comfort. He perceives his delicate
|
||
constitution, and the necessity of treating him tolerably. I’ll console
|
||
Mr. Edgar by acquainting him with the turn Heathcliff’s humour has
|
||
taken. Having no excuse for lingering longer, I slipped out, while
|
||
Linton was engaged in timidly rebuffing the advances of a friendly
|
||
sheep-dog. But he was too much on the alert to be cheated: as I closed
|
||
the door, I heard a cry, and a frantic repetition of the words—
|
||
|
||
“Don’t leave me! I’ll not stay here! I’ll not stay here!”
|
||
|
||
Then the latch was raised and fell: they did not suffer him to come
|
||
forth. I mounted Minny, and urged her to a trot; and so my brief
|
||
guardianship ended.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXI
|
||
|
||
|
||
We had sad work with little Cathy that day: she rose in high glee,
|
||
eager to join her cousin, and such passionate tears and lamentations
|
||
followed the news of his departure that Edgar himself was obliged to
|
||
soothe her, by affirming he should come back soon: he added, however,
|
||
“if I can get him”; and there were no hopes of that. This promise
|
||
poorly pacified her; but time was more potent; and though still at
|
||
intervals she inquired of her father when Linton would return, before
|
||
she did see him again his features had waxed so dim in her memory that
|
||
she did not recognise him.
|
||
|
||
When I chanced to encounter the housekeeper of Wuthering Heights, in
|
||
paying business visits to Gimmerton, I used to ask how the young master
|
||
got on; for he lived almost as secluded as Catherine herself, and was
|
||
never to be seen. I could gather from her that he continued in weak
|
||
health, and was a tiresome inmate. She said Mr. Heathcliff seemed to
|
||
dislike him ever longer and worse, though he took some trouble to
|
||
conceal it: he had an antipathy to the sound of his voice, and could
|
||
not do at all with his sitting in the same room with him many minutes
|
||
together. There seldom passed much talk between them: Linton learnt his
|
||
lessons and spent his evenings in a small apartment they called the
|
||
parlour: or else lay in bed all day: for he was constantly getting
|
||
coughs, and colds, and aches, and pains of some sort.
|
||
|
||
“And I never knew such a faint-hearted creature,” added the woman; “nor
|
||
one so careful of hisseln. He _will_ go on, if I leave the window open
|
||
a bit late in the evening. Oh! it’s killing, a breath of night air! And
|
||
he must have a fire in the middle of summer; and Joseph’s bacca-pipe is
|
||
poison; and he must always have sweets and dainties, and always milk,
|
||
milk for ever—heeding naught how the rest of us are pinched in winter;
|
||
and there he’ll sit, wrapped in his furred cloak in his chair by the
|
||
fire, with some toast and water or other slop on the hob to sip at; and
|
||
if Hareton, for pity, comes to amuse him—Hareton is not bad-natured,
|
||
though he’s rough—they’re sure to part, one swearing and the other
|
||
crying. I believe the master would relish Earnshaw’s thrashing him to a
|
||
mummy, if he were not his son; and I’m certain he would be fit to turn
|
||
him out of doors, if he knew half the nursing he gives hisseln. But
|
||
then he won’t go into danger of temptation: he never enters the
|
||
parlour, and should Linton show those ways in the house where he is, he
|
||
sends him upstairs directly.”
|
||
|
||
I divined, from this account, that utter lack of sympathy had rendered
|
||
young Heathcliff selfish and disagreeable, if he were not so
|
||
originally; and my interest in him, consequently, decayed: though still
|
||
I was moved with a sense of grief at his lot, and a wish that he had
|
||
been left with us. Mr. Edgar encouraged me to gain information: he
|
||
thought a great deal about him, I fancy, and would have run some risk
|
||
to see him; and he told me once to ask the housekeeper whether he ever
|
||
came into the village? She said he had only been twice, on horseback,
|
||
accompanying his father; and both times he pretended to be quite
|
||
knocked up for three or four days afterwards. That housekeeper left, if
|
||
I recollect rightly, two years after he came; and another, whom I did
|
||
not know, was her successor; she lives there still.
|
||
|
||
Time wore on at the Grange in its former pleasant way till Miss Cathy
|
||
reached sixteen. On the anniversary of her birth we never manifested
|
||
any signs of rejoicing, because it was also the anniversary of my late
|
||
mistress’s death. Her father invariably spent that day alone in the
|
||
library; and walked, at dusk, as far as Gimmerton kirkyard, where he
|
||
would frequently prolong his stay beyond midnight. Therefore Catherine
|
||
was thrown on her own resources for amusement. This twentieth of March
|
||
was a beautiful spring day, and when her father had retired, my young
|
||
lady came down dressed for going out, and said she asked to have a
|
||
ramble on the edge of the moor with me: Mr. Linton had given her leave,
|
||
if we went only a short distance and were back within the hour.
|
||
|
||
“So make haste, Ellen!” she cried. “I know where I wish to go; where a
|
||
colony of moor-game are settled: I want to see whether they have made
|
||
their nests yet.”
|
||
|
||
“That must be a good distance up,” I answered; “they don’t breed on the
|
||
edge of the moor.”
|
||
|
||
“No, it’s not,” she said. “I’ve gone very near with papa.”
|
||
|
||
I put on my bonnet and sallied out, thinking nothing more of the
|
||
matter. She bounded before me, and returned to my side, and was off
|
||
again like a young greyhound; and, at first, I found plenty of
|
||
entertainment in listening to the larks singing far and near, and
|
||
enjoying the sweet, warm sunshine; and watching her, my pet and my
|
||
delight, with her golden ringlets flying loose behind, and her bright
|
||
cheek, as soft and pure in its bloom as a wild rose, and her eyes
|
||
radiant with cloudless pleasure. She was a happy creature, and an
|
||
angel, in those days. It’s a pity she could not be content.
|
||
|
||
“Well,” said I, “where are your moor-game, Miss Cathy? We should be at
|
||
them: the Grange park-fence is a great way off now.”
|
||
|
||
“Oh, a little further—only a little further, Ellen,” was her answer,
|
||
continually. “Climb to that hillock, pass that bank, and by the time
|
||
you reach the other side I shall have raised the birds.”
|
||
|
||
But there were so many hillocks and banks to climb and pass, that, at
|
||
length, I began to be weary, and told her we must halt, and retrace our
|
||
steps. I shouted to her, as she had outstripped me a long way; she
|
||
either did not hear or did not regard, for she still sprang on, and I
|
||
was compelled to follow. Finally, she dived into a hollow; and before I
|
||
came in sight of her again, she was two miles nearer Wuthering Heights
|
||
than her own home; and I beheld a couple of persons arrest her, one of
|
||
whom I felt convinced was Mr. Heathcliff himself.
|
||
|
||
Cathy had been caught in the fact of plundering, or, at least, hunting
|
||
out the nests of the grouse. The Heights were Heathcliff’s land, and he
|
||
was reproving the poacher.
|
||
|
||
“I’ve neither taken any nor found any,” she said, as I toiled to them,
|
||
expanding her hands in corroboration of the statement. “I didn’t mean
|
||
to take them; but papa told me there were quantities up here, and I
|
||
wished to see the eggs.”
|
||
|
||
Heathcliff glanced at me with an ill-meaning smile, expressing his
|
||
acquaintance with the party, and, consequently, his malevolence towards
|
||
it, and demanded who “papa” was?
|
||
|
||
“Mr. Linton of Thrushcross Grange,” she replied. “I thought you did not
|
||
know me, or you wouldn’t have spoken in that way.”
|
||
|
||
“You suppose papa is highly esteemed and respected, then?” he said,
|
||
sarcastically.
|
||
|
||
“And what are you?” inquired Catherine, gazing curiously on the
|
||
speaker. “That man I’ve seen before. Is he your son?”
|
||
|
||
She pointed to Hareton, the other individual, who had gained nothing
|
||
but increased bulk and strength by the addition of two years to his
|
||
age: he seemed as awkward and rough as ever.
|
||
|
||
“Miss Cathy,” I interrupted, “it will be three hours instead of one
|
||
that we are out, presently. We really must go back.”
|
||
|
||
“No, that man is not my son,” answered Heathcliff, pushing me aside.
|
||
“But I have one, and you have seen him before too; and, though your
|
||
nurse is in a hurry, I think both you and she would be the better for a
|
||
little rest. Will you just turn this nab of heath, and walk into my
|
||
house? You’ll get home earlier for the ease; and you shall receive a
|
||
kind welcome.”
|
||
|
||
I whispered Catherine that she mustn’t, on any account, accede to the
|
||
proposal: it was entirely out of the question.
|
||
|
||
“Why?” she asked, aloud. “I’m tired of running, and the ground is dewy:
|
||
I can’t sit here. Let us go, Ellen. Besides, he says I have seen his
|
||
son. He’s mistaken, I think; but I guess where he lives: at the
|
||
farmhouse I visited in coming from Penistone Crags. Don’t you?”
|
||
|
||
“I do. Come, Nelly, hold your tongue—it will be a treat for her to look
|
||
in on us. Hareton, get forwards with the lass. You shall walk with me,
|
||
Nelly.”
|
||
|
||
“No, she’s not going to any such place,” I cried, struggling to release
|
||
my arm, which he had seized: but she was almost at the door-stones
|
||
already, scampering round the brow at full speed. Her appointed
|
||
companion did not pretend to escort her: he shied off by the road-side,
|
||
and vanished.
|
||
|
||
“Mr. Heathcliff, it’s very wrong,” I continued: “you know you mean no
|
||
good. And there she’ll see Linton, and all will be told as soon as ever
|
||
we return; and I shall have the blame.”
|
||
|
||
“I want her to see Linton,” he answered; “he’s looking better these few
|
||
days; it’s not often he’s fit to be seen. And we’ll soon persuade her
|
||
to keep the visit secret: where is the harm of it?”
|
||
|
||
“The harm of it is, that her father would hate me if he found I
|
||
suffered her to enter your house; and I am convinced you have a bad
|
||
design in encouraging her to do so,” I replied.
|
||
|
||
“My design is as honest as possible. I’ll inform you of its whole
|
||
scope,” he said. “That the two cousins may fall in love, and get
|
||
married. I’m acting generously to your master: his young chit has no
|
||
expectations, and should she second my wishes she’ll be provided for at
|
||
once as joint successor with Linton.”
|
||
|
||
“If Linton died,” I answered, “and his life is quite uncertain,
|
||
Catherine would be the heir.”
|
||
|
||
“No, she would not,” he said. “There is no clause in the will to secure
|
||
it so: his property would go to me; but, to prevent disputes, I desire
|
||
their union, and am resolved to bring it about.”
|
||
|
||
“And I’m resolved she shall never approach your house with me again,” I
|
||
returned, as we reached the gate, where Miss Cathy waited our coming.
|
||
|
||
Heathcliff bade me be quiet; and, preceding us up the path, hastened to
|
||
open the door. My young lady gave him several looks, as if she could
|
||
not exactly make up her mind what to think of him; but now he smiled
|
||
when he met her eye, and softened his voice in addressing her; and I
|
||
was foolish enough to imagine the memory of her mother might disarm him
|
||
from desiring her injury. Linton stood on the hearth. He had been out
|
||
walking in the fields, for his cap was on, and he was calling to Joseph
|
||
to bring him dry shoes. He had grown tall of his age, still wanting
|
||
some months of sixteen. His features were pretty yet, and his eye and
|
||
complexion brighter than I remembered them, though with merely
|
||
temporary lustre borrowed from the salubrious air and genial sun.
|
||
|
||
“Now, who is that?” asked Mr. Heathcliff, turning to Cathy. “Can you
|
||
tell?”
|
||
|
||
“Your son?” she said, having doubtfully surveyed, first one and then
|
||
the other.
|
||
|
||
“Yes, yes,” answered he: “but is this the only time you have beheld
|
||
him? Think! Ah! you have a short memory. Linton, don’t you recall your
|
||
cousin, that you used to tease us so with wishing to see?”
|
||
|
||
“What, Linton!” cried Cathy, kindling into joyful surprise at the name.
|
||
“Is that little Linton? He’s taller than I am! Are you Linton?”
|
||
|
||
The youth stepped forward, and acknowledged himself: she kissed him
|
||
fervently, and they gazed with wonder at the change time had wrought in
|
||
the appearance of each. Catherine had reached her full height; her
|
||
figure was both plump and slender, elastic as steel, and her whole
|
||
aspect sparkling with health and spirits. Linton’s looks and movements
|
||
were very languid, and his form extremely slight; but there was a grace
|
||
in his manner that mitigated these defects, and rendered him not
|
||
unpleasing. After exchanging numerous marks of fondness with him, his
|
||
cousin went to Mr. Heathcliff, who lingered by the door, dividing his
|
||
attention between the objects inside and those that lay without:
|
||
pretending, that is, to observe the latter, and really noting the
|
||
former alone.
|
||
|
||
“And you are my uncle, then!” she cried, reaching up to salute him. “I
|
||
thought I liked you, though you were cross at first. Why don’t you
|
||
visit at the Grange with Linton? To live all these years such close
|
||
neighbours, and never see us, is odd: what have you done so for?”
|
||
|
||
“I visited it once or twice too often before you were born,” he
|
||
answered. “There—damn it! If you have any kisses to spare, give them to
|
||
Linton: they are thrown away on me.”
|
||
|
||
“Naughty Ellen!” exclaimed Catherine, flying to attack me next with her
|
||
lavish caresses. “Wicked Ellen! to try to hinder me from entering. But
|
||
I’ll take this walk every morning in future: may I, uncle? and
|
||
sometimes bring papa. Won’t you be glad to see us?”
|
||
|
||
“Of course,” replied the uncle, with a hardly suppressed grimace,
|
||
resulting from his deep aversion to both the proposed visitors. “But
|
||
stay,” he continued, turning towards the young lady. “Now I think of
|
||
it, I’d better tell you. Mr. Linton has a prejudice against me: we
|
||
quarrelled at one time of our lives, with unchristian ferocity; and, if
|
||
you mention coming here to him, he’ll put a veto on your visits
|
||
altogether. Therefore, you must not mention it, unless you be careless
|
||
of seeing your cousin hereafter: you may come, if you will, but you
|
||
must not mention it.”
|
||
|
||
“Why did you quarrel?” asked Catherine, considerably crestfallen.
|
||
|
||
“He thought me too poor to wed his sister,” answered Heathcliff, “and
|
||
was grieved that I got her: his pride was hurt, and he’ll never forgive
|
||
it.”
|
||
|
||
“That’s wrong!” said the young lady: “some time I’ll tell him so. But
|
||
Linton and I have no share in your quarrel. I’ll not come here, then;
|
||
he shall come to the Grange.”
|
||
|
||
“It will be too far for me,” murmured her cousin: “to walk four miles
|
||
would kill me. No, come here, Miss Catherine, now and then: not every
|
||
morning, but once or twice a week.”
|
||
|
||
The father launched towards his son a glance of bitter contempt.
|
||
|
||
“I am afraid, Nelly, I shall lose my labour,” he muttered to me. “Miss
|
||
Catherine, as the ninny calls her, will discover his value, and send
|
||
him to the devil. Now, if it had been Hareton!—Do you know that, twenty
|
||
times a day, I covet Hareton, with all his degradation? I’d have loved
|
||
the lad had he been some one else. But I think he’s safe from _her_
|
||
love. I’ll pit him against that paltry creature, unless it bestir
|
||
itself briskly. We calculate it will scarcely last till it is eighteen.
|
||
Oh, confound the vapid thing! He’s absorbed in drying his feet, and
|
||
never looks at her.—Linton!”
|
||
|
||
“Yes, father,” answered the boy.
|
||
|
||
“Have you nothing to show your cousin anywhere about, not even a rabbit
|
||
or a weasel’s nest? Take her into the garden, before you change your
|
||
shoes; and into the stable to see your horse.”
|
||
|
||
“Wouldn’t you rather sit here?” asked Linton, addressing Cathy in a
|
||
tone which expressed reluctance to move again.
|
||
|
||
“I don’t know,” she replied, casting a longing look to the door, and
|
||
evidently eager to be active.
|
||
|
||
He kept his seat, and shrank closer to the fire. Heathcliff rose, and
|
||
went into the kitchen, and from thence to the yard, calling out for
|
||
Hareton. Hareton responded, and presently the two re-entered. The young
|
||
man had been washing himself, as was visible by the glow on his cheeks
|
||
and his wetted hair.
|
||
|
||
“Oh, I’ll ask _you_, uncle,” cried Miss Cathy, recollecting the
|
||
housekeeper’s assertion. “That is not my cousin, is he?”
|
||
|
||
“Yes,” he replied, “your mother’s nephew. Don’t you like him?”
|
||
|
||
Catherine looked queer.
|
||
|
||
“Is he not a handsome lad?” he continued.
|
||
|
||
The uncivil little thing stood on tiptoe, and whispered a sentence in
|
||
Heathcliff’s ear. He laughed; Hareton darkened: I perceived he was very
|
||
sensitive to suspected slights, and had obviously a dim notion of his
|
||
inferiority. But his master or guardian chased the frown by exclaiming—
|
||
|
||
“You’ll be the favourite among us, Hareton! She says you are a—What was
|
||
it? Well, something very flattering. Here! you go with her round the
|
||
farm. And behave like a gentleman, mind! Don’t use any bad words; and
|
||
don’t stare when the young lady is not looking at you, and be ready to
|
||
hide your face when she is; and, when you speak, say your words slowly,
|
||
and keep your hands out of your pockets. Be off, and entertain her as
|
||
nicely as you can.”
|
||
|
||
He watched the couple walking past the window. Earnshaw had his
|
||
countenance completely averted from his companion. He seemed studying
|
||
the familiar landscape with a stranger’s and an artist’s interest.
|
||
Catherine took a sly look at him, expressing small admiration. She then
|
||
turned her attention to seeking out objects of amusement for herself,
|
||
and tripped merrily on, lilting a tune to supply the lack of
|
||
conversation.
|
||
|
||
“I’ve tied his tongue,” observed Heathcliff. “He’ll not venture a
|
||
single syllable all the time! Nelly, you recollect me at his age—nay,
|
||
some years younger. Did I ever look so stupid: so ‘gaumless,’ as Joseph
|
||
calls it?”
|
||
|
||
“Worse,” I replied, “because more sullen with it.”
|
||
|
||
“I’ve a pleasure in him,” he continued, reflecting aloud. “He has
|
||
satisfied my expectations. If he were a born fool I should not enjoy it
|
||
half so much. But he’s no fool; and I can sympathise with all his
|
||
feelings, having felt them myself. I know what he suffers now, for
|
||
instance, exactly: it is merely a beginning of what he shall suffer,
|
||
though. And he’ll never be able to emerge from his bathos of coarseness
|
||
and ignorance. I’ve got him faster than his scoundrel of a father
|
||
secured me, and lower; for he takes a pride in his brutishness. I’ve
|
||
taught him to scorn everything extra-animal as silly and weak. Don’t
|
||
you think Hindley would be proud of his son, if he could see him?
|
||
almost as proud as I am of mine. But there’s this difference; one is
|
||
gold put to the use of paving-stones, and the other is tin polished to
|
||
ape a service of silver. _Mine_ has nothing valuable about it; yet I
|
||
shall have the merit of making it go as far as such poor stuff can go.
|
||
_His_ had first-rate qualities, and they are lost: rendered worse than
|
||
unavailing. _I_ have nothing to regret; _he_ would have more than any,
|
||
but I, are aware of. And the best of it is, Hareton is damnably fond of
|
||
me! You’ll own that I’ve outmatched Hindley there. If the dead villain
|
||
could rise from his grave to abuse me for his offspring’s wrongs, I
|
||
should have the fun of seeing the said offspring fight him back again,
|
||
indignant that he should dare to rail at the one friend he has in the
|
||
world!”
|
||
|
||
Heathcliff chuckled a fiendish laugh at the idea. I made no reply,
|
||
because I saw that he expected none. Meantime, our young companion, who
|
||
sat too removed from us to hear what was said, began to evince symptoms
|
||
of uneasiness, probably repenting that he had denied himself the treat
|
||
of Catherine’s society for fear of a little fatigue. His father
|
||
remarked the restless glances wandering to the window, and the hand
|
||
irresolutely extended towards his cap.
|
||
|
||
“Get up, you idle boy!” he exclaimed, with assumed heartiness. “Away
|
||
after them! they are just at the corner, by the stand of hives.”
|
||
|
||
Linton gathered his energies, and left the hearth. The lattice was
|
||
open, and, as he stepped out, I heard Cathy inquiring of her unsociable
|
||
attendant what was that inscription over the door? Hareton stared up,
|
||
and scratched his head like a true clown.
|
||
|
||
“It’s some damnable writing,” he answered. “I cannot read it.”
|
||
|
||
“Can’t read it?” cried Catherine; “I can read it: it’s English. But I
|
||
want to know why it is there.”
|
||
|
||
Linton giggled: the first appearance of mirth he had exhibited.
|
||
|
||
“He does not know his letters,” he said to his cousin. “Could you
|
||
believe in the existence of such a colossal dunce?”
|
||
|
||
“Is he all as he should be?” asked Miss Cathy, seriously; “or is he
|
||
simple: not right? I’ve questioned him twice now, and each time he
|
||
looked so stupid I think he does not understand me. I can hardly
|
||
understand _him_, I’m sure!”
|
||
|
||
Linton repeated his laugh, and glanced at Hareton tauntingly; who
|
||
certainly did not seem quite clear of comprehension at that moment.
|
||
|
||
“There’s nothing the matter but laziness; is there, Earnshaw?” he said.
|
||
“My cousin fancies you are an idiot. There you experience the
|
||
consequence of scorning ‘book-larning,’ as you would say. Have you
|
||
noticed, Catherine, his frightful Yorkshire pronunciation?”
|
||
|
||
“Why, where the devil is the use on’t?” growled Hareton, more ready in
|
||
answering his daily companion. He was about to enlarge further, but the
|
||
two youngsters broke into a noisy fit of merriment: my giddy miss being
|
||
delighted to discover that she might turn his strange talk to matter of
|
||
amusement.
|
||
|
||
“Where is the use of the devil in that sentence?” tittered Linton.
|
||
“Papa told you not to say any bad words, and you can’t open your mouth
|
||
without one. Do try to behave like a gentleman, now do!”
|
||
|
||
“If thou weren’t more a lass than a lad, I’d fell thee this minute, I
|
||
would; pitiful lath of a crater!” retorted the angry boor, retreating,
|
||
while his face burnt with mingled rage and mortification; for he was
|
||
conscious of being insulted, and embarrassed how to resent it.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Heathcliff having overheard the conversation, as well as I, smiled
|
||
when he saw him go; but immediately afterwards cast a look of singular
|
||
aversion on the flippant pair, who remained chattering in the doorway:
|
||
the boy finding animation enough while discussing Hareton’s faults and
|
||
deficiencies, and relating anecdotes of his goings on; and the girl
|
||
relishing his pert and spiteful sayings, without considering the
|
||
ill-nature they evinced. I began to dislike, more than to compassionate
|
||
Linton, and to excuse his father in some measure for holding him cheap.
|
||
|
||
We stayed till afternoon: I could not tear Miss Cathy away sooner; but
|
||
happily my master had not quitted his apartment, and remained ignorant
|
||
of our prolonged absence. As we walked home, I would fain have
|
||
enlightened my charge on the characters of the people we had quitted:
|
||
but she got it into her head that I was prejudiced against them.
|
||
|
||
“Aha!” she cried, “you take papa’s side, Ellen: you are partial I know;
|
||
or else you wouldn’t have cheated me so many years into the notion that
|
||
Linton lived a long way from here. I’m really extremely angry; only I’m
|
||
so pleased I can’t show it! But you must hold your tongue about my
|
||
uncle; he’s _my_ uncle, remember; and I’ll scold papa for quarrelling
|
||
with him.”
|
||
|
||
And so she ran on, till I relinquished the endeavour to convince her of
|
||
her mistake. She did not mention the visit that night, because she did
|
||
not see Mr. Linton. Next day it all came out, sadly to my chagrin; and
|
||
still I was not altogether sorry: I thought the burden of directing and
|
||
warning would be more efficiently borne by him than me. But he was too
|
||
timid in giving satisfactory reasons for his wish that she should shun
|
||
connection with the household of the Heights, and Catherine liked good
|
||
reasons for every restraint that harassed her petted will.
|
||
|
||
“Papa!” she exclaimed, after the morning’s salutations, “guess whom I
|
||
saw yesterday, in my walk on the moors. Ah, papa, you started! you’ve
|
||
not done right, have you, now? I saw—but listen, and you shall hear how
|
||
I found you out; and Ellen, who is in league with you, and yet
|
||
pretended to pity me so, when I kept hoping, and was always
|
||
disappointed about Linton’s coming back!”
|
||
|
||
She gave a faithful account of her excursion and its consequences; and
|
||
my master, though he cast more than one reproachful look at me, said
|
||
nothing till she had concluded. Then he drew her to him, and asked if
|
||
she knew why he had concealed Linton’s near neighbourhood from her?
|
||
Could she think it was to deny her a pleasure that she might harmlessly
|
||
enjoy?
|
||
|
||
“It was because you disliked Mr. Heathcliff,” she answered.
|
||
|
||
“Then you believe I care more for my own feelings than yours, Cathy?”
|
||
he said. “No, it was not because I disliked Mr. Heathcliff, but because
|
||
Mr. Heathcliff dislikes me; and is a most diabolical man, delighting to
|
||
wrong and ruin those he hates, if they give him the slightest
|
||
opportunity. I knew that you could not keep up an acquaintance with
|
||
your cousin without being brought into contact with him; and I knew he
|
||
would detest you on my account; so for your own good, and nothing else,
|
||
I took precautions that you should not see Linton again. I meant to
|
||
explain this some time as you grew older, and I’m sorry I delayed it.”
|
||
|
||
“But Mr. Heathcliff was quite cordial, papa,” observed Catherine, not
|
||
at all convinced; “and _he_ didn’t object to our seeing each other: he
|
||
said I might come to his house when I pleased; only I must not tell
|
||
you, because you had quarrelled with him, and would not forgive him for
|
||
marrying aunt Isabella. And you won’t. _You_ are the one to be blamed:
|
||
he is willing to let _us_ be friends, at least; Linton and I; and you
|
||
are not.”
|
||
|
||
My master, perceiving that she would not take his word for her
|
||
uncle-in-law’s evil disposition, gave a hasty sketch of his conduct to
|
||
Isabella, and the manner in which Wuthering Heights became his
|
||
property. He could not bear to discourse long upon the topic; for
|
||
though he spoke little of it, he still felt the same horror and
|
||
detestation of his ancient enemy that had occupied his heart ever since
|
||
Mrs. Linton’s death. “She might have been living yet, if it had not
|
||
been for him!” was his constant bitter reflection; and, in his eyes,
|
||
Heathcliff seemed a murderer. Miss Cathy—conversant with no bad deeds
|
||
except her own slight acts of disobedience, injustice, and passion,
|
||
arising from hot temper and thoughtlessness, and repented of on the day
|
||
they were committed—was amazed at the blackness of spirit that could
|
||
brood on and cover revenge for years, and deliberately prosecute its
|
||
plans without a visitation of remorse. She appeared so deeply impressed
|
||
and shocked at this new view of human nature—excluded from all her
|
||
studies and all her ideas till now—that Mr. Edgar deemed it unnecessary
|
||
to pursue the subject. He merely added: “You will know hereafter,
|
||
darling, why I wish you to avoid his house and family; now return to
|
||
your old employments and amusements, and think no more about them.”
|
||
|
||
Catherine kissed her father, and sat down quietly to her lessons for a
|
||
couple of hours, according to custom; then she accompanied him into the
|
||
grounds, and the whole day passed as usual: but in the evening, when
|
||
she had retired to her room, and I went to help her to undress, I found
|
||
her crying, on her knees by the bedside.
|
||
|
||
“Oh, fie, silly child!” I exclaimed. “If you had any real griefs you’d
|
||
be ashamed to waste a tear on this little contrariety. You never had
|
||
one shadow of substantial sorrow, Miss Catherine. Suppose, for a
|
||
minute, that master and I were dead, and you were by yourself in the
|
||
world: how would you feel, then? Compare the present occasion with such
|
||
an affliction as that, and be thankful for the friends you have,
|
||
instead of coveting more.”
|
||
|
||
“I’m not crying for myself, Ellen,” she answered, “it’s for him. He
|
||
expected to see me again to-morrow, and there he’ll be so disappointed:
|
||
and he’ll wait for me, and I sha’n’t come!”
|
||
|
||
“Nonsense!” said I, “do you imagine he has thought as much of you as
|
||
you have of him? Hasn’t he Hareton for a companion? Not one in a
|
||
hundred would weep at losing a relation they had just seen twice, for
|
||
two afternoons. Linton will conjecture how it is, and trouble himself
|
||
no further about you.”
|
||
|
||
“But may I not write a note to tell him why I cannot come?” she asked,
|
||
rising to her feet. “And just send those books I promised to lend him?
|
||
His books are not as nice as mine, and he wanted to have them
|
||
extremely, when I told him how interesting they were. May I not,
|
||
Ellen?”
|
||
|
||
“No, indeed! no, indeed!” replied I with decision. “Then he would write
|
||
to you, and there’d never be an end of it. No, Miss Catherine, the
|
||
acquaintance must be dropped entirely: so papa expects, and I shall see
|
||
that it is done.”
|
||
|
||
“But how can one little note—?” she recommenced, putting on an
|
||
imploring countenance.
|
||
|
||
“Silence!” I interrupted. “We’ll not begin with your little notes. Get
|
||
into bed.”
|
||
|
||
She threw at me a very naughty look, so naughty that I would not kiss
|
||
her good-night at first: I covered her up, and shut her door, in great
|
||
displeasure; but, repenting half-way, I returned softly, and lo! there
|
||
was Miss standing at the table with a bit of blank paper before her and
|
||
a pencil in her hand, which she guiltily slipped out of sight on my
|
||
entrance.
|
||
|
||
“You’ll get nobody to take that, Catherine,” I said, “if you write it;
|
||
and at present I shall put out your candle.”
|
||
|
||
I set the extinguisher on the flame, receiving as I did so a slap on my
|
||
hand and a petulant “cross thing!” I then quitted her again, and she
|
||
drew the bolt in one of her worst, most peevish humours. The letter was
|
||
finished and forwarded to its destination by a milk-fetcher who came
|
||
from the village; but that I didn’t learn till some time afterwards.
|
||
Weeks passed on, and Cathy recovered her temper; though she grew
|
||
wondrous fond of stealing off to corners by herself; and often, if I
|
||
came near her suddenly while reading, she would start and bend over the
|
||
book, evidently desirous to hide it; and I detected edges of loose
|
||
paper sticking out beyond the leaves. She also got a trick of coming
|
||
down early in the morning and lingering about the kitchen, as if she
|
||
were expecting the arrival of something; and she had a small drawer in
|
||
a cabinet in the library, which she would trifle over for hours, and
|
||
whose key she took special care to remove when she left it.
|
||
|
||
One day, as she inspected this drawer, I observed that the playthings
|
||
and trinkets which recently formed its contents were transmuted into
|
||
bits of folded paper. My curiosity and suspicions were roused; I
|
||
determined to take a peep at her mysterious treasures; so, at night, as
|
||
soon as she and my master were safe upstairs, I searched, and readily
|
||
found among my house keys one that would fit the lock. Having opened, I
|
||
emptied the whole contents into my apron, and took them with me to
|
||
examine at leisure in my own chamber. Though I could not but suspect, I
|
||
was still surprised to discover that they were a mass of
|
||
correspondence—daily almost, it must have been—from Linton Heathcliff:
|
||
answers to documents forwarded by her. The earlier dated were
|
||
embarrassed and short; gradually, however, they expanded into copious
|
||
love-letters, foolish, as the age of the writer rendered natural, yet
|
||
with touches here and there which I thought were borrowed from a more
|
||
experienced source. Some of them struck me as singularly odd compounds
|
||
of ardour and flatness; commencing in strong feeling, and concluding in
|
||
the affected, wordy style that a schoolboy might use to a fancied,
|
||
incorporeal sweetheart. Whether they satisfied Cathy I don’t know; but
|
||
they appeared very worthless trash to me. After turning over as many as
|
||
I thought proper, I tied them in a handkerchief and set them aside,
|
||
relocking the vacant drawer.
|
||
|
||
Following her habit, my young lady descended early, and visited the
|
||
kitchen: I watched her go to the door, on the arrival of a certain
|
||
little boy; and, while the dairymaid filled his can, she tucked
|
||
something into his jacket pocket, and plucked something out. I went
|
||
round by the garden, and laid wait for the messenger; who fought
|
||
valorously to defend his trust, and we spilt the milk between us; but I
|
||
succeeded in abstracting the epistle; and, threatening serious
|
||
consequences if he did not look sharp home, I remained under the wall
|
||
and perused Miss Cathy’s affectionate composition. It was more simple
|
||
and more eloquent than her cousin’s: very pretty and very silly. I
|
||
shook my head, and went meditating into the house. The day being wet,
|
||
she could not divert herself with rambling about the park; so, at the
|
||
conclusion of her morning studies, she resorted to the solace of the
|
||
drawer. Her father sat reading at the table; and I, on purpose, had
|
||
sought a bit of work in some unripped fringes of the window-curtain,
|
||
keeping my eye steadily fixed on her proceedings. Never did any bird
|
||
flying back to a plundered nest, which it had left brimful of chirping
|
||
young ones, express more complete despair, in its anguished cries and
|
||
flutterings, than she by her single “Oh!” and the change that
|
||
transfigured her late happy countenance. Mr. Linton looked up.
|
||
|
||
“What is the matter, love? Have you hurt yourself?” he said.
|
||
|
||
His tone and look assured her _he_ had not been the discoverer of the
|
||
hoard.
|
||
|
||
“No, papa!” she gasped. “Ellen! Ellen! come upstairs—I’m sick!”
|
||
|
||
I obeyed her summons, and accompanied her out.
|
||
|
||
“Oh, Ellen! you have got them,” she commenced immediately, dropping on
|
||
her knees, when we were enclosed alone. “Oh, give them to me, and I’ll
|
||
never, never do so again! Don’t tell papa. You have not told papa,
|
||
Ellen? say you have not? I’ve been exceedingly naughty, but I won’t do
|
||
it any more!”
|
||
|
||
With a grave severity in my manner I bade her stand up.
|
||
|
||
“So,” I exclaimed, “Miss Catherine, you are tolerably far on, it seems:
|
||
you may well be ashamed of them! A fine bundle of trash you study in
|
||
your leisure hours, to be sure: why, it’s good enough to be printed!
|
||
And what do you suppose the master will think when I display it before
|
||
him? I hav’n’t shown it yet, but you needn’t imagine I shall keep your
|
||
ridiculous secrets. For shame! and you must have led the way in writing
|
||
such absurdities: he would not have thought of beginning, I’m certain.”
|
||
|
||
“I didn’t! I didn’t!” sobbed Cathy, fit to break her heart. “I didn’t
|
||
once think of loving him till—”
|
||
|
||
“_Loving_!” cried I, as scornfully as I could utter the word.
|
||
“_Loving_! Did anybody ever hear the like! I might just as well talk of
|
||
loving the miller who comes once a year to buy our corn. Pretty loving,
|
||
indeed! and both times together you have seen Linton hardly four hours
|
||
in your life! Now here is the babyish trash. I’m going with it to the
|
||
library; and we’ll see what your father says to such _loving_.”
|
||
|
||
She sprang at her precious epistles, but I held them above my head; and
|
||
then she poured out further frantic entreaties that I would burn
|
||
them—do anything rather than show them. And being really fully as much
|
||
inclined to laugh as scold—for I esteemed it all girlish vanity—I at
|
||
length relented in a measure, and asked,—“If I consent to burn them,
|
||
will you promise faithfully neither to send nor receive a letter again,
|
||
nor a book (for I perceive you have sent him books), nor locks of hair,
|
||
nor rings, nor playthings?”
|
||
|
||
“We don’t send playthings,” cried Catherine, her pride overcoming her
|
||
shame.
|
||
|
||
“Nor anything at all, then, my lady?” I said. “Unless you will, here I
|
||
go.”
|
||
|
||
“I promise, Ellen!” she cried, catching my dress. “Oh, put them in the
|
||
fire, do, do!”
|
||
|
||
But when I proceeded to open a place with the poker the sacrifice was
|
||
too painful to be borne. She earnestly supplicated that I would spare
|
||
her one or two.
|
||
|
||
“One or two, Ellen, to keep for Linton’s sake!”
|
||
|
||
I unknotted the handkerchief, and commenced dropping them in from an
|
||
angle, and the flame curled up the chimney.
|
||
|
||
“I will have one, you cruel wretch!” she screamed, darting her hand
|
||
into the fire, and drawing forth some half-consumed fragments, at the
|
||
expense of her fingers.
|
||
|
||
“Very well—and I will have some to exhibit to papa!” I answered,
|
||
shaking back the rest into the bundle, and turning anew to the door.
|
||
|
||
She emptied her blackened pieces into the flames, and motioned me to
|
||
finish the immolation. It was done; I stirred up the ashes, and
|
||
interred them under a shovelful of coals; and she mutely, and with a
|
||
sense of intense injury, retired to her private apartment. I descended
|
||
to tell my master that the young lady’s qualm of sickness was almost
|
||
gone, but I judged it best for her to lie down a while. She wouldn’t
|
||
dine; but she reappeared at tea, pale, and red about the eyes, and
|
||
marvellously subdued in outward aspect. Next morning I answered the
|
||
letter by a slip of paper, inscribed, “Master Heathcliff is requested
|
||
to send no more notes to Miss Linton, as she will not receive them.”
|
||
And, thenceforth, the little boy came with vacant pockets.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXII
|
||
|
||
|
||
Summer drew to an end, and early autumn: it was past Michaelmas, but
|
||
the harvest was late that year, and a few of our fields were still
|
||
uncleared. Mr. Linton and his daughter would frequently walk out among
|
||
the reapers; at the carrying of the last sheaves they stayed till dusk,
|
||
and the evening happening to be chill and damp, my master caught a bad
|
||
cold, that settled obstinately on his lungs, and confined him indoors
|
||
throughout the whole of the winter, nearly without intermission.
|
||
|
||
Poor Cathy, frightened from her little romance, had been considerably
|
||
sadder and duller since its abandonment; and her father insisted on her
|
||
reading less, and taking more exercise. She had his companionship no
|
||
longer; I esteemed it a duty to supply its lack, as much as possible,
|
||
with mine: an inefficient substitute; for I could only spare two or
|
||
three hours, from my numerous diurnal occupations, to follow her
|
||
footsteps, and then my society was obviously less desirable than his.
|
||
|
||
On an afternoon in October, or the beginning of November—a fresh watery
|
||
afternoon, when the turf and paths were rustling with moist, withered
|
||
leaves, and the cold blue sky was half hidden by clouds—dark grey
|
||
streamers, rapidly mounting from the west, and boding abundant rain—I
|
||
requested my young lady to forego her ramble, because I was certain of
|
||
showers. She refused; and I unwillingly donned a cloak, and took my
|
||
umbrella to accompany her on a stroll to the bottom of the park: a
|
||
formal walk which she generally affected if low-spirited—and that she
|
||
invariably was when Mr. Edgar had been worse than ordinary, a thing
|
||
never known from his confession, but guessed both by her and me from
|
||
his increased silence and the melancholy of his countenance. She went
|
||
sadly on: there was no running or bounding now, though the chill wind
|
||
might well have tempted her to race. And often, from the side of my
|
||
eye, I could detect her raising a hand, and brushing something off her
|
||
cheek. I gazed round for a means of diverting her thoughts. On one side
|
||
of the road rose a high, rough bank, where hazels and stunted oaks,
|
||
with their roots half exposed, held uncertain tenure: the soil was too
|
||
loose for the latter; and strong winds had blown some nearly
|
||
horizontal. In summer Miss Catherine delighted to climb along these
|
||
trunks, and sit in the branches, swinging twenty feet above the ground;
|
||
and I, pleased with her agility and her light, childish heart, still
|
||
considered it proper to scold every time I caught her at such an
|
||
elevation, but so that she knew there was no necessity for descending.
|
||
From dinner to tea she would lie in her breeze-rocked cradle, doing
|
||
nothing except singing old songs—my nursery lore—to herself, or
|
||
watching the birds, joint tenants, feed and entice their young ones to
|
||
fly: or nestling with closed lids, half thinking, half dreaming,
|
||
happier than words can express.
|
||
|
||
“Look, Miss!” I exclaimed, pointing to a nook under the roots of one
|
||
twisted tree. “Winter is not here yet. There’s a little flower up
|
||
yonder, the last bud from the multitude of bluebells that clouded those
|
||
turf steps in July with a lilac mist. Will you clamber up, and pluck it
|
||
to show to papa?”
|
||
|
||
Cathy stared a long time at the lonely blossom trembling in its earthy
|
||
shelter, and replied, at length—“No, I’ll not touch it: but it looks
|
||
melancholy, does it not, Ellen?”
|
||
|
||
“Yes,” I observed, “about as starved and sackless as you: your cheeks
|
||
are bloodless; let us take hold of hands and run. You’re so low, I
|
||
daresay I shall keep up with you.”
|
||
|
||
“No,” she repeated, and continued sauntering on, pausing at intervals
|
||
to muse over a bit of moss, or a tuft of blanched grass, or a fungus
|
||
spreading its bright orange among the heaps of brown foliage; and, ever
|
||
and anon, her hand was lifted to her averted face.
|
||
|
||
“Catherine, why are you crying, love?” I asked, approaching and putting
|
||
my arm over her shoulder. “You mustn’t cry because papa has a cold; be
|
||
thankful it is nothing worse.”
|
||
|
||
She now put no further restraint on her tears; her breath was stifled
|
||
by sobs.
|
||
|
||
“Oh, it _will_ be something worse,” she said. “And what shall I do when
|
||
papa and you leave me, and I am by myself? I can’t forget your words,
|
||
Ellen; they are always in my ear. How life will be changed, how dreary
|
||
the world will be, when papa and you are dead.”
|
||
|
||
“None can tell whether you won’t die before us,” I replied. “It’s wrong
|
||
to anticipate evil. We’ll hope there are years and years to come before
|
||
any of us go: master is young, and I am strong, and hardly forty-five.
|
||
My mother lived till eighty, a canty dame to the last. And suppose Mr.
|
||
Linton were spared till he saw sixty, that would be more years than you
|
||
have counted, Miss. And would it not be foolish to mourn a calamity
|
||
above twenty years beforehand?”
|
||
|
||
“But Aunt Isabella was younger than papa,” she remarked, gazing up with
|
||
timid hope to seek further consolation.
|
||
|
||
“Aunt Isabella had not you and me to nurse her,” I replied. “She wasn’t
|
||
as happy as Master: she hadn’t as much to live for. All you need do, is
|
||
to wait well on your father, and cheer him by letting him see you
|
||
cheerful; and avoid giving him anxiety on any subject: mind that,
|
||
Cathy! I’ll not disguise but you might kill him if you were wild and
|
||
reckless, and cherished a foolish, fanciful affection for the son of a
|
||
person who would be glad to have him in his grave; and allowed him to
|
||
discover that you fretted over the separation he has judged it
|
||
expedient to make.”
|
||
|
||
“I fret about nothing on earth except papa’s illness,” answered my
|
||
companion. “I care for nothing in comparison with papa. And I’ll
|
||
never—never—oh, never, while I have my senses, do an act or say a word
|
||
to vex him. I love him better than myself, Ellen; and I know it by
|
||
this: I pray every night that I may live after him; because I would
|
||
rather be miserable than that he should be: that proves I love him
|
||
better than myself.”
|
||
|
||
“Good words,” I replied. “But deeds must prove it also; and after he is
|
||
well, remember you don’t forget resolutions formed in the hour of
|
||
fear.”
|
||
|
||
As we talked, we neared a door that opened on the road; and my young
|
||
lady, lightening into sunshine again, climbed up and seated herself on
|
||
the top of the wall, reaching over to gather some hips that bloomed
|
||
scarlet on the summit branches of the wild-rose trees shadowing the
|
||
highway side: the lower fruit had disappeared, but only birds could
|
||
touch the upper, except from Cathy’s present station. In stretching to
|
||
pull them, her hat fell off; and as the door was locked, she proposed
|
||
scrambling down to recover it. I bid her be cautious lest she got a
|
||
fall, and she nimbly disappeared. But the return was no such easy
|
||
matter: the stones were smooth and neatly cemented, and the rosebushes
|
||
and blackberry stragglers could yield no assistance in re-ascending.
|
||
I, like a fool, didn’t recollect that, till I heard her laughing and
|
||
exclaiming—“Ellen! you’ll have to fetch the key, or else I must run
|
||
round to the porter’s lodge. I can’t scale the ramparts on this side!”
|
||
|
||
“Stay where you are,” I answered; “I have my bundle of keys in my
|
||
pocket: perhaps I may manage to open it; if not, I’ll go.”
|
||
|
||
Catherine amused herself with dancing to and fro before the door, while
|
||
I tried all the large keys in succession. I had applied the last, and
|
||
found that none would do; so, repeating my desire that she would remain
|
||
there, I was about to hurry home as fast as I could, when an
|
||
approaching sound arrested me. It was the trot of a horse; Cathy’s
|
||
dance stopped also.
|
||
|
||
“Who is that?” I whispered.
|
||
|
||
“Ellen, I wish you could open the door,” whispered back my companion,
|
||
anxiously.
|
||
|
||
“Ho, Miss Linton!” cried a deep voice (the rider’s), “I’m glad to meet
|
||
you. Don’t be in haste to enter, for I have an explanation to ask and
|
||
obtain.”
|
||
|
||
“I sha’n’t speak to you, Mr. Heathcliff,” answered Catherine. “Papa
|
||
says you are a wicked man, and you hate both him and me; and Ellen says
|
||
the same.”
|
||
|
||
“That is nothing to the purpose,” said Heathcliff. (He it was.) “I
|
||
don’t hate my son, I suppose; and it is concerning him that I demand
|
||
your attention. Yes; you have cause to blush. Two or three months
|
||
since, were you not in the habit of writing to Linton? making love in
|
||
play, eh? You deserved, both of you, flogging for that! You especially,
|
||
the elder; and less sensitive, as it turns out. I’ve got your letters,
|
||
and if you give me any pertness I’ll send them to your father. I
|
||
presume you grew weary of the amusement and dropped it, didn’t you?
|
||
Well, you dropped Linton with it into a Slough of Despond. He was in
|
||
earnest: in love, really. As true as I live, he’s dying for you;
|
||
breaking his heart at your fickleness: not figuratively, but actually.
|
||
Though Hareton has made him a standing jest for six weeks, and I have
|
||
used more serious measures, and attempted to frighten him out of his
|
||
idiocy, he gets worse daily; and he’ll be under the sod before summer,
|
||
unless you restore him!”
|
||
|
||
“How can you lie so glaringly to the poor child?” I called from the
|
||
inside. “Pray ride on! How can you deliberately get up such paltry
|
||
falsehoods? Miss Cathy, I’ll knock the lock off with a stone: you won’t
|
||
believe that vile nonsense. You can feel in yourself it is impossible
|
||
that a person should die for love of a stranger.”
|
||
|
||
“I was not aware there were eavesdroppers,” muttered the detected
|
||
villain. “Worthy Mrs. Dean, I like you, but I don’t like your
|
||
double-dealing,” he added aloud. “How could _you_ lie so glaringly as
|
||
to affirm I hated the ‘poor child’? and invent bugbear stories to
|
||
terrify her from my door-stones? Catherine Linton (the very name warms
|
||
me), my bonny lass, I shall be from home all this week; go and see if I
|
||
have not spoken truth: do, there’s a darling! Just imagine your father
|
||
in my place, and Linton in yours; then think how you would value your
|
||
careless lover if he refused to stir a step to comfort you, when your
|
||
father himself entreated him; and don’t, from pure stupidity, fall into
|
||
the same error. I swear, on my salvation, he’s going to his grave, and
|
||
none but you can save him!”
|
||
|
||
The lock gave way and I issued out.
|
||
|
||
“I swear Linton is dying,” repeated Heathcliff, looking hard at me.
|
||
“And grief and disappointment are hastening his death. Nelly, if you
|
||
won’t let her go, you can walk over yourself. But I shall not return
|
||
till this time next week; and I think your master himself would
|
||
scarcely object to her visiting her cousin.”
|
||
|
||
“Come in,” said I, taking Cathy by the arm and half forcing her to
|
||
re-enter; for she lingered, viewing with troubled eyes the features of
|
||
the speaker, too stern to express his inward deceit.
|
||
|
||
He pushed his horse close, and, bending down, observed—
|
||
|
||
“Miss Catherine, I’ll own to you that I have little patience with
|
||
Linton; and Hareton and Joseph have less. I’ll own that he’s with a
|
||
harsh set. He pines for kindness, as well as love; and a kind word from
|
||
you would be his best medicine. Don’t mind Mrs. Dean’s cruel cautions;
|
||
but be generous, and contrive to see him. He dreams of you day and
|
||
night, and cannot be persuaded that you don’t hate him, since you
|
||
neither write nor call.”
|
||
|
||
I closed the door, and rolled a stone to assist the loosened lock in
|
||
holding it; and spreading my umbrella, I drew my charge underneath: for
|
||
the rain began to drive through the moaning branches of the trees, and
|
||
warned us to avoid delay. Our hurry prevented any comment on the
|
||
encounter with Heathcliff, as we stretched towards home; but I divined
|
||
instinctively that Catherine’s heart was clouded now in double
|
||
darkness. Her features were so sad, they did not seem hers: she
|
||
evidently regarded what she had heard as every syllable true.
|
||
|
||
The master had retired to rest before we came in. Cathy stole to his
|
||
room to inquire how he was; he had fallen asleep. She returned, and
|
||
asked me to sit with her in the library. We took our tea together; and
|
||
afterwards she lay down on the rug, and told me not to talk, for she
|
||
was weary. I got a book, and pretended to read. As soon as she supposed
|
||
me absorbed in my occupation, she recommenced her silent weeping: it
|
||
appeared, at present, her favourite diversion. I suffered her to enjoy
|
||
it a while; then I expostulated: deriding and ridiculing all Mr.
|
||
Heathcliff’s assertions about his son, as if I were certain she would
|
||
coincide. Alas! I hadn’t skill to counteract the effect his account had
|
||
produced: it was just what he intended.
|
||
|
||
“You may be right, Ellen,” she answered; “but I shall never feel at
|
||
ease till I know. And I must tell Linton it is not my fault that I
|
||
don’t write, and convince him that I shall not change.”
|
||
|
||
What use were anger and protestations against her silly credulity? We
|
||
parted that night—hostile; but next day beheld me on the road to
|
||
Wuthering Heights, by the side of my wilful young mistress’s pony. I
|
||
couldn’t bear to witness her sorrow: to see her pale, dejected
|
||
countenance, and heavy eyes: and I yielded, in the faint hope that
|
||
Linton himself might prove, by his reception of us, how little of the
|
||
tale was founded on fact.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXIII
|
||
|
||
|
||
The rainy night had ushered in a misty morning—half frost, half
|
||
drizzle—and temporary brooks crossed our path—gurgling from the
|
||
uplands. My feet were thoroughly wetted; I was cross and low; exactly
|
||
the humour suited for making the most of these disagreeable things. We
|
||
entered the farm-house by the kitchen way, to ascertain whether Mr.
|
||
Heathcliff were really absent: because I put slight faith in his own
|
||
affirmation.
|
||
|
||
Joseph seemed sitting in a sort of elysium alone, beside a roaring
|
||
fire; a quart of ale on the table near him, bristling with large pieces
|
||
of toasted oat-cake; and his black, short pipe in his mouth. Catherine
|
||
ran to the hearth to warm herself. I asked if the master was in? My
|
||
question remained so long unanswered, that I thought the old man had
|
||
grown deaf, and repeated it louder.
|
||
|
||
“Na—ay!” he snarled, or rather screamed through his nose. “Na—ay! yah
|
||
muh goa back whear yah coom frough.”
|
||
|
||
“Joseph!” cried a peevish voice, simultaneously with me, from the inner
|
||
room. “How often am I to call you? There are only a few red ashes now.
|
||
Joseph! come this moment.”
|
||
|
||
Vigorous puffs, and a resolute stare into the grate, declared he had no
|
||
ear for this appeal. The housekeeper and Hareton were invisible; one
|
||
gone on an errand, and the other at his work, probably. We knew
|
||
Linton’s tones, and entered.
|
||
|
||
“Oh, I hope you’ll die in a garret, starved to death!” said the boy,
|
||
mistaking our approach for that of his negligent attendant.
|
||
|
||
He stopped on observing his error: his cousin flew to him.
|
||
|
||
“Is that you, Miss Linton?” he said, raising his head from the arm of
|
||
the great chair, in which he reclined. “No—don’t kiss me: it takes my
|
||
breath. Dear me! Papa said you would call,” continued he, after
|
||
recovering a little from Catherine’s embrace; while she stood by
|
||
looking very contrite. “Will you shut the door, if you please? you left
|
||
it open; and those—those _detestable_ creatures won’t bring coals to
|
||
the fire. It’s so cold!”
|
||
|
||
I stirred up the cinders, and fetched a scuttleful myself. The invalid
|
||
complained of being covered with ashes; but he had a tiresome cough,
|
||
and looked feverish and ill, so I did not rebuke his temper.
|
||
|
||
“Well, Linton,” murmured Catherine, when his corrugated brow relaxed,
|
||
“are you glad to see me? Can I do you any good?”
|
||
|
||
“Why didn’t you come before?” he asked. “You should have come, instead
|
||
of writing. It tired me dreadfully writing those long letters. I’d far
|
||
rather have talked to you. Now, I can neither bear to talk, nor
|
||
anything else. I wonder where Zillah is! Will you” (looking at me)
|
||
“step into the kitchen and see?”
|
||
|
||
I had received no thanks for my other service; and being unwilling to
|
||
run to and fro at his behest, I replied—
|
||
|
||
“Nobody is out there but Joseph.”
|
||
|
||
“I want to drink,” he exclaimed fretfully, turning away. “Zillah is
|
||
constantly gadding off to Gimmerton since papa went: it’s miserable!
|
||
And I’m obliged to come down here—they resolved never to hear me
|
||
upstairs.”
|
||
|
||
“Is your father attentive to you, Master Heathcliff?” I asked,
|
||
perceiving Catherine to be checked in her friendly advances.
|
||
|
||
“Attentive? He makes _them_ a little more attentive at least,” he
|
||
cried. “The wretches! Do you know, Miss Linton, that brute Hareton
|
||
laughs at me! I hate him! indeed, I hate them all: they are odious
|
||
beings.”
|
||
|
||
Cathy began searching for some water; she lighted on a pitcher in the
|
||
dresser, filled a tumbler, and brought it. He bid her add a spoonful of
|
||
wine from a bottle on the table; and having swallowed a small portion,
|
||
appeared more tranquil, and said she was very kind.
|
||
|
||
“And are you glad to see me?” asked she, reiterating her former
|
||
question, and pleased to detect the faint dawn of a smile.
|
||
|
||
“Yes, I am. It’s something new to hear a voice like yours!” he replied.
|
||
“But I have been vexed, because you wouldn’t come. And papa swore it
|
||
was owing to me: he called me a pitiful, shuffling, worthless thing;
|
||
and said you despised me; and if he had been in my place, he would be
|
||
more the master of the Grange than your father by this time. But you
|
||
don’t despise me, do you, Miss—?”
|
||
|
||
“I wish you would say Catherine, or Cathy,” interrupted my young lady.
|
||
“Despise you? No! Next to papa and Ellen, I love you better than
|
||
anybody living. I don’t love Mr. Heathcliff, though; and I dare not
|
||
come when he returns: will he stay away many days?”
|
||
|
||
“Not many,” answered Linton; “but he goes on to the moors frequently,
|
||
since the shooting season commenced; and you might spend an hour or two
|
||
with me in his absence. Do say you will. I think I should not be
|
||
peevish with you: you’d not provoke me, and you’d always be ready to
|
||
help me, wouldn’t you?”
|
||
|
||
“Yes,” said Catherine, stroking his long soft hair, “if I could only
|
||
get papa’s consent, I’d spend half my time with you. Pretty Linton! I
|
||
wish you were my brother.”
|
||
|
||
“And then you would like me as well as your father?” observed he, more
|
||
cheerfully. “But papa says you would love me better than him and all
|
||
the world, if you were my wife; so I’d rather you were that.”
|
||
|
||
“No, I should never love anybody better than papa,” she returned
|
||
gravely. “And people hate their wives, sometimes; but not their sisters
|
||
and brothers: and if you were the latter, you would live with us, and
|
||
papa would be as fond of you as he is of me.”
|
||
|
||
Linton denied that people ever hated their wives; but Cathy affirmed
|
||
they did, and, in her wisdom, instanced his own father’s aversion to
|
||
her aunt. I endeavoured to stop her thoughtless tongue. I couldn’t
|
||
succeed till everything she knew was out. Master Heathcliff, much
|
||
irritated, asserted her relation was false.
|
||
|
||
“Papa told me; and papa does not tell falsehoods,” she answered pertly.
|
||
|
||
“_My_ papa scorns yours!” cried Linton. “He calls him a sneaking fool.”
|
||
|
||
“Yours is a wicked man,” retorted Catherine; “and you are very naughty
|
||
to dare to repeat what he says. He must be wicked to have made Aunt
|
||
Isabella leave him as she did.”
|
||
|
||
“She didn’t leave him,” said the boy; “you sha’n’t contradict me.”
|
||
|
||
“She did,” cried my young lady.
|
||
|
||
“Well, I’ll tell _you_ something!” said Linton. “Your mother hated your
|
||
father: now then.”
|
||
|
||
“Oh!” exclaimed Catherine, too enraged to continue.
|
||
|
||
“And she loved mine,” added he.
|
||
|
||
“You little liar! I hate you now!” she panted, and her face grew red
|
||
with passion.
|
||
|
||
“She did! she did!” sang Linton, sinking into the recess of his chair,
|
||
and leaning back his head to enjoy the agitation of the other
|
||
disputant, who stood behind.
|
||
|
||
“Hush, Master Heathcliff!” I said; “that’s your father’s tale, too, I
|
||
suppose.”
|
||
|
||
“It isn’t: you hold your tongue!” he answered. “She did, she did,
|
||
Catherine! she did, she did!”
|
||
|
||
Cathy, beside herself, gave the chair a violent push, and caused him to
|
||
fall against one arm. He was immediately seized by a suffocating cough
|
||
that soon ended his triumph. It lasted so long that it frightened even
|
||
me. As to his cousin, she wept with all her might, aghast at the
|
||
mischief she had done: though she said nothing. I held him till the fit
|
||
exhausted itself. Then he thrust me away, and leant his head down
|
||
silently. Catherine quelled her lamentations also, took a seat
|
||
opposite, and looked solemnly into the fire.
|
||
|
||
“How do you feel now, Master Heathcliff?” I inquired, after waiting ten
|
||
minutes.
|
||
|
||
“I wish _she_ felt as I do,” he replied: “spiteful, cruel thing!
|
||
Hareton never touches me: he never struck me in his life. And I was
|
||
better to-day: and there—” his voice died in a whimper.
|
||
|
||
“_I_ didn’t strike you!” muttered Cathy, chewing her lip to prevent
|
||
another burst of emotion.
|
||
|
||
He sighed and moaned like one under great suffering, and kept it up for
|
||
a quarter of an hour; on purpose to distress his cousin apparently, for
|
||
whenever he caught a stifled sob from her he put renewed pain and
|
||
pathos into the inflexions of his voice.
|
||
|
||
“I’m sorry I hurt you, Linton,” she said at length, racked beyond
|
||
endurance. “But _I_ couldn’t have been hurt by that little push, and I
|
||
had no idea that you could, either: you’re not much, are you, Linton?
|
||
Don’t let me go home thinking I’ve done you harm. Answer! speak to me.”
|
||
|
||
“I can’t speak to you,” he murmured; “you’ve hurt me so that I shall
|
||
lie awake all night choking with this cough. If you had it you’d know
|
||
what it was; but _you’ll_ be comfortably asleep while I’m in agony, and
|
||
nobody near me. I wonder how you would like to pass those fearful
|
||
nights!” And he began to wail aloud, for very pity of himself.
|
||
|
||
“Since you are in the habit of passing dreadful nights,” I said, “it
|
||
won’t be Miss who spoils your ease: you’d be the same had she never
|
||
come. However, she shall not disturb you again; and perhaps you’ll get
|
||
quieter when we leave you.”
|
||
|
||
“Must I go?” asked Catherine dolefully, bending over him. “Do you want
|
||
me to go, Linton?”
|
||
|
||
“You can’t alter what you’ve done,” he replied pettishly, shrinking
|
||
from her, “unless you alter it for the worse by teasing me into a
|
||
fever.”
|
||
|
||
“Well, then, I must go?” she repeated.
|
||
|
||
“Let me alone, at least,” said he; “I can’t bear your talking.”
|
||
|
||
She lingered, and resisted my persuasions to departure a tiresome
|
||
while; but as he neither looked up nor spoke, she finally made a
|
||
movement to the door, and I followed. We were recalled by a scream.
|
||
Linton had slid from his seat on to the hearthstone, and lay writhing
|
||
in the mere perverseness of an indulged plague of a child, determined
|
||
to be as grievous and harassing as it can. I thoroughly gauged his
|
||
disposition from his behaviour, and saw at once it would be folly to
|
||
attempt humouring him. Not so my companion: she ran back in terror,
|
||
knelt down, and cried, and soothed, and entreated, till he grew quiet
|
||
from lack of breath: by no means from compunction at distressing her.
|
||
|
||
“I shall lift him on to the settle,” I said, “and he may roll about as
|
||
he pleases: we can’t stop to watch him. I hope you are satisfied, Miss
|
||
Cathy, that _you_ are not the person to benefit him; and that his
|
||
condition of health is not occasioned by attachment to you. Now, then,
|
||
there he is! Come away: as soon as he knows there is nobody by to care
|
||
for his nonsense, he’ll be glad to lie still.”
|
||
|
||
She placed a cushion under his head, and offered him some water; he
|
||
rejected the latter, and tossed uneasily on the former, as if it were a
|
||
stone or a block of wood. She tried to put it more comfortably.
|
||
|
||
“I can’t do with that,” he said; “it’s not high enough.”
|
||
|
||
Catherine brought another to lay above it.
|
||
|
||
“That’s _too_ high,” murmured the provoking thing.
|
||
|
||
“How must I arrange it, then?” she asked despairingly.
|
||
|
||
He twined himself up to her, as she half knelt by the settle, and
|
||
converted her shoulder into a support.
|
||
|
||
“No, that won’t do,” I said. “You’ll be content with the cushion,
|
||
Master Heathcliff. Miss has wasted too much time on you already: we
|
||
cannot remain five minutes longer.”
|
||
|
||
“Yes, yes, we can!” replied Cathy. “He’s good and patient now. He’s
|
||
beginning to think I shall have far greater misery than he will
|
||
to-night, if I believe he is the worse for my visit: and then I dare
|
||
not come again. Tell the truth about it, Linton; for I mustn’t come, if
|
||
I have hurt you.”
|
||
|
||
“You must come, to cure me,” he answered. “You ought to come, because
|
||
you have hurt me: you know you have extremely! I was not as ill when
|
||
you entered as I am at present—was I?”
|
||
|
||
“But you’ve made yourself ill by crying and being in a passion.—I
|
||
didn’t do it all,” said his cousin. “However, we’ll be friends now. And
|
||
you want me: you would wish to see me sometimes, really?”
|
||
|
||
“I told you I did,” he replied impatiently. “Sit on the settle and let
|
||
me lean on your knee. That’s as mamma used to do, whole afternoons
|
||
together. Sit quite still and don’t talk: but you may sing a song, if
|
||
you can sing; or you may say a nice long interesting ballad—one of
|
||
those you promised to teach me; or a story. I’d rather have a ballad,
|
||
though: begin.”
|
||
|
||
Catherine repeated the longest she could remember. The employment
|
||
pleased both mightily. Linton would have another, and after that
|
||
another, notwithstanding my strenuous objections; and so they went on
|
||
until the clock struck twelve, and we heard Hareton in the court,
|
||
returning for his dinner.
|
||
|
||
“And to-morrow, Catherine, will you be here to-morrow?” asked young
|
||
Heathcliff, holding her frock as she rose reluctantly.
|
||
|
||
“No,” I answered, “nor next day neither.” She, however, gave a
|
||
different response evidently, for his forehead cleared as she stooped
|
||
and whispered in his ear.
|
||
|
||
“You won’t go to-morrow, recollect, Miss!” I commenced, when we were
|
||
out of the house. “You are not dreaming of it, are you?”
|
||
|
||
She smiled.
|
||
|
||
“Oh, I’ll take good care,” I continued: “I’ll have that lock mended,
|
||
and you can escape by no way else.”
|
||
|
||
“I can get over the wall,” she said laughing. “The Grange is not a
|
||
prison, Ellen, and you are not my gaoler. And besides, I’m almost
|
||
seventeen: I’m a woman. And I’m certain Linton would recover quickly if
|
||
he had me to look after him. I’m older than he is, you know, and wiser:
|
||
less childish, am I not? And he’ll soon do as I direct him, with some
|
||
slight coaxing. He’s a pretty little darling when he’s good. I’d make
|
||
such a pet of him, if he were mine. We should never quarrel, should we,
|
||
after we were used to each other? Don’t you like him, Ellen?”
|
||
|
||
“Like him!” I exclaimed. “The worst-tempered bit of a sickly slip that
|
||
ever struggled into its teens. Happily, as Mr. Heathcliff conjectured,
|
||
he’ll not win twenty. I doubt whether he’ll see spring, indeed. And
|
||
small loss to his family whenever he drops off. And lucky it is for us
|
||
that his father took him: the kinder he was treated, the more tedious
|
||
and selfish he’d be. I’m glad you have no chance of having him for a
|
||
husband, Miss Catherine.”
|
||
|
||
My companion waxed serious at hearing this speech. To speak of his
|
||
death so regardlessly wounded her feelings.
|
||
|
||
“He’s younger than I,” she answered, after a protracted pause of
|
||
meditation, “and he ought to live the longest: he will—he must live as
|
||
long as I do. He’s as strong now as when he first came into the north;
|
||
I’m positive of that. It’s only a cold that ails him, the same as papa
|
||
has. You say papa will get better, and why shouldn’t he?”
|
||
|
||
“Well, well,” I cried, “after all, we needn’t trouble ourselves; for
|
||
listen, Miss,—and mind, I’ll keep my word,—if you attempt going to
|
||
Wuthering Heights again, with or without me, I shall inform Mr. Linton,
|
||
and, unless he allow it, the intimacy with your cousin must not be
|
||
revived.”
|
||
|
||
“It has been revived,” muttered Cathy, sulkily.
|
||
|
||
“Must not be continued, then,” I said.
|
||
|
||
“We’ll see,” was her reply, and she set off at a gallop, leaving me to
|
||
toil in the rear.
|
||
|
||
We both reached home before our dinner-time; my master supposed we had
|
||
been wandering through the park, and therefore he demanded no
|
||
explanation of our absence. As soon as I entered I hastened to change
|
||
my soaked shoes and stockings; but sitting such a while at the Heights
|
||
had done the mischief. On the succeeding morning I was laid up, and
|
||
during three weeks I remained incapacitated for attending to my duties:
|
||
a calamity never experienced prior to that period, and never, I am
|
||
thankful to say, since.
|
||
|
||
My little mistress behaved like an angel in coming to wait on me, and
|
||
cheer my solitude; the confinement brought me exceedingly low. It is
|
||
wearisome, to a stirring active body: but few have slighter reasons for
|
||
complaint than I had. The moment Catherine left Mr. Linton’s room she
|
||
appeared at my bedside. Her day was divided between us; no amusement
|
||
usurped a minute: she neglected her meals, her studies, and her play;
|
||
and she was the fondest nurse that ever watched. She must have had a
|
||
warm heart, when she loved her father so, to give so much to me. I said
|
||
her days were divided between us; but the master retired early, and I
|
||
generally needed nothing after six o’clock, thus the evening was her
|
||
own. Poor thing! I never considered what she did with herself after
|
||
tea. And though frequently, when she looked in to bid me good-night, I
|
||
remarked a fresh colour in her cheeks and a pinkness over her slender
|
||
fingers, instead of fancying the hue borrowed from a cold ride across
|
||
the moors, I laid it to the charge of a hot fire in the library.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXIV
|
||
|
||
|
||
At the close of three weeks I was able to quit my chamber and move
|
||
about the house. And on the first occasion of my sitting up in the
|
||
evening I asked Catherine to read to me, because my eyes were weak. We
|
||
were in the library, the master having gone to bed: she consented,
|
||
rather unwillingly, I fancied; and imagining my sort of books did not
|
||
suit her, I bid her please herself in the choice of what she perused.
|
||
She selected one of her own favourites, and got forward steadily about
|
||
an hour; then came frequent questions.
|
||
|
||
“Ellen, are not you tired? Hadn’t you better lie down now? You’ll be
|
||
sick, keeping up so long, Ellen.”
|
||
|
||
“No, no, dear, I’m not tired,” I returned, continually.
|
||
|
||
Perceiving me immovable, she essayed another method of showing her
|
||
disrelish for her occupation. It changed to yawning, and stretching,
|
||
and—
|
||
|
||
“Ellen, I’m tired.”
|
||
|
||
“Give over then and talk,” I answered.
|
||
|
||
That was worse: she fretted and sighed, and looked at her watch till
|
||
eight, and finally went to her room, completely overdone with sleep;
|
||
judging by her peevish, heavy look, and the constant rubbing she
|
||
inflicted on her eyes. The following night she seemed more impatient
|
||
still; and on the third from recovering my company she complained of a
|
||
headache, and left me. I thought her conduct odd; and having remained
|
||
alone a long while, I resolved on going and inquiring whether she were
|
||
better, and asking her to come and lie on the sofa, instead of upstairs
|
||
in the dark. No Catherine could I discover upstairs, and none below.
|
||
The servants affirmed they had not seen her. I listened at Mr. Edgar’s
|
||
door; all was silence. I returned to her apartment, extinguished my
|
||
candle, and seated myself in the window.
|
||
|
||
The moon shone bright; a sprinkling of snow covered the ground, and I
|
||
reflected that she might, possibly, have taken it into her head to walk
|
||
about the garden, for refreshment. I did detect a figure creeping along
|
||
the inner fence of the park; but it was not my young mistress: on its
|
||
emerging into the light, I recognised one of the grooms. He stood a
|
||
considerable period, viewing the carriage-road through the grounds;
|
||
then started off at a brisk pace, as if he had detected something, and
|
||
reappeared presently, leading Miss’s pony; and there she was, just
|
||
dismounted, and walking by its side. The man took his charge stealthily
|
||
across the grass towards the stable. Cathy entered by the
|
||
casement-window of the drawing-room, and glided noiselessly up to where
|
||
I awaited her. She put the door gently to, slipped off her snowy
|
||
shoes, untied her hat, and was proceeding, unconscious of my espionage,
|
||
to lay aside her mantle, when I suddenly rose and revealed myself. The
|
||
surprise petrified her an instant: she uttered an inarticulate
|
||
exclamation, and stood fixed.
|
||
|
||
“My dear Miss Catherine,” I began, too vividly impressed by her recent
|
||
kindness to break into a scold, “where have you been riding out at this
|
||
hour? And why should you try to deceive me by telling a tale? Where
|
||
have you been? Speak!”
|
||
|
||
“To the bottom of the park,” she stammered. “I didn’t tell a tale.”
|
||
|
||
“And nowhere else?” I demanded.
|
||
|
||
“No,” was the muttered reply.
|
||
|
||
“Oh, Catherine!” I cried, sorrowfully. “You know you have been doing
|
||
wrong, or you wouldn’t be driven to uttering an untruth to me. That
|
||
does grieve me. I’d rather be three months ill, than hear you frame a
|
||
deliberate lie.”
|
||
|
||
She sprang forward, and bursting into tears, threw her arms round my
|
||
neck.
|
||
|
||
“Well, Ellen, I’m so afraid of you being angry,” she said. “Promise not
|
||
to be angry, and you shall know the very truth: I hate to hide it.”
|
||
|
||
We sat down in the window-seat; I assured her I would not scold,
|
||
whatever her secret might be, and I guessed it, of course; so she
|
||
commenced—
|
||
|
||
“I’ve been to Wuthering Heights, Ellen, and I’ve never missed going a
|
||
day since you fell ill; except thrice before, and twice after you left
|
||
your room. I gave Michael books and pictures to prepare Minny every
|
||
evening, and to put her back in the stable: you mustn’t scold _him_
|
||
either, mind. I was at the Heights by half-past six, and generally
|
||
stayed till half-past eight, and then galloped home. It was not to
|
||
amuse myself that I went: I was often wretched all the time. Now and
|
||
then I was happy: once in a week perhaps. At first, I expected there
|
||
would be sad work persuading you to let me keep my word to Linton: for
|
||
I had engaged to call again next day, when we quitted him; but, as you
|
||
stayed upstairs on the morrow, I escaped that trouble. While Michael
|
||
was refastening the lock of the park door in the afternoon, I got
|
||
possession of the key, and told him how my cousin wished me to visit
|
||
him, because he was sick, and couldn’t come to the Grange; and how papa
|
||
would object to my going: and then I negotiated with him about the
|
||
pony. He is fond of reading, and he thinks of leaving soon to get
|
||
married; so he offered, if I would lend him books out of the library,
|
||
to do what I wished: but I preferred giving him my own, and that
|
||
satisfied him better.
|
||
|
||
“On my second visit Linton seemed in lively spirits; and Zillah (that
|
||
is their housekeeper) made us a clean room and a good fire, and told us
|
||
that, as Joseph was out at a prayer-meeting and Hareton Earnshaw was
|
||
off with his dogs—robbing our woods of pheasants, as I heard
|
||
afterwards—we might do what we liked. She brought me some warm wine and
|
||
gingerbread, and appeared exceedingly good-natured; and Linton sat in
|
||
the arm-chair, and I in the little rocking chair on the hearth-stone,
|
||
and we laughed and talked so merrily, and found so much to say: we
|
||
planned where we would go, and what we would do in summer. I needn’t
|
||
repeat that, because you would call it silly.
|
||
|
||
“One time, however, we were near quarrelling. He said the pleasantest
|
||
manner of spending a hot July day was lying from morning till evening
|
||
on a bank of heath in the middle of the moors, with the bees humming
|
||
dreamily about among the bloom, and the larks singing high up overhead,
|
||
and the blue sky and bright sun shining steadily and cloudlessly. That
|
||
was his most perfect idea of heaven’s happiness: mine was rocking in a
|
||
rustling green tree, with a west wind blowing, and bright white clouds
|
||
flitting rapidly above; and not only larks, but throstles, and
|
||
blackbirds, and linnets, and cuckoos pouring out music on every side,
|
||
and the moors seen at a distance, broken into cool dusky dells; but
|
||
close by great swells of long grass undulating in waves to the breeze;
|
||
and woods and sounding water, and the whole world awake and wild with
|
||
joy. He wanted all to lie in an ecstasy of peace; I wanted all to
|
||
sparkle and dance in a glorious jubilee. I said his heaven would be
|
||
only half alive; and he said mine would be drunk: I said I should fall
|
||
asleep in his; and he said he could not breathe in mine, and began to
|
||
grow very snappish. At last, we agreed to try both, as soon as the
|
||
right weather came; and then we kissed each other and were friends.
|
||
|
||
“After sitting still an hour, I looked at the great room with its
|
||
smooth uncarpeted floor, and thought how nice it would be to play in,
|
||
if we removed the table; and I asked Linton to call Zillah in to help
|
||
us, and we’d have a game at blindman’s-buff; she should try to catch
|
||
us: you used to, you know, Ellen. He wouldn’t: there was no pleasure in
|
||
it, he said; but he consented to play at ball with me. We found two in
|
||
a cupboard, among a heap of old toys, tops, and hoops, and battledores
|
||
and shuttlecocks. One was marked C., and the other H.; I wished to have
|
||
the C., because that stood for Catherine, and the H. might be for
|
||
Heathcliff, his name; but the bran came out of H., and Linton didn’t
|
||
like it. I beat him constantly; and he got cross again, and coughed,
|
||
and returned to his chair. That night, though, he easily recovered his
|
||
good humour: he was charmed with two or three pretty songs—_your_
|
||
songs, Ellen; and when I was obliged to go, he begged and entreated me
|
||
to come the following evening; and I promised. Minny and I went flying
|
||
home as light as air; and I dreamt of Wuthering Heights and my sweet,
|
||
darling cousin, till morning.
|
||
|
||
“On the morrow I was sad; partly because you were poorly, and partly
|
||
that I wished my father knew, and approved of my excursions: but it was
|
||
beautiful moonlight after tea; and, as I rode on, the gloom cleared. I
|
||
shall have another happy evening, I thought to myself; and what
|
||
delights me more, my pretty Linton will. I trotted up their garden, and
|
||
was turning round to the back, when that fellow Earnshaw met me, took
|
||
my bridle, and bid me go in by the front entrance. He patted Minny’s
|
||
neck, and said she was a bonny beast, and appeared as if he wanted me
|
||
to speak to him. I only told him to leave my horse alone, or else it
|
||
would kick him. He answered in his vulgar accent, ‘It wouldn’t do mitch
|
||
hurt if it did;’ and surveyed its legs with a smile. I was half
|
||
inclined to make it try; however, he moved off to open the door, and,
|
||
as he raised the latch, he looked up to the inscription above, and
|
||
said, with a stupid mixture of awkwardness and elation: ‘Miss
|
||
Catherine! I can read yon, now.’
|
||
|
||
“‘Wonderful,’ I exclaimed. ‘Pray let us hear you—you _are_ grown
|
||
clever!’
|
||
|
||
“He spelt, and drawled over by syllables, the name—‘Hareton Earnshaw.’
|
||
|
||
“‘And the figures?’ I cried, encouragingly, perceiving that he came to
|
||
a dead halt.
|
||
|
||
“‘I cannot tell them yet,’ he answered.
|
||
|
||
“‘Oh, you dunce!’ I said, laughing heartily at his failure.
|
||
|
||
“The fool stared, with a grin hovering about his lips, and a scowl
|
||
gathering over his eyes, as if uncertain whether he might not join in
|
||
my mirth: whether it were not pleasant familiarity, or what it really
|
||
was, contempt. I settled his doubts, by suddenly retrieving my gravity
|
||
and desiring him to walk away, for I came to see Linton, not him. He
|
||
reddened—I saw that by the moonlight—dropped his hand from the latch,
|
||
and skulked off, a picture of mortified vanity. He imagined himself to
|
||
be as accomplished as Linton, I suppose, because he could spell his own
|
||
name; and was marvellously discomfited that I didn’t think the same.”
|
||
|
||
“Stop, Miss Catherine, dear!” I interrupted. “I shall not scold, but I
|
||
don’t like your conduct there. If you had remembered that Hareton was
|
||
your cousin as much as Master Heathcliff, you would have felt how
|
||
improper it was to behave in that way. At least, it was praiseworthy
|
||
ambition for him to desire to be as accomplished as Linton; and
|
||
probably he did not learn merely to show off: you had made him ashamed
|
||
of his ignorance before, I have no doubt; and he wished to remedy it
|
||
and please you. To sneer at his imperfect attempt was very bad
|
||
breeding. Had _you_ been brought up in his circumstances, would you be
|
||
less rude? He was as quick and as intelligent a child as ever you were;
|
||
and I’m hurt that he should be despised now, because that base
|
||
Heathcliff has treated him so unjustly.”
|
||
|
||
“Well, Ellen, you won’t cry about it, will you?” she exclaimed,
|
||
surprised at my earnestness. “But wait, and you shall hear if he conned
|
||
his A B C to please me; and if it were worth while being civil to the
|
||
brute. I entered; Linton was lying on the settle, and half got up to
|
||
welcome me.
|
||
|
||
“‘I’m ill to-night, Catherine, love,’ he said; ‘and you must have all
|
||
the talk, and let me listen. Come, and sit by me. I was sure you
|
||
wouldn’t break your word, and I’ll make you promise again, before you
|
||
go.’
|
||
|
||
“I knew now that I mustn’t tease him, as he was ill; and I spoke softly
|
||
and put no questions, and avoided irritating him in any way. I had
|
||
brought some of my nicest books for him: he asked me to read a little
|
||
of one, and I was about to comply, when Earnshaw burst the door open:
|
||
having gathered venom with reflection. He advanced direct to us, seized
|
||
Linton by the arm, and swung him off the seat.
|
||
|
||
“‘Get to thy own room!’ he said, in a voice almost inarticulate with
|
||
passion; and his face looked swelled and furious. ‘Take her there if
|
||
she comes to see thee: thou shalln’t keep me out of this. Begone wi’ ye
|
||
both!’
|
||
|
||
“He swore at us, and left Linton no time to answer, nearly throwing him
|
||
into the kitchen; and he clenched his fist as I followed, seemingly
|
||
longing to knock me down. I was afraid for a moment, and I let one
|
||
volume fall; he kicked it after me, and shut us out. I heard a
|
||
malignant, crackly laugh by the fire, and turning, beheld that odious
|
||
Joseph standing rubbing his bony hands, and quivering.
|
||
|
||
“‘I wer sure he’d sarve ye out! He’s a grand lad! He’s getten t’ raight
|
||
sperrit in him! _He_ knaws—ay, he knaws, as weel as I do, who sud be t’
|
||
maister yonder—Ech, ech, ech! He made ye skift properly! Ech, ech,
|
||
ech!’
|
||
|
||
“‘Where must we go?’ I asked of my cousin, disregarding the old
|
||
wretch’s mockery.
|
||
|
||
“Linton was white and trembling. He was not pretty then, Ellen: oh, no!
|
||
he looked frightful; for his thin face and large eyes were wrought into
|
||
an expression of frantic, powerless fury. He grasped the handle of the
|
||
door, and shook it: it was fastened inside.
|
||
|
||
“‘If you don’t let me in, I’ll kill you!—If you don’t let me in, I’ll
|
||
kill you!’ he rather shrieked than said. ‘Devil! devil!—I’ll kill
|
||
you—I’ll kill you!’
|
||
|
||
“Joseph uttered his croaking laugh again.
|
||
|
||
“‘Thear, that’s t’ father!’ he cried. ‘That’s father! We’ve allas
|
||
summut o’ either side in us. Niver heed, Hareton, lad—dunnut be
|
||
’feard—he cannot get at thee!’
|
||
|
||
“I took hold of Linton’s hands, and tried to pull him away; but he
|
||
shrieked so shockingly that I dared not proceed. At last his cries were
|
||
choked by a dreadful fit of coughing; blood gushed from his mouth, and
|
||
he fell on the ground. I ran into the yard, sick with terror; and
|
||
called for Zillah, as loud as I could. She soon heard me: she was
|
||
milking the cows in a shed behind the barn, and hurrying from her work,
|
||
she inquired what there was to do? I hadn’t breath to explain; dragging
|
||
her in, I looked about for Linton. Earnshaw had come out to examine the
|
||
mischief he had caused, and he was then conveying the poor thing
|
||
upstairs. Zillah and I ascended after him; but he stopped me at the top
|
||
of the steps, and said I shouldn’t go in: I must go home. I exclaimed
|
||
that he had killed Linton, and I _would_ enter. Joseph locked the door,
|
||
and declared I should do ‘no sich stuff,’ and asked me whether I were
|
||
‘bahn to be as mad as him.’ I stood crying till the housekeeper
|
||
reappeared. She affirmed he would be better in a bit, but he couldn’t
|
||
do with that shrieking and din; and she took me, and nearly carried me
|
||
into the house.
|
||
|
||
“Ellen, I was ready to tear my hair off my head! I sobbed and wept so
|
||
that my eyes were almost blind; and the ruffian you have such sympathy
|
||
with stood opposite: presuming every now and then to bid me ‘wisht,’
|
||
and denying that it was his fault; and, finally, frightened by my
|
||
assertions that I would tell papa, and that he should be put in prison
|
||
and hanged, he commenced blubbering himself, and hurried out to hide
|
||
his cowardly agitation. Still, I was not rid of him: when at length
|
||
they compelled me to depart, and I had got some hundred yards off the
|
||
premises, he suddenly issued from the shadow of the road-side, and
|
||
checked Minny and took hold of me.
|
||
|
||
“‘Miss Catherine, I’m ill grieved,’ he began, ‘but it’s rayther too
|
||
bad—’
|
||
|
||
“I gave him a cut with my whip, thinking perhaps he would murder me. He
|
||
let go, thundering one of his horrid curses, and I galloped home more
|
||
than half out of my senses.
|
||
|
||
“I didn’t bid you good-night that evening, and I didn’t go to Wuthering
|
||
Heights the next: I wished to go exceedingly; but I was strangely
|
||
excited, and dreaded to hear that Linton was dead, sometimes; and
|
||
sometimes shuddered at the thought of encountering Hareton. On the
|
||
third day I took courage: at least, I couldn’t bear longer suspense,
|
||
and stole off once more. I went at five o’clock, and walked; fancying I
|
||
might manage to creep into the house, and up to Linton’s room,
|
||
unobserved. However, the dogs gave notice of my approach. Zillah
|
||
received me, and saying ‘the lad was mending nicely,’ showed me into a
|
||
small, tidy, carpeted apartment, where, to my inexpressible joy, I
|
||
beheld Linton laid on a little sofa, reading one of my books. But he
|
||
would neither speak to me nor look at me, through a whole hour, Ellen:
|
||
he has such an unhappy temper. And what quite confounded me, when he
|
||
did open his mouth, it was to utter the falsehood that I had occasioned
|
||
the uproar, and Hareton was not to blame! Unable to reply, except
|
||
passionately, I got up and walked from the room. He sent after me a
|
||
faint ‘Catherine!’ He did not reckon on being answered so: but I
|
||
wouldn’t turn back; and the morrow was the second day on which I stayed
|
||
at home, nearly determined to visit him no more. But it was so
|
||
miserable going to bed and getting up, and never hearing anything about
|
||
him, that my resolution melted into air before it was properly formed.
|
||
It _had_ appeared wrong to take the journey once; now it seemed wrong
|
||
to refrain. Michael came to ask if he must saddle Minny; I said ‘Yes,’
|
||
and considered myself doing a duty as she bore me over the hills. I was
|
||
forced to pass the front windows to get to the court: it was no use
|
||
trying to conceal my presence.
|
||
|
||
“‘Young master is in the house,’ said Zillah, as she saw me making for
|
||
the parlour. I went in; Earnshaw was there also, but he quitted the
|
||
room directly. Linton sat in the great arm-chair half asleep; walking
|
||
up to the fire, I began in a serious tone, partly meaning it to be
|
||
true—
|
||
|
||
“‘As you don’t like me, Linton, and as you think I come on purpose to
|
||
hurt you, and pretend that I do so every time, this is our last
|
||
meeting: let us say good-bye; and tell Mr. Heathcliff that you have no
|
||
wish to see me, and that he mustn’t invent any more falsehoods on the
|
||
subject.’
|
||
|
||
“‘Sit down and take your hat off, Catherine,’ he answered. ‘You are so
|
||
much happier than I am, you ought to be better. Papa talks enough of my
|
||
defects, and shows enough scorn of me, to make it natural I should
|
||
doubt myself. I doubt whether I am not altogether as worthless as he
|
||
calls me, frequently; and then I feel so cross and bitter, I hate
|
||
everybody! I _am_ worthless, and bad in temper, and bad in spirit,
|
||
almost always; and, if you choose, you _may_ say good-bye: you’ll get
|
||
rid of an annoyance. Only, Catherine, do me this justice: believe that
|
||
if I might be as sweet, and as kind, and as good as you are, I would
|
||
be; as willingly, and more so, than as happy and as healthy. And
|
||
believe that your kindness has made me love you deeper than if I
|
||
deserved your love: and though I couldn’t, and cannot help showing my
|
||
nature to you, I regret it and repent it; and shall regret and repent
|
||
it till I die!’
|
||
|
||
“I felt he spoke the truth; and I felt I must forgive him: and, though
|
||
we should quarrel the next moment, I must forgive him again. We were
|
||
reconciled; but we cried, both of us, the whole time I stayed: not
|
||
entirely for sorrow; yet I _was_ sorry Linton had that distorted
|
||
nature. He’ll never let his friends be at ease, and he’ll never be at
|
||
ease himself! I have always gone to his little parlour, since that
|
||
night; because his father returned the day after.
|
||
|
||
“About three times, I think, we have been merry and hopeful, as we were
|
||
the first evening; the rest of my visits were dreary and troubled: now
|
||
with his selfishness and spite, and now with his sufferings: but I’ve
|
||
learned to endure the former with nearly as little resentment as the
|
||
latter. Mr. Heathcliff purposely avoids me: I have hardly seen him at
|
||
all. Last Sunday, indeed, coming earlier than usual, I heard him
|
||
abusing poor Linton cruelly for his conduct of the night before. I
|
||
can’t tell how he knew of it, unless he listened. Linton had certainly
|
||
behaved provokingly: however, it was the business of nobody but me, and
|
||
I interrupted Mr. Heathcliff’s lecture by entering and telling him so.
|
||
He burst into a laugh, and went away, saying he was glad I took that
|
||
view of the matter. Since then, I’ve told Linton he must whisper his
|
||
bitter things. Now, Ellen, you have heard all. I can’t be prevented
|
||
from going to Wuthering Heights, except by inflicting misery on two
|
||
people; whereas, if you’ll only not tell papa, my going need disturb
|
||
the tranquillity of none. You’ll not tell, will you? It will be very
|
||
heartless, if you do.”
|
||
|
||
“I’ll make up my mind on that point by to-morrow, Miss Catherine,” I
|
||
replied. “It requires some study; and so I’ll leave you to your rest,
|
||
and go think it over.”
|
||
|
||
I thought it over aloud, in my master’s presence; walking straight from
|
||
her room to his, and relating the whole story: with the exception of
|
||
her conversations with her cousin, and any mention of Hareton. Mr.
|
||
Linton was alarmed and distressed, more than he would acknowledge to
|
||
me. In the morning, Catherine learnt my betrayal of her confidence, and
|
||
she learnt also that her secret visits were to end. In vain she wept
|
||
and writhed against the interdict, and implored her father to have pity
|
||
on Linton: all she got to comfort her was a promise that he would write
|
||
and give him leave to come to the Grange when he pleased; but
|
||
explaining that he must no longer expect to see Catherine at Wuthering
|
||
Heights. Perhaps, had he been aware of his nephew’s disposition and
|
||
state of health, he would have seen fit to withhold even that slight
|
||
consolation.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXV
|
||
|
||
|
||
“These things happened last winter, sir,” said Mrs. Dean; “hardly more
|
||
than a year ago. Last winter, I did not think, at another twelve
|
||
months’ end, I should be amusing a stranger to the family with relating
|
||
them! Yet, who knows how long you’ll be a stranger? You’re too young to
|
||
rest always contented, living by yourself; and I some way fancy no one
|
||
could see Catherine Linton and not love her. You smile; but why do you
|
||
look so lively and interested when I talk about her? and why have you
|
||
asked me to hang her picture over your fireplace? and why—?”
|
||
|
||
“Stop, my good friend!” I cried. “It may be very possible that _I_
|
||
should love her; but would she love me? I doubt it too much to venture
|
||
my tranquillity by running into temptation: and then my home is not
|
||
here. I’m of the busy world, and to its arms I must return. Go on. Was
|
||
Catherine obedient to her father’s commands?”
|
||
|
||
“She was,” continued the housekeeper. “Her affection for him was still
|
||
the chief sentiment in her heart; and he spoke without anger: he spoke
|
||
in the deep tenderness of one about to leave his treasure amid perils
|
||
and foes, where his remembered words would be the only aid that he
|
||
could bequeath to guide her. He said to me, a few days afterwards, ‘I
|
||
wish my nephew would write, Ellen, or call. Tell me, sincerely, what
|
||
you think of him: is he changed for the better, or is there a prospect
|
||
of improvement, as he grows a man?’
|
||
|
||
“‘He’s very delicate, sir,’ I replied; ‘and scarcely likely to reach
|
||
manhood: but this I can say, he does not resemble his father; and if
|
||
Miss Catherine had the misfortune to marry him, he would not be beyond
|
||
her control: unless she were extremely and foolishly indulgent.
|
||
However, master, you’ll have plenty of time to get acquainted with him
|
||
and see whether he would suit her: it wants four years and more to his
|
||
being of age.’”
|
||
|
||
Edgar sighed; and, walking to the window, looked out towards Gimmerton
|
||
Kirk. It was a misty afternoon, but the February sun shone dimly, and
|
||
we could just distinguish the two fir-trees in the yard, and the
|
||
sparely-scattered gravestones.
|
||
|
||
“I’ve prayed often,” he half soliloquised, “for the approach of what is
|
||
coming; and now I begin to shrink, and fear it. I thought the memory of
|
||
the hour I came down that glen a bridegroom would be less sweet than
|
||
the anticipation that I was soon, in a few months, or, possibly, weeks,
|
||
to be carried up, and laid in its lonely hollow! Ellen, I’ve been very
|
||
happy with my little Cathy: through winter nights and summer days she
|
||
was a living hope at my side. But I’ve been as happy musing by myself
|
||
among those stones, under that old church: lying, through the long June
|
||
evenings, on the green mound of her mother’s grave, and
|
||
wishing—yearning for the time when I might lie beneath it. What can I
|
||
do for Cathy? How must I quit her? I’d not care one moment for Linton
|
||
being Heathcliff’s son; nor for his taking her from me, if he could
|
||
console her for my loss. I’d not care that Heathcliff gained his ends,
|
||
and triumphed in robbing me of my last blessing! But should Linton be
|
||
unworthy—only a feeble tool to his father—I cannot abandon her to him!
|
||
And, hard though it be to crush her buoyant spirit, I must persevere in
|
||
making her sad while I live, and leaving her solitary when I die.
|
||
Darling! I’d rather resign her to God, and lay her in the earth before
|
||
me.”
|
||
|
||
“Resign her to God as it is, sir,” I answered, “and if we should lose
|
||
you—which may He forbid—under His providence, I’ll stand her friend and
|
||
counsellor to the last. Miss Catherine is a good girl: I don’t fear
|
||
that she will go wilfully wrong; and people who do their duty are
|
||
always finally rewarded.”
|
||
|
||
Spring advanced; yet my master gathered no real strength, though he
|
||
resumed his walks in the grounds with his daughter. To her
|
||
inexperienced notions, this itself was a sign of convalescence; and
|
||
then his cheek was often flushed, and his eyes were bright; she felt
|
||
sure of his recovering. On her seventeenth birthday, he did not visit
|
||
the churchyard: it was raining, and I observed—
|
||
|
||
“You’ll surely not go out to-night, sir?”
|
||
|
||
He answered,—“No, I’ll defer it this year a little longer.”
|
||
|
||
He wrote again to Linton, expressing his great desire to see him; and,
|
||
had the invalid been presentable, I’ve no doubt his father would have
|
||
permitted him to come. As it was, being instructed, he returned an
|
||
answer, intimating that Mr. Heathcliff objected to his calling at the
|
||
Grange; but his uncle’s kind remembrance delighted him, and he hoped to
|
||
meet him sometimes in his rambles, and personally to petition that his
|
||
cousin and he might not remain long so utterly divided.
|
||
|
||
That part of his letter was simple, and probably his own. Heathcliff
|
||
knew he could plead eloquently for Catherine’s company, then.
|
||
|
||
“I do not ask,” he said, “that she may visit here; but am I never to
|
||
see her, because my father forbids me to go to her home, and you forbid
|
||
her to come to mine? Do, now and then, ride with her towards the
|
||
Heights; and let us exchange a few words, in your presence! We have
|
||
done nothing to deserve this separation; and you are not angry with me:
|
||
you have no reason to dislike me, you allow, yourself. Dear uncle! send
|
||
me a kind note to-morrow, and leave to join you anywhere you please,
|
||
except at Thrushcross Grange. I believe an interview would convince you
|
||
that my father’s character is not mine: he affirms I am more your
|
||
nephew than his son; and though I have faults which render me unworthy
|
||
of Catherine, she has excused them, and for her sake, you should also.
|
||
You inquire after my health—it is better; but while I remain cut off
|
||
from all hope, and doomed to solitude, or the society of those who
|
||
never did and never will like me, how can I be cheerful and well?”
|
||
|
||
Edgar, though he felt for the boy, could not consent to grant his
|
||
request; because he could not accompany Catherine. He said, in summer,
|
||
perhaps, they might meet: meantime, he wished him to continue writing
|
||
at intervals, and engaged to give him what advice and comfort he was
|
||
able by letter; being well aware of his hard position in his family.
|
||
Linton complied; and had he been unrestrained, would probably have
|
||
spoiled all by filling his epistles with complaints and lamentations:
|
||
but his father kept a sharp watch over him; and, of course, insisted on
|
||
every line that my master sent being shown; so, instead of penning his
|
||
peculiar personal sufferings and distresses, the themes constantly
|
||
uppermost in his thoughts, he harped on the cruel obligation of being
|
||
held asunder from his friend and love; and gently intimated that Mr.
|
||
Linton must allow an interview soon, or he should fear he was purposely
|
||
deceiving him with empty promises.
|
||
|
||
Cathy was a powerful ally at home; and between them they at length
|
||
persuaded my master to acquiesce in their having a ride or a walk
|
||
together about once a week, under my guardianship, and on the moors
|
||
nearest the Grange: for June found him still declining. Though he had
|
||
set aside yearly a portion of his income for my young lady’s fortune,
|
||
he had a natural desire that she might retain—or at least return in a
|
||
short time to—the house of her ancestors; and he considered her only
|
||
prospect of doing that was by a union with his heir; he had no idea
|
||
that the latter was failing almost as fast as himself; nor had any one,
|
||
I believe: no doctor visited the Heights, and no one saw Master
|
||
Heathcliff to make report of his condition among us. I, for my part,
|
||
began to fancy my forebodings were false, and that he must be actually
|
||
rallying, when he mentioned riding and walking on the moors, and seemed
|
||
so earnest in pursuing his object. I could not picture a father
|
||
treating a dying child as tyrannically and wickedly as I afterwards
|
||
learned Heathcliff had treated him, to compel this apparent eagerness:
|
||
his efforts redoubling the more imminently his avaricious and unfeeling
|
||
plans were threatened with defeat by death.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXVI
|
||
|
||
|
||
Summer was already past its prime, when Edgar reluctantly yielded his
|
||
assent to their entreaties, and Catherine and I set out on our first
|
||
ride to join her cousin. It was a close, sultry day: devoid of
|
||
sunshine, but with a sky too dappled and hazy to threaten rain: and our
|
||
place of meeting had been fixed at the guide-stone, by the cross-roads.
|
||
On arriving there, however, a little herd-boy, despatched as a
|
||
messenger, told us that,—“Maister Linton wer just o’ this side th’
|
||
Heights: and he’d be mitch obleeged to us to gang on a bit further.”
|
||
|
||
“Then Master Linton has forgot the first injunction of his uncle,” I
|
||
observed: “he bid us keep on the Grange land, and here we are off at
|
||
once.”
|
||
|
||
“Well, we’ll turn our horses’ heads round when we reach him,” answered
|
||
my companion; “our excursion shall lie towards home.”
|
||
|
||
But when we reached him, and that was scarcely a quarter of a mile from
|
||
his own door, we found he had no horse; and we were forced to dismount,
|
||
and leave ours to graze. He lay on the heath, awaiting our approach,
|
||
and did not rise till we came within a few yards. Then he walked so
|
||
feebly, and looked so pale, that I immediately exclaimed,—“Why, Master
|
||
Heathcliff, you are not fit for enjoying a ramble this morning. How ill
|
||
you do look!”
|
||
|
||
Catherine surveyed him with grief and astonishment: she changed the
|
||
ejaculation of joy on her lips to one of alarm; and the congratulation
|
||
on their long-postponed meeting to an anxious inquiry, whether he were
|
||
worse than usual?
|
||
|
||
“No—better—better!” he panted, trembling, and retaining her hand as if
|
||
he needed its support, while his large blue eyes wandered timidly over
|
||
her; the hollowness round them transforming to haggard wildness the
|
||
languid expression they once possessed.
|
||
|
||
“But you have been worse,” persisted his cousin; “worse than when I saw
|
||
you last; you are thinner, and—”
|
||
|
||
“I’m tired,” he interrupted, hurriedly. “It is too hot for walking, let
|
||
us rest here. And, in the morning, I often feel sick—papa says I grow
|
||
so fast.”
|
||
|
||
Badly satisfied, Cathy sat down, and he reclined beside her.
|
||
|
||
“This is something like your paradise,” said she, making an effort at
|
||
cheerfulness. “You recollect the two days we agreed to spend in the
|
||
place and way each thought pleasantest? This is nearly yours, only
|
||
there are clouds; but then they are so soft and mellow: it is nicer
|
||
than sunshine. Next week, if you can, we’ll ride down to the Grange
|
||
Park, and try mine.”
|
||
|
||
Linton did not appear to remember what she talked of; and he had
|
||
evidently great difficulty in sustaining any kind of conversation. His
|
||
lack of interest in the subjects she started, and his equal incapacity
|
||
to contribute to her entertainment, were so obvious that she could not
|
||
conceal her disappointment. An indefinite alteration had come over his
|
||
whole person and manner. The pettishness that might be caressed into
|
||
fondness, had yielded to a listless apathy; there was less of the
|
||
peevish temper of a child which frets and teases on purpose to be
|
||
soothed, and more of the self-absorbed moroseness of a confirmed
|
||
invalid, repelling consolation, and ready to regard the good-humoured
|
||
mirth of others as an insult. Catherine perceived, as well as I did,
|
||
that he held it rather a punishment, than a gratification, to endure
|
||
our company; and she made no scruple of proposing, presently, to
|
||
depart. That proposal, unexpectedly, roused Linton from his lethargy,
|
||
and threw him into a strange state of agitation. He glanced fearfully
|
||
towards the Heights, begging she would remain another half-hour, at
|
||
least.
|
||
|
||
“But I think,” said Cathy, “you’d be more comfortable at home than
|
||
sitting here; and I cannot amuse you to-day, I see, by my tales, and
|
||
songs, and chatter: you have grown wiser than I, in these six months;
|
||
you have little taste for my diversions now: or else, if I could amuse
|
||
you, I’d willingly stay.”
|
||
|
||
“Stay to rest yourself,” he replied. “And, Catherine, don’t think or
|
||
say that I’m _very_ unwell: it is the heavy weather and heat that make
|
||
me dull; and I walked about, before you came, a great deal for me. Tell
|
||
uncle I’m in tolerable health, will you?”
|
||
|
||
“I’ll tell him that _you_ say so, Linton. I couldn’t affirm that you
|
||
are,” observed my young lady, wondering at his pertinacious assertion
|
||
of what was evidently an untruth.
|
||
|
||
“And be here again next Thursday,” continued he, shunning her puzzled
|
||
gaze. “And give him my thanks for permitting you to come—my best
|
||
thanks, Catherine. And—and, if you _did_ meet my father, and he asked
|
||
you about me, don’t lead him to suppose that I’ve been extremely silent
|
||
and stupid: don’t look sad and downcast, as you _are_ doing—he’ll be
|
||
angry.”
|
||
|
||
“I care nothing for his anger,” exclaimed Cathy, imagining she would be
|
||
its object.
|
||
|
||
“But I do,” said her cousin, shuddering. “_Don’t_ provoke him against
|
||
me, Catherine, for he is very hard.”
|
||
|
||
“Is he severe to you, Master Heathcliff?” I inquired. “Has he grown
|
||
weary of indulgence, and passed from passive to active hatred?”
|
||
|
||
Linton looked at me, but did not answer; and, after keeping her seat by
|
||
his side another ten minutes, during which his head fell drowsily on
|
||
his breast, and he uttered nothing except suppressed moans of
|
||
exhaustion or pain, Cathy began to seek solace in looking for
|
||
bilberries, and sharing the produce of her researches with me: she did
|
||
not offer them to him, for she saw further notice would only weary and
|
||
annoy.
|
||
|
||
“Is it half-an-hour now, Ellen?” she whispered in my ear, at last. “I
|
||
can’t tell why we should stay. He’s asleep, and papa will be wanting us
|
||
back.”
|
||
|
||
“Well, we must not leave him asleep,” I answered; “wait till he wakes,
|
||
and be patient. You were mighty eager to set off, but your longing to
|
||
see poor Linton has soon evaporated!”
|
||
|
||
“Why did _he_ wish to see me?” returned Catherine. “In his crossest
|
||
humours, formerly, I liked him better than I do in his present curious
|
||
mood. It’s just as if it were a task he was compelled to perform—this
|
||
interview—for fear his father should scold him. But I’m hardly going to
|
||
come to give Mr. Heathcliff pleasure; whatever reason he may have for
|
||
ordering Linton to undergo this penance. And, though I’m glad he’s
|
||
better in health, I’m sorry he’s so much less pleasant, and so much
|
||
less affectionate to me.”
|
||
|
||
“You think _he is_ better in health, then?” I said.
|
||
|
||
“Yes,” she answered; “because he always made such a great deal of his
|
||
sufferings, you know. He is not tolerably well, as he told me to tell
|
||
papa; but he’s better, very likely.”
|
||
|
||
“There you differ with me, Miss Cathy,” I remarked; “I should
|
||
conjecture him to be far worse.”
|
||
|
||
Linton here started from his slumber in bewildered terror, and asked if
|
||
any one had called his name.
|
||
|
||
“No,” said Catherine; “unless in dreams. I cannot conceive how you
|
||
manage to doze out of doors, in the morning.”
|
||
|
||
“I thought I heard my father,” he gasped, glancing up to the frowning
|
||
nab above us. “You are sure nobody spoke?”
|
||
|
||
“Quite sure,” replied his cousin. “Only Ellen and I were disputing
|
||
concerning your health. Are you truly stronger, Linton, than when we
|
||
separated in winter? If you be, I’m certain one thing is not
|
||
stronger—your regard for me: speak,—are you?”
|
||
|
||
The tears gushed from Linton’s eyes as he answered, “Yes, yes, I am!”
|
||
And, still under the spell of the imaginary voice, his gaze wandered up
|
||
and down to detect its owner.
|
||
|
||
Cathy rose. “For to-day we must part,” she said. “And I won’t conceal
|
||
that I have been sadly disappointed with our meeting; though I’ll
|
||
mention it to nobody but you: not that I stand in awe of Mr.
|
||
Heathcliff.”
|
||
|
||
“Hush,” murmured Linton; “for God’s sake, hush! He’s coming.” And he
|
||
clung to Catherine’s arm, striving to detain her; but at that
|
||
announcement she hastily disengaged herself, and whistled to Minny, who
|
||
obeyed her like a dog.
|
||
|
||
“I’ll be here next Thursday,” she cried, springing to the saddle.
|
||
“Good-bye. Quick, Ellen!”
|
||
|
||
And so we left him, scarcely conscious of our departure, so absorbed
|
||
was he in anticipating his father’s approach.
|
||
|
||
Before we reached home, Catherine’s displeasure softened into a
|
||
perplexed sensation of pity and regret, largely blended with vague,
|
||
uneasy doubts about Linton’s actual circumstances, physical and social:
|
||
in which I partook, though I counselled her not to say much; for a
|
||
second journey would make us better judges. My master requested an
|
||
account of our ongoings. His nephew’s offering of thanks was duly
|
||
delivered, Miss Cathy gently touching on the rest: I also threw little
|
||
light on his inquiries, for I hardly knew what to hide and what to
|
||
reveal.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXVII
|
||
|
||
|
||
Seven days glided away, every one marking its course by the henceforth
|
||
rapid alteration of Edgar Linton’s state. The havoc that months had
|
||
previously wrought was now emulated by the inroads of hours. Catherine
|
||
we would fain have deluded yet; but her own quick spirit refused to
|
||
delude her: it divined in secret, and brooded on the dreadful
|
||
probability, gradually ripening into certainty. She had not the heart
|
||
to mention her ride, when Thursday came round; I mentioned it for her,
|
||
and obtained permission to order her out of doors: for the library,
|
||
where her father stopped a short time daily—the brief period he could
|
||
bear to sit up—and his chamber, had become her whole world. She grudged
|
||
each moment that did not find her bending over his pillow, or seated by
|
||
his side. Her countenance grew wan with watching and sorrow, and my
|
||
master gladly dismissed her to what he flattered himself would be a
|
||
happy change of scene and society; drawing comfort from the hope that
|
||
she would not now be left entirely alone after his death.
|
||
|
||
He had a fixed idea, I guessed by several observations he let fall,
|
||
that, as his nephew resembled him in person, he would resemble him in
|
||
mind; for Linton’s letters bore few or no indications of his defective
|
||
character. And I, through pardonable weakness, refrained from
|
||
correcting the error; asking myself what good there would be in
|
||
disturbing his last moments with information that he had neither power
|
||
nor opportunity to turn to account.
|
||
|
||
We deferred our excursion till the afternoon; a golden afternoon of
|
||
August: every breath from the hills so full of life, that it seemed
|
||
whoever respired it, though dying, might revive. Catherine’s face was
|
||
just like the landscape—shadows and sunshine flitting over it in rapid
|
||
succession; but the shadows rested longer, and the sunshine was more
|
||
transient; and her poor little heart reproached itself for even that
|
||
passing forgetfulness of its cares.
|
||
|
||
We discerned Linton watching at the same spot he had selected before.
|
||
My young mistress alighted, and told me that, as she was resolved to
|
||
stay a very little while, I had better hold the pony and remain on
|
||
horseback; but I dissented: I wouldn’t risk losing sight of the charge
|
||
committed to me a minute; so we climbed the slope of heath together.
|
||
Master Heathcliff received us with greater animation on this occasion:
|
||
not the animation of high spirits though, nor yet of joy; it looked
|
||
more like fear.
|
||
|
||
“It is late!” he said, speaking short and with difficulty. “Is not your
|
||
father very ill? I thought you wouldn’t come.”
|
||
|
||
“_Why_ won’t you be candid?” cried Catherine, swallowing her greeting.
|
||
“Why cannot you say at once you don’t want me? It is strange, Linton,
|
||
that for the second time you have brought me here on purpose,
|
||
apparently to distress us both, and for no reason besides!”
|
||
|
||
Linton shivered, and glanced at her, half supplicating, half ashamed;
|
||
but his cousin’s patience was not sufficient to endure this enigmatical
|
||
behaviour.
|
||
|
||
“My father _is_ very ill,” she said; “and why am I called from his
|
||
bedside? Why didn’t you send to absolve me from my promise, when you
|
||
wished I wouldn’t keep it? Come! I desire an explanation: playing and
|
||
trifling are completely banished out of my mind; and I can’t dance
|
||
attendance on your affectations now!”
|
||
|
||
“My affectations!” he murmured; “what are they? For heaven’s sake,
|
||
Catherine, don’t look so angry! Despise me as much as you please; I am
|
||
a worthless, cowardly wretch: I can’t be scorned enough; but I’m too
|
||
mean for your anger. Hate my father, and spare me for contempt.”
|
||
|
||
“Nonsense!” cried Catherine in a passion. “Foolish, silly boy! And
|
||
there! he trembles, as if I were really going to touch him! You needn’t
|
||
bespeak contempt, Linton: anybody will have it spontaneously at your
|
||
service. Get off! I shall return home: it is folly dragging you from
|
||
the hearth-stone, and pretending—what do we pretend? Let go my frock!
|
||
If I pitied you for crying and looking so very frightened, you should
|
||
spurn such pity. Ellen, tell him how disgraceful this conduct is. Rise,
|
||
and don’t degrade yourself into an abject reptile—_don’t_!”
|
||
|
||
With streaming face and an expression of agony, Linton had thrown his
|
||
nerveless frame along the ground: he seemed convulsed with exquisite
|
||
terror.
|
||
|
||
“Oh!” he sobbed, “I cannot bear it! Catherine, Catherine, I’m a
|
||
traitor, too, and I dare not tell you! But leave me, and I shall be
|
||
killed! _Dear_ Catherine, my life is in your hands: and you have said
|
||
you loved me, and if you did, it wouldn’t harm you. You’ll not go,
|
||
then? kind, sweet, good Catherine! And perhaps you _will_ consent—and
|
||
he’ll let me die with you!”
|
||
|
||
My young lady, on witnessing his intense anguish, stooped to raise him.
|
||
The old feeling of indulgent tenderness overcame her vexation, and she
|
||
grew thoroughly moved and alarmed.
|
||
|
||
“Consent to what?” she asked. “To stay! tell me the meaning of this
|
||
strange talk, and I will. You contradict your own words, and distract
|
||
me! Be calm and frank, and confess at once all that weighs on your
|
||
heart. You wouldn’t injure me, Linton, would you? You wouldn’t let any
|
||
enemy hurt me, if you could prevent it? I’ll believe you are a coward,
|
||
for yourself, but not a cowardly betrayer of your best friend.”
|
||
|
||
“But my father threatened me,” gasped the boy, clasping his attenuated
|
||
fingers, “and I dread him—I dread him! I _dare_ not tell!”
|
||
|
||
“Oh, well!” said Catherine, with scornful compassion, “keep your
|
||
secret: _I’m_ no coward. Save yourself: I’m not afraid!”
|
||
|
||
Her magnanimity provoked his tears: he wept wildly, kissing her
|
||
supporting hands, and yet could not summon courage to speak out. I was
|
||
cogitating what the mystery might be, and determined Catherine should
|
||
never suffer to benefit him or any one else, by my good will; when,
|
||
hearing a rustle among the ling, I looked up and saw Mr. Heathcliff
|
||
almost close upon us, descending the Heights. He didn’t cast a glance
|
||
towards my companions, though they were sufficiently near for Linton’s
|
||
sobs to be audible; but hailing me in the almost hearty tone he assumed
|
||
to none besides, and the sincerity of which I couldn’t avoid doubting,
|
||
he said—
|
||
|
||
“It is something to see you so near to my house, Nelly. How are you at
|
||
the Grange? Let us hear. The rumour goes,” he added, in a lower tone,
|
||
“that Edgar Linton is on his death-bed: perhaps they exaggerate his
|
||
illness?”
|
||
|
||
“No; my master is dying,” I replied: “it is true enough. A sad thing it
|
||
will be for us all, but a blessing for him!”
|
||
|
||
“How long will he last, do you think?” he asked.
|
||
|
||
“I don’t know,” I said.
|
||
|
||
“Because,” he continued, looking at the two young people, who were
|
||
fixed under his eye—Linton appeared as if he could not venture to stir
|
||
or raise his head, and Catherine could not move, on his
|
||
account—“because that lad yonder seems determined to beat me; and I’d
|
||
thank his uncle to be quick, and go before him! Hallo! has the whelp
|
||
been playing that game long? I _did_ give him some lessons about
|
||
snivelling. Is he pretty lively with Miss Linton generally?”
|
||
|
||
“Lively? no—he has shown the greatest distress,” I answered. “To see
|
||
him, I should say, that instead of rambling with his sweetheart on the
|
||
hills, he ought to be in bed, under the hands of a doctor.”
|
||
|
||
“He shall be, in a day or two,” muttered Heathcliff. “But first—get up,
|
||
Linton! Get up!” he shouted. “Don’t grovel on the ground there: up,
|
||
this moment!”
|
||
|
||
Linton had sunk prostrate again in another paroxysm of helpless fear,
|
||
caused by his father’s glance towards him, I suppose: there was nothing
|
||
else to produce such humiliation. He made several efforts to obey, but
|
||
his little strength was annihilated for the time, and he fell back
|
||
again with a moan. Mr. Heathcliff advanced, and lifted him to lean
|
||
against a ridge of turf.
|
||
|
||
“Now,” said he, with curbed ferocity, “I’m getting angry—and if you
|
||
don’t command that paltry spirit of yours—_damn_ you! get up directly!”
|
||
|
||
“I will, father,” he panted. “Only, let me alone, or I shall faint.
|
||
I’ve done as you wished, I’m sure. Catherine will tell you that I—that
|
||
I—have been cheerful. Ah! keep by me, Catherine; give me your hand.”
|
||
|
||
“Take mine,” said his father; “stand on your feet. There now—she’ll
|
||
lend you her arm: that’s right, look at _her_. You would imagine I was
|
||
the devil himself, Miss Linton, to excite such horror. Be so kind as to
|
||
walk home with him, will you? He shudders if I touch him.”
|
||
|
||
“Linton dear!” whispered Catherine, “I can’t go to Wuthering Heights:
|
||
papa has forbidden me. He’ll not harm you: why are you so afraid?”
|
||
|
||
“I can never re-enter that house,” he answered. “I’m _not_ to re-enter
|
||
it without you!”
|
||
|
||
“Stop!” cried his father. “We’ll respect Catherine’s filial scruples.
|
||
Nelly, take him in, and I’ll follow your advice concerning the doctor,
|
||
without delay.”
|
||
|
||
“You’ll do well,” replied I. “But I must remain with my mistress: to
|
||
mind your son is not my business.”
|
||
|
||
“You are very stiff,” said Heathcliff, “I know that: but you’ll force
|
||
me to pinch the baby and make it scream before it moves your charity.
|
||
Come, then, my hero. Are you willing to return, escorted by me?”
|
||
|
||
He approached once more, and made as if he would seize the fragile
|
||
being; but, shrinking back, Linton clung to his cousin, and implored
|
||
her to accompany him, with a frantic importunity that admitted no
|
||
denial. However I disapproved, I couldn’t hinder her: indeed, how could
|
||
she have refused him herself? What was filling him with dread we had no
|
||
means of discerning; but there he was, powerless under its gripe, and
|
||
any addition seemed capable of shocking him into idiocy. We reached the
|
||
threshold; Catherine walked in, and I stood waiting till she had
|
||
conducted the invalid to a chair, expecting her out immediately; when
|
||
Mr. Heathcliff, pushing me forward, exclaimed—“My house is not stricken
|
||
with the plague, Nelly; and I have a mind to be hospitable to-day: sit
|
||
down, and allow me to shut the door.”
|
||
|
||
He shut and locked it also. I started.
|
||
|
||
“You shall have tea before you go home,” he added. “I am by myself.
|
||
Hareton is gone with some cattle to the Lees, and Zillah and Joseph are
|
||
off on a journey of pleasure; and, though I’m used to being alone, I’d
|
||
rather have some interesting company, if I can get it. Miss Linton,
|
||
take your seat by _him_. I give you what I have: the present is hardly
|
||
worth accepting; but I have nothing else to offer. It is Linton, I
|
||
mean. How she does stare! It’s odd what a savage feeling I have to
|
||
anything that seems afraid of me! Had I been born where laws are less
|
||
strict and tastes less dainty, I should treat myself to a slow
|
||
vivisection of those two, as an evening’s amusement.”
|
||
|
||
He drew in his breath, struck the table, and swore to himself, “By
|
||
hell! I hate them.”
|
||
|
||
“I am not afraid of you!” exclaimed Catherine, who could not hear the
|
||
latter part of his speech. She stepped close up; her black eyes
|
||
flashing with passion and resolution. “Give me that key: I will have
|
||
it!” she said. “I wouldn’t eat or drink here, if I were starving.”
|
||
|
||
Heathcliff had the key in his hand that remained on the table. He
|
||
looked up, seized with a sort of surprise at her boldness; or,
|
||
possibly, reminded, by her voice and glance, of the person from whom
|
||
she inherited it. She snatched at the instrument, and half succeeded in
|
||
getting it out of his loosened fingers: but her action recalled him to
|
||
the present; he recovered it speedily.
|
||
|
||
“Now, Catherine Linton,” he said, “stand off, or I shall knock you
|
||
down; and that will make Mrs. Dean mad.”
|
||
|
||
Regardless of this warning, she captured his closed hand and its
|
||
contents again. “We _will_ go!” she repeated, exerting her utmost
|
||
efforts to cause the iron muscles to relax; and finding that her nails
|
||
made no impression, she applied her teeth pretty sharply. Heathcliff
|
||
glanced at me a glance that kept me from interfering a moment.
|
||
Catherine was too intent on his fingers to notice his face. He opened
|
||
them suddenly, and resigned the object of dispute; but, ere she had
|
||
well secured it, he seized her with the liberated hand, and, pulling
|
||
her on his knee, administered with the other a shower of terrific slaps
|
||
on both sides of the head, each sufficient to have fulfilled his
|
||
threat, had she been able to fall.
|
||
|
||
At this diabolical violence I rushed on him furiously. “You villain!” I
|
||
began to cry, “you villain!” A touch on the chest silenced me: I am
|
||
stout, and soon put out of breath; and, what with that and the rage, I
|
||
staggered dizzily back, and felt ready to suffocate, or to burst a
|
||
blood-vessel. The scene was over in two minutes; Catherine, released,
|
||
put her two hands to her temples, and looked just as if she were not
|
||
sure whether her ears were off or on. She trembled like a reed, poor
|
||
thing, and leant against the table perfectly bewildered.
|
||
|
||
“I know how to chastise children, you see,” said the scoundrel, grimly,
|
||
as he stooped to repossess himself of the key, which had dropped to the
|
||
floor. “Go to Linton now, as I told you; and cry at your ease! I shall
|
||
be your father, to-morrow—all the father you’ll have in a few days—and
|
||
you shall have plenty of that. You can bear plenty; you’re no weakling:
|
||
you shall have a daily taste, if I catch such a devil of a temper in
|
||
your eyes again!”
|
||
|
||
Cathy ran to me instead of Linton, and knelt down and put her burning
|
||
cheek on my lap, weeping aloud. Her cousin had shrunk into a corner of
|
||
the settle, as quiet as a mouse, congratulating himself, I dare say,
|
||
that the correction had alighted on another than him. Mr. Heathcliff,
|
||
perceiving us all confounded, rose, and expeditiously made the tea
|
||
himself. The cups and saucers were laid ready. He poured it out, and
|
||
handed me a cup.
|
||
|
||
“Wash away your spleen,” he said. “And help your own naughty pet and
|
||
mine. It is not poisoned, though I prepared it. I’m going out to seek
|
||
your horses.”
|
||
|
||
Our first thought, on his departure, was to force an exit somewhere. We
|
||
tried the kitchen door, but that was fastened outside: we looked at the
|
||
windows—they were too narrow for even Cathy’s little figure.
|
||
|
||
“Master Linton,” I cried, seeing we were regularly imprisoned, “you
|
||
know what your diabolical father is after, and you shall tell us, or
|
||
I’ll box your ears, as he has done your cousin’s.”
|
||
|
||
“Yes, Linton, you must tell,” said Catherine. “It was for your sake I
|
||
came; and it will be wickedly ungrateful if you refuse.”
|
||
|
||
“Give me some tea, I’m thirsty, and then I’ll tell you,” he answered.
|
||
“Mrs. Dean, go away. I don’t like you standing over me. Now, Catherine,
|
||
you are letting your tears fall into my cup. I won’t drink that. Give
|
||
me another.”
|
||
|
||
Catherine pushed another to him, and wiped her face. I felt disgusted
|
||
at the little wretch’s composure, since he was no longer in terror for
|
||
himself. The anguish he had exhibited on the moor subsided as soon as
|
||
ever he entered Wuthering Heights; so I guessed he had been menaced
|
||
with an awful visitation of wrath if he failed in decoying us there;
|
||
and, that accomplished, he had no further immediate fears.
|
||
|
||
“Papa wants us to be married,” he continued, after sipping some of the
|
||
liquid. “And he knows your papa wouldn’t let us marry now; and he’s
|
||
afraid of my dying if we wait; so we are to be married in the morning,
|
||
and you are to stay here all night; and, if you do as he wishes, you
|
||
shall return home next day, and take me with you.”
|
||
|
||
“Take you with her, pitiful changeling!” I exclaimed. “_You_ marry?
|
||
Why, the man is mad! or he thinks us fools, every one. And do you
|
||
imagine that beautiful young lady, that healthy, hearty girl, will tie
|
||
herself to a little perishing monkey like you? Are you cherishing the
|
||
notion that _anybody_, let alone Miss Catherine Linton, would have you
|
||
for a husband? You want whipping for bringing us in here at all, with
|
||
your dastardly puling tricks: and—don’t look so silly, now! I’ve a very
|
||
good mind to shake you severely, for your contemptible treachery, and
|
||
your imbecile conceit.”
|
||
|
||
I did give him a slight shaking; but it brought on the cough, and he
|
||
took to his ordinary resource of moaning and weeping, and Catherine
|
||
rebuked me.
|
||
|
||
“Stay all night? No,” she said, looking slowly round. “Ellen, I’ll burn
|
||
that door down but I’ll get out.”
|
||
|
||
And she would have commenced the execution of her threat directly, but
|
||
Linton was up in alarm for his dear self again. He clasped her in his
|
||
two feeble arms sobbing:—“Won’t you have me, and save me? not let me
|
||
come to the Grange? Oh, darling Catherine! you mustn’t go and leave,
|
||
after all. You _must_ obey my father—you _must_!”
|
||
|
||
“I must obey my own,” she replied, “and relieve him from this cruel
|
||
suspense. The whole night! What would he think? He’ll be distressed
|
||
already. I’ll either break or burn a way out of the house. Be quiet!
|
||
You’re in no danger; but if you hinder me—Linton, I love papa better
|
||
than you!”
|
||
|
||
The mortal terror he felt of Mr. Heathcliff’s anger restored to the boy
|
||
his coward’s eloquence. Catherine was near distraught: still, she
|
||
persisted that she must go home, and tried entreaty in her turn,
|
||
persuading him to subdue his selfish agony. While they were thus
|
||
occupied, our jailor re-entered.
|
||
|
||
“Your beasts have trotted off,” he said, “and—now Linton! snivelling
|
||
again? What has she been doing to you? Come, come—have done, and get to
|
||
bed. In a month or two, my lad, you’ll be able to pay her back her
|
||
present tyrannies with a vigorous hand. You’re pining for pure love,
|
||
are you not? nothing else in the world: and she shall have you! There,
|
||
to bed! Zillah won’t be here to-night; you must undress yourself. Hush!
|
||
hold your noise! Once in your own room, I’ll not come near you: you
|
||
needn’t fear. By chance, you’ve managed tolerably. I’ll look to the
|
||
rest.”
|
||
|
||
He spoke these words, holding the door open for his son to pass, and
|
||
the latter achieved his exit exactly as a spaniel might which suspected
|
||
the person who attended on it of designing a spiteful squeeze. The lock
|
||
was re-secured. Heathcliff approached the fire, where my mistress and I
|
||
stood silent. Catherine looked up, and instinctively raised her hand to
|
||
her cheek: his neighbourhood revived a painful sensation. Anybody else
|
||
would have been incapable of regarding the childish act with sternness,
|
||
but he scowled on her and muttered—“Oh! you are not afraid of me? Your
|
||
courage is well disguised: you _seem_ damnably afraid!”
|
||
|
||
“I _am_ afraid now,” she replied, “because, if I stay, papa will be
|
||
miserable: and how can I endure making him miserable—when he—when
|
||
he—Mr. Heathcliff, _let_ me go home! I promise to marry Linton: papa
|
||
would like me to: and I love him. Why should you wish to force me to do
|
||
what I’ll willingly do of myself?”
|
||
|
||
“Let him dare to force you,” I cried. “There’s law in the land, thank
|
||
God! there is; though we be in an out-of-the-way place. I’d inform if
|
||
he were my own son: and it’s felony without benefit of clergy!”
|
||
|
||
“Silence!” said the ruffian. “To the devil with your clamour! I don’t
|
||
want _you_ to speak. Miss Linton, I shall enjoy myself remarkably in
|
||
thinking your father will be miserable: I shall not sleep for
|
||
satisfaction. You could have hit on no surer way of fixing your
|
||
residence under my roof for the next twenty-four hours than informing
|
||
me that such an event would follow. As to your promise to marry Linton,
|
||
I’ll take care you shall keep it; for you shall not quit this place
|
||
till it is fulfilled.”
|
||
|
||
“Send Ellen, then, to let papa know I’m safe!” exclaimed Catherine,
|
||
weeping bitterly. “Or marry me now. Poor papa! Ellen, he’ll think we’re
|
||
lost. What shall we do?”
|
||
|
||
“Not he! He’ll think you are tired of waiting on him, and run off for a
|
||
little amusement,” answered Heathcliff. “You cannot deny that you
|
||
entered my house of your own accord, in contempt of his injunctions to
|
||
the contrary. And it is quite natural that you should desire amusement
|
||
at your age; and that you would weary of nursing a sick man, and that
|
||
man _only_ your father. Catherine, his happiest days were over when
|
||
your days began. He cursed you, I dare say, for coming into the world
|
||
(I did, at least); and it would just do if he cursed you as _he_ went
|
||
out of it. I’d join him. I don’t love you! How should I? Weep away. As
|
||
far as I can see, it will be your chief diversion hereafter; unless
|
||
Linton make amends for other losses: and your provident parent appears
|
||
to fancy he may. His letters of advice and consolation entertained me
|
||
vastly. In his last he recommended my jewel to be careful of his; and
|
||
kind to her when he got her. Careful and kind—that’s paternal. But
|
||
Linton requires his whole stock of care and kindness for himself.
|
||
Linton can play the little tyrant well. He’ll undertake to torture any
|
||
number of cats, if their teeth be drawn and their claws pared. You’ll
|
||
be able to tell his uncle fine tales of his _kindness_, when you get
|
||
home again, I assure you.”
|
||
|
||
“You’re right there!” I said; “explain your son’s character. Show his
|
||
resemblance to yourself: and then, I hope, Miss Cathy will think twice
|
||
before she takes the cockatrice!”
|
||
|
||
“I don’t much mind speaking of his amiable qualities now,” he answered;
|
||
“because she must either accept him or remain a prisoner, and you along
|
||
with her, till your master dies. I can detain you both, quite
|
||
concealed, here. If you doubt, encourage her to retract her word, and
|
||
you’ll have an opportunity of judging!”
|
||
|
||
“I’ll not retract my word,” said Catherine. “I’ll marry him within this
|
||
hour, if I may go to Thrushcross Grange afterwards. Mr. Heathcliff,
|
||
you’re a cruel man, but you’re not a fiend; and you won’t, from _mere_
|
||
malice, destroy irrevocably all my happiness. If papa thought I had
|
||
left him on purpose, and if he died before I returned, could I bear to
|
||
live? I’ve given over crying: but I’m going to kneel here, at your
|
||
knee; and I’ll not get up, and I’ll not take my eyes from your face
|
||
till you look back at me! No, don’t turn away! _do_ look! you’ll see
|
||
nothing to provoke you. I don’t hate you. I’m not angry that you struck
|
||
me. Have you never loved _anybody_ in all your life, uncle? _never_?
|
||
Ah! you must look once. I’m so wretched, you can’t help being sorry and
|
||
pitying me.”
|
||
|
||
“Keep your eft’s fingers off; and move, or I’ll kick you!” cried
|
||
Heathcliff, brutally repulsing her. “I’d rather be hugged by a snake.
|
||
How the devil can you dream of fawning on me? I _detest_ you!”
|
||
|
||
He shrugged his shoulders: shook himself, indeed, as if his flesh crept
|
||
with aversion; and thrust back his chair; while I got up, and opened my
|
||
mouth, to commence a downright torrent of abuse. But I was rendered
|
||
dumb in the middle of the first sentence, by a threat that I should be
|
||
shown into a room by myself the very next syllable I uttered. It was
|
||
growing dark—we heard a sound of voices at the garden-gate. Our host
|
||
hurried out instantly: _he_ had his wits about him; _we_ had not. There
|
||
was a talk of two or three minutes, and he returned alone.
|
||
|
||
“I thought it had been your cousin Hareton,” I observed to Catherine.
|
||
“I wish he would arrive! Who knows but he might take our part?”
|
||
|
||
“It was three servants sent to seek you from the Grange,” said
|
||
Heathcliff, overhearing me. “You should have opened a lattice and
|
||
called out: but I could swear that chit is glad you didn’t. She’s glad
|
||
to be obliged to stay, I’m certain.”
|
||
|
||
At learning the chance we had missed, we both gave vent to our grief
|
||
without control; and he allowed us to wail on till nine o’clock. Then
|
||
he bid us go upstairs, through the kitchen, to Zillah’s chamber; and I
|
||
whispered my companion to obey: perhaps we might contrive to get
|
||
through the window there, or into a garret, and out by its skylight.
|
||
The window, however, was narrow, like those below, and the garret trap
|
||
was safe from our attempts; for we were fastened in as before. We
|
||
neither of us lay down: Catherine took her station by the lattice, and
|
||
watched anxiously for morning; a deep sigh being the only answer I
|
||
could obtain to my frequent entreaties that she would try to rest. I
|
||
seated myself in a chair, and rocked to and fro, passing harsh judgment
|
||
on my many derelictions of duty; from which, it struck me then, all the
|
||
misfortunes of my employers sprang. It was not the case, in reality, I
|
||
am aware; but it was, in my imagination, that dismal night; and I
|
||
thought Heathcliff himself less guilty than I.
|
||
|
||
At seven o’clock he came, and inquired if Miss Linton had risen. She
|
||
ran to the door immediately, and answered, “Yes.” “Here, then,” he
|
||
said, opening it, and pulling her out. I rose to follow, but he turned
|
||
the lock again. I demanded my release.
|
||
|
||
“Be patient,” he replied; “I’ll send up your breakfast in a while.”
|
||
|
||
I thumped on the panels, and rattled the latch angrily; and Catherine
|
||
asked why I was still shut up? He answered, I must try to endure it
|
||
another hour, and they went away. I endured it two or three hours; at
|
||
length, I heard a footstep: not Heathcliff’s.
|
||
|
||
“I’ve brought you something to eat,” said a voice; “oppen t’ door!”
|
||
|
||
Complying eagerly, I beheld Hareton, laden with food enough to last me
|
||
all day.
|
||
|
||
“Tak’ it,” he added, thrusting the tray into my hand.
|
||
|
||
“Stay one minute,” I began.
|
||
|
||
“Nay,” cried he, and retired, regardless of any prayers I could pour
|
||
forth to detain him.
|
||
|
||
And there I remained enclosed the whole day, and the whole of the next
|
||
night; and another, and another. Five nights and four days I remained,
|
||
altogether, seeing nobody but Hareton once every morning; and he was a
|
||
model of a jailor: surly, and dumb, and deaf to every attempt at moving
|
||
his sense of justice or compassion.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXVIII
|
||
|
||
|
||
On the fifth morning, or rather afternoon, a different step
|
||
approached—lighter and shorter; and, this time, the person entered the
|
||
room. It was Zillah; donned in her scarlet shawl, with a black silk
|
||
bonnet on her head, and a willow-basket swung to her arm.
|
||
|
||
“Eh, dear! Mrs. Dean!” she exclaimed. “Well! there is a talk about you
|
||
at Gimmerton. I never thought but you were sunk in the Blackhorse
|
||
marsh, and missy with you, till master told me you’d been found, and
|
||
he’d lodged you here! What! and you must have got on an island, sure?
|
||
And how long were you in the hole? Did master save you, Mrs. Dean? But
|
||
you’re not so thin—you’ve not been so poorly, have you?”
|
||
|
||
“Your master is a true scoundrel!” I replied. “But he shall answer for
|
||
it. He needn’t have raised that tale: it shall all be laid bare!”
|
||
|
||
“What do you mean?” asked Zillah. “It’s not his tale: they tell that in
|
||
the village—about your being lost in the marsh; and I calls to
|
||
Earnshaw, when I come in—‘Eh, they’s queer things, Mr. Hareton,
|
||
happened since I went off. It’s a sad pity of that likely young lass,
|
||
and cant Nelly Dean.’ He stared. I thought he had not heard aught, so I
|
||
told him the rumour. The master listened, and he just smiled to
|
||
himself, and said, ‘If they have been in the marsh, they are out now,
|
||
Zillah. Nelly Dean is lodged, at this minute, in your room. You can
|
||
tell her to flit, when you go up; here is the key. The bog-water got
|
||
into her head, and she would have run home quite flighty, but I fixed
|
||
her till she came round to her senses. You can bid her go to the Grange
|
||
at once, if she be able, and carry a message from me, that her young
|
||
lady will follow in time to attend the squire’s funeral.’”
|
||
|
||
“Mr. Edgar is not dead?” I gasped. “Oh! Zillah, Zillah!”
|
||
|
||
“No, no; sit you down, my good mistress,” she replied; “you’re right
|
||
sickly yet. He’s not dead; Doctor Kenneth thinks he may last another
|
||
day. I met him on the road and asked.”
|
||
|
||
Instead of sitting down, I snatched my outdoor things, and hastened
|
||
below, for the way was free. On entering the house, I looked about for
|
||
some one to give information of Catherine. The place was filled with
|
||
sunshine, and the door stood wide open; but nobody seemed at hand. As I
|
||
hesitated whether to go off at once, or return and seek my mistress, a
|
||
slight cough drew my attention to the hearth. Linton lay on the settle,
|
||
sole tenant, sucking a stick of sugar-candy, and pursuing my movements
|
||
with apathetic eyes. “Where is Miss Catherine?” I demanded sternly,
|
||
supposing I could frighten him into giving intelligence, by catching
|
||
him thus, alone. He sucked on like an innocent.
|
||
|
||
“Is she gone?” I said.
|
||
|
||
“No,” he replied; “she’s upstairs: she’s not to go; we won’t let her.”
|
||
|
||
“You won’t let her, little idiot!” I exclaimed. “Direct me to her room
|
||
immediately, or I’ll make you sing out sharply.”
|
||
|
||
“Papa would make you sing out, if you attempted to get there,” he
|
||
answered. “He says I’m not to be soft with Catherine: she’s my wife,
|
||
and it’s shameful that she should wish to leave me. He says she hates
|
||
me and wants me to die, that she may have my money; but she shan’t have
|
||
it: and she shan’t go home! She never shall!—she may cry, and be sick
|
||
as much as she pleases!”
|
||
|
||
He resumed his former occupation, closing his lids, as if he meant to
|
||
drop asleep.
|
||
|
||
“Master Heathcliff,” I resumed, “have you forgotten all Catherine’s
|
||
kindness to you last winter, when you affirmed you loved her, and when
|
||
she brought you books and sung you songs, and came many a time through
|
||
wind and snow to see you? She wept to miss one evening, because you
|
||
would be disappointed; and you felt then that she was a hundred times
|
||
too good to you: and now you believe the lies your father tells, though
|
||
you know he detests you both. And you join him against her. That’s fine
|
||
gratitude, is it not?”
|
||
|
||
The corner of Linton’s mouth fell, and he took the sugar-candy from his
|
||
lips.
|
||
|
||
“Did she come to Wuthering Heights because she hated you?” I continued.
|
||
“Think for yourself! As to your money, she does not even know that you
|
||
will have any. And you say she’s sick; and yet you leave her alone, up
|
||
there in a strange house! _You_ who have felt what it is to be so
|
||
neglected! You could pity your own sufferings; and she pitied them,
|
||
too; but you won’t pity hers! I shed tears, Master Heathcliff, you
|
||
see—an elderly woman, and a servant merely—and you, after pretending
|
||
such affection, and having reason to worship her almost, store every
|
||
tear you have for yourself, and lie there quite at ease. Ah! you’re a
|
||
heartless, selfish boy!”
|
||
|
||
“I can’t stay with her,” he answered crossly. “I’ll not stay by myself.
|
||
She cries so I can’t bear it. And she won’t give over, though I say
|
||
I’ll call my father. I did call him once, and he threatened to strangle
|
||
her if she was not quiet; but she began again the instant he left the
|
||
room, moaning and grieving all night long, though I screamed for
|
||
vexation that I couldn’t sleep.”
|
||
|
||
“Is Mr. Heathcliff out?” I inquired, perceiving that the wretched
|
||
creature had no power to sympathise with his cousin’s mental tortures.
|
||
|
||
“He’s in the court,” he replied, “talking to Doctor Kenneth; who says
|
||
uncle is dying, truly, at last. I’m glad, for I shall be master of the
|
||
Grange after him. Catherine always spoke of it as _her_ house. It isn’t
|
||
hers! It’s mine: papa says everything she has is mine. All her nice
|
||
books are mine; she offered to give me them, and her pretty birds, and
|
||
her pony Minny, if I would get the key of our room, and let her out;
|
||
but I told her she had nothing to give, they were all, all mine. And
|
||
then she cried, and took a little picture from her neck, and said I
|
||
should have that; two pictures in a gold case, on one side her mother,
|
||
and on the other uncle, when they were young. That was yesterday—I said
|
||
_they_ were mine, too; and tried to get them from her. The spiteful
|
||
thing wouldn’t let me: she pushed me off, and hurt me. I shrieked
|
||
out—that frightens her—she heard papa coming, and she broke the hinges
|
||
and divided the case, and gave me her mother’s portrait; the other she
|
||
attempted to hide: but papa asked what was the matter, and I explained
|
||
it. He took the one I had away, and ordered her to resign hers to me;
|
||
she refused, and he—he struck her down, and wrenched it off the chain,
|
||
and crushed it with his foot.”
|
||
|
||
“And were you pleased to see her struck?” I asked: having my designs in
|
||
encouraging his talk.
|
||
|
||
“I winked,” he answered: “I wink to see my father strike a dog or a
|
||
horse, he does it so hard. Yet I was glad at first—she deserved
|
||
punishing for pushing me: but when papa was gone, she made me come to
|
||
the window and showed me her cheek cut on the inside, against her
|
||
teeth, and her mouth filling with blood; and then she gathered up the
|
||
bits of the picture, and went and sat down with her face to the wall,
|
||
and she has never spoken to me since: and I sometimes think she can’t
|
||
speak for pain. I don’t like to think so; but she’s a naughty thing for
|
||
crying continually; and she looks so pale and wild, I’m afraid of her.”
|
||
|
||
“And you can get the key if you choose?” I said.
|
||
|
||
“Yes, when I am upstairs,” he answered; “but I can’t walk upstairs
|
||
now.”
|
||
|
||
“In what apartment is it?” I asked.
|
||
|
||
“Oh,” he cried, “I shan’t tell _you_ where it is. It is our secret.
|
||
Nobody, neither Hareton nor Zillah, is to know. There! you’ve tired
|
||
me—go away, go away!” And he turned his face on to his arm, and shut
|
||
his eyes again.
|
||
|
||
I considered it best to depart without seeing Mr. Heathcliff, and bring
|
||
a rescue for my young lady from the Grange. On reaching it, the
|
||
astonishment of my fellow-servants to see me, and their joy also, was
|
||
intense; and when they heard that their little mistress was safe, two
|
||
or three were about to hurry up and shout the news at Mr. Edgar’s door:
|
||
but I bespoke the announcement of it myself. How changed I found him,
|
||
even in those few days! He lay an image of sadness and resignation
|
||
awaiting his death. Very young he looked: though his actual age was
|
||
thirty-nine, one would have called him ten years younger, at least. He
|
||
thought of Catherine; for he murmured her name. I touched his hand, and
|
||
spoke.
|
||
|
||
“Catherine is coming, dear master!” I whispered; “she is alive and
|
||
well; and will be here, I hope, to-night.”
|
||
|
||
I trembled at the first effects of this intelligence: he half rose up,
|
||
looked eagerly round the apartment, and then sank back in a swoon. As
|
||
soon as he recovered, I related our compulsory visit, and detention at
|
||
the Heights. I said Heathcliff forced me to go in: which was not quite
|
||
true. I uttered as little as possible against Linton; nor did I
|
||
describe all his father’s brutal conduct—my intentions being to add no
|
||
bitterness, if I could help it, to his already overflowing cup.
|
||
|
||
He divined that one of his enemy’s purposes was to secure the personal
|
||
property, as well as the estate, to his son: or rather himself; yet why
|
||
he did not wait till his decease was a puzzle to my master, because
|
||
ignorant how nearly he and his nephew would quit the world together.
|
||
However, he felt that his will had better be altered: instead of
|
||
leaving Catherine’s fortune at her own disposal, he determined to put
|
||
it in the hands of trustees for her use during life, and for her
|
||
children, if she had any, after her. By that means, it could not fall
|
||
to Mr. Heathcliff should Linton die.
|
||
|
||
Having received his orders, I despatched a man to fetch the attorney,
|
||
and four more, provided with serviceable weapons, to demand my young
|
||
lady of her jailor. Both parties were delayed very late. The single
|
||
servant returned first. He said Mr. Green, the lawyer, was out when he
|
||
arrived at his house, and he had to wait two hours for his re-entrance;
|
||
and then Mr. Green told him he had a little business in the village
|
||
that must be done; but he would be at Thrushcross Grange before
|
||
morning. The four men came back unaccompanied also. They brought word
|
||
that Catherine was ill: too ill to quit her room; and Heathcliff would
|
||
not suffer them to see her. I scolded the stupid fellows well for
|
||
listening to that tale, which I would not carry to my master; resolving
|
||
to take a whole bevy up to the Heights, at daylight, and storm it
|
||
literally, unless the prisoner were quietly surrendered to us. Her
|
||
father _shall_ see her, I vowed, and vowed again, if that devil be
|
||
killed on his own door-stones in trying to prevent it!
|
||
|
||
Happily, I was spared the journey and the trouble. I had gone
|
||
downstairs at three o’clock to fetch a jug of water; and was passing
|
||
through the hall with it in my hand, when a sharp knock at the front
|
||
door made me jump. “Oh! it is Green,” I said, recollecting myself—“only
|
||
Green,” and I went on, intending to send somebody else to open it; but
|
||
the knock was repeated: not loud, and still importunately. I put the
|
||
jug on the banister and hastened to admit him myself. The harvest moon
|
||
shone clear outside. It was not the attorney. My own sweet little
|
||
mistress sprang on my neck sobbing, “Ellen, Ellen! Is papa alive?”
|
||
|
||
“Yes,” I cried: “yes, my angel, he is, God be thanked, you are safe
|
||
with us again!”
|
||
|
||
She wanted to run, breathless as she was, upstairs to Mr. Linton’s
|
||
room; but I compelled her to sit down on a chair, and made her drink,
|
||
and washed her pale face, chafing it into a faint colour with my apron.
|
||
Then I said I must go first, and tell of her arrival; imploring her to
|
||
say, she should be happy with young Heathcliff. She stared, but soon
|
||
comprehending why I counselled her to utter the falsehood, she assured
|
||
me she would not complain.
|
||
|
||
I couldn’t abide to be present at their meeting. I stood outside the
|
||
chamber-door a quarter of an hour, and hardly ventured near the bed,
|
||
then. All was composed, however: Catherine’s despair was as silent as
|
||
her father’s joy. She supported him calmly, in appearance; and he fixed
|
||
on her features his raised eyes that seemed dilating with ecstasy.
|
||
|
||
He died blissfully, Mr. Lockwood: he died so. Kissing her cheek, he
|
||
murmured,—“I am going to her; and you, darling child, shall come to
|
||
us!” and never stirred or spoke again; but continued that rapt, radiant
|
||
gaze, till his pulse imperceptibly stopped and his soul departed. None
|
||
could have noticed the exact minute of his death, it was so entirely
|
||
without a struggle.
|
||
|
||
Whether Catherine had spent her tears, or whether the grief were too
|
||
weighty to let them flow, she sat there dry-eyed till the sun rose: she
|
||
sat till noon, and would still have remained brooding over that
|
||
deathbed, but I insisted on her coming away and taking some repose. It
|
||
was well I succeeded in removing her, for at dinner-time appeared the
|
||
lawyer, having called at Wuthering Heights to get his instructions how
|
||
to behave. He had sold himself to Mr. Heathcliff: that was the cause of
|
||
his delay in obeying my master’s summons. Fortunately, no thought of
|
||
worldly affairs crossed the latter’s mind, to disturb him, after his
|
||
daughter’s arrival.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Green took upon himself to order everything and everybody about the
|
||
place. He gave all the servants but me, notice to quit. He would have
|
||
carried his delegated authority to the point of insisting that Edgar
|
||
Linton should not be buried beside his wife, but in the chapel, with
|
||
his family. There was the will, however, to hinder that, and my loud
|
||
protestations against any infringement of its directions. The funeral
|
||
was hurried over; Catherine, Mrs. Linton Heathcliff now, was suffered
|
||
to stay at the Grange till her father’s corpse had quitted it.
|
||
|
||
She told me that her anguish had at last spurred Linton to incur the
|
||
risk of liberating her. She heard the men I sent disputing at the door,
|
||
and she gathered the sense of Heathcliff’s answer. It drove her
|
||
desperate. Linton who had been conveyed up to the little parlour soon
|
||
after I left, was terrified into fetching the key before his father
|
||
re-ascended. He had the cunning to unlock and re-lock the door, without
|
||
shutting it; and when he should have gone to bed, he begged to sleep
|
||
with Hareton, and his petition was granted for once. Catherine stole
|
||
out before break of day. She dared not try the doors lest the dogs
|
||
should raise an alarm; she visited the empty chambers and examined
|
||
their windows; and, luckily, lighting on her mother’s, she got easily
|
||
out of its lattice, and on to the ground, by means of the fir-tree
|
||
close by. Her accomplice suffered for his share in the escape,
|
||
notwithstanding his timid contrivances.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXIX
|
||
|
||
|
||
The evening after the funeral, my young lady and I were seated in the
|
||
library; now musing mournfully—one of us despairingly—on our loss, now
|
||
venturing conjectures as to the gloomy future.
|
||
|
||
We had just agreed the best destiny which could await Catherine would
|
||
be a permission to continue resident at the Grange; at least during
|
||
Linton’s life: he being allowed to join her there, and I to remain as
|
||
housekeeper. That seemed rather too favourable an arrangement to be
|
||
hoped for; and yet I did hope, and began to cheer up under the prospect
|
||
of retaining my home and my employment, and, above all, my beloved
|
||
young mistress; when a servant—one of the discarded ones, not yet
|
||
departed—rushed hastily in, and said “that devil Heathcliff” was coming
|
||
through the court: should he fasten the door in his face?
|
||
|
||
If we had been mad enough to order that proceeding, we had not time. He
|
||
made no ceremony of knocking or announcing his name: he was master, and
|
||
availed himself of the master’s privilege to walk straight in, without
|
||
saying a word. The sound of our informant’s voice directed him to the
|
||
library; he entered and motioning him out, shut the door.
|
||
|
||
It was the same room into which he had been ushered, as a guest,
|
||
eighteen years before: the same moon shone through the window; and the
|
||
same autumn landscape lay outside. We had not yet lighted a candle, but
|
||
all the apartment was visible, even to the portraits on the wall: the
|
||
splendid head of Mrs. Linton, and the graceful one of her husband.
|
||
Heathcliff advanced to the hearth. Time had little altered his person
|
||
either. There was the same man: his dark face rather sallower and more
|
||
composed, his frame a stone or two heavier, perhaps, and no other
|
||
difference. Catherine had risen with an impulse to dash out, when she
|
||
saw him.
|
||
|
||
“Stop!” he said, arresting her by the arm. “No more runnings away!
|
||
Where would you go? I’m come to fetch you home; and I hope you’ll be a
|
||
dutiful daughter and not encourage my son to further disobedience. I
|
||
was embarrassed how to punish him when I discovered his part in the
|
||
business: he’s such a cobweb, a pinch would annihilate him; but you’ll
|
||
see by his look that he has received his due! I brought him down one
|
||
evening, the day before yesterday, and just set him in a chair, and
|
||
never touched him afterwards. I sent Hareton out, and we had the room
|
||
to ourselves. In two hours, I called Joseph to carry him up again; and
|
||
since then my presence is as potent on his nerves as a ghost; and I
|
||
fancy he sees me often, though I am not near. Hareton says he wakes and
|
||
shrieks in the night by the hour together, and calls you to protect him
|
||
from me; and, whether you like your precious mate, or not, you must
|
||
come: he’s your concern now; I yield all my interest in him to you.”
|
||
|
||
“Why not let Catherine continue here,” I pleaded, “and send Master
|
||
Linton to her? As you hate them both, you’d not miss them: they _can_
|
||
only be a daily plague to your unnatural heart.”
|
||
|
||
“I’m seeking a tenant for the Grange,” he answered; “and I want my
|
||
children about me, to be sure. Besides, that lass owes me her services
|
||
for her bread. I’m not going to nurture her in luxury and idleness
|
||
after Linton is gone. Make haste and get ready, now; and don’t oblige
|
||
me to compel you.”
|
||
|
||
“I shall,” said Catherine. “Linton is all I have to love in the world,
|
||
and though you have done what you could to make him hateful to me, and
|
||
me to him, you _cannot_ make us hate each other. And I defy you to hurt
|
||
him when I am by, and I defy you to frighten me!”
|
||
|
||
“You are a boastful champion,” replied Heathcliff; “but I don’t like
|
||
you well enough to hurt him: you shall get the full benefit of the
|
||
torment, as long as it lasts. It is not I who will make him hateful to
|
||
you—it is his own sweet spirit. He’s as bitter as gall at your
|
||
desertion and its consequences: don’t expect thanks for this noble
|
||
devotion. I heard him draw a pleasant picture to Zillah of what he
|
||
would do if he were as strong as I: the inclination is there, and his
|
||
very weakness will sharpen his wits to find a substitute for strength.”
|
||
|
||
“I know he has a bad nature,” said Catherine: “he’s your son. But I’m
|
||
glad I’ve a better, to forgive it; and I know he loves me, and for that
|
||
reason I love him. Mr. Heathcliff, _you_ have _nobody_ to love you;
|
||
and, however miserable you make us, we shall still have the revenge of
|
||
thinking that your cruelty arises from your greater misery. You _are_
|
||
miserable, are you not? Lonely, like the devil, and envious like him?
|
||
_Nobody_ loves you—_nobody_ will cry for you when you die! I wouldn’t
|
||
be you!”
|
||
|
||
Catherine spoke with a kind of dreary triumph: she seemed to have made
|
||
up her mind to enter into the spirit of her future family, and draw
|
||
pleasure from the griefs of her enemies.
|
||
|
||
“You shall be sorry to be yourself presently,” said her father-in-law,
|
||
“if you stand there another minute. Begone, witch, and get your
|
||
things!”
|
||
|
||
She scornfully withdrew. In her absence I began to beg for Zillah’s
|
||
place at the Heights, offering to resign mine to her; but he would
|
||
suffer it on no account. He bid me be silent; and then, for the first
|
||
time, allowed himself a glance round the room and a look at the
|
||
pictures. Having studied Mrs. Linton’s, he said—“I shall have that
|
||
home. Not because I need it, but—” He turned abruptly to the fire, and
|
||
continued, with what, for lack of a better word, I must call a
|
||
smile—“I’ll tell you what I did yesterday! I got the sexton, who was
|
||
digging Linton’s grave, to remove the earth off her coffin lid, and I
|
||
opened it. I thought, once, I would have stayed there: when I saw her
|
||
face again—it is hers yet!—he had hard work to stir me; but he said it
|
||
would change if the air blew on it, and so I struck one side of the
|
||
coffin loose, and covered it up: not Linton’s side, damn him! I wish
|
||
he’d been soldered in lead. And I bribed the sexton to pull it away
|
||
when I’m laid there, and slide mine out too; I’ll have it made so: and
|
||
then by the time Linton gets to us he’ll not know which is which!”
|
||
|
||
“You were very wicked, Mr. Heathcliff!” I exclaimed; “were you not
|
||
ashamed to disturb the dead?”
|
||
|
||
“I disturbed nobody, Nelly,” he replied; “and I gave some ease to
|
||
myself. I shall be a great deal more comfortable now; and you’ll have a
|
||
better chance of keeping me underground, when I get there. Disturbed
|
||
her? No! she has disturbed me, night and day, through eighteen
|
||
years—incessantly—remorselessly—till yesternight; and yesternight I was
|
||
tranquil. I dreamt I was sleeping the last sleep by that sleeper, with
|
||
my heart stopped and my cheek frozen against hers.”
|
||
|
||
“And if she had been dissolved into earth, or worse, what would you
|
||
have dreamt of then?” I said.
|
||
|
||
“Of dissolving with her, and being more happy still!” he answered. “Do
|
||
you suppose I dread any change of that sort? I expected such a
|
||
transformation on raising the lid, but I’m better pleased that it should
|
||
not commence till I share it. Besides, unless I had received a distinct
|
||
impression of her passionless features, that strange feeling would
|
||
hardly have been removed. It began oddly. You know I was wild after she
|
||
died; and eternally, from dawn to dawn, praying her to return to me her
|
||
spirit! I have a strong faith in ghosts: I have a conviction that they
|
||
can, and do, exist among us! The day she was buried, there came a fall
|
||
of snow. In the evening I went to the churchyard. It blew bleak as
|
||
winter—all round was solitary. I didn’t fear that her fool of a husband
|
||
would wander up the glen so late; and no one else had business to bring
|
||
them there. Being alone, and conscious two yards of loose earth was the
|
||
sole barrier between us, I said to myself—‘I’ll have her in my arms
|
||
again! If she be cold, I’ll think it is this north wind that chills
|
||
_me_; and if she be motionless, it is sleep.’ I got a spade from the
|
||
tool-house, and began to delve with all my might—it scraped the coffin;
|
||
I fell to work with my hands; the wood commenced cracking about the
|
||
screws; I was on the point of attaining my object, when it seemed that
|
||
I heard a sigh from some one above, close at the edge of the grave, and
|
||
bending down. ‘If I can only get this off,’ I muttered, ‘I wish they
|
||
may shovel in the earth over us both!’ and I wrenched at it more
|
||
desperately still. There was another sigh, close at my ear. I appeared
|
||
to feel the warm breath of it displacing the sleet-laden wind. I knew
|
||
no living thing in flesh and blood was by; but, as certainly as you
|
||
perceive the approach to some substantial body in the dark, though it
|
||
cannot be discerned, so certainly I felt that Cathy was there: not
|
||
under me, but on the earth. A sudden sense of relief flowed from my
|
||
heart through every limb. I relinquished my labour of agony, and turned
|
||
consoled at once: unspeakably consoled. Her presence was with me: it
|
||
remained while I re-filled the grave, and led me home. You may laugh,
|
||
if you will; but I was sure I should see her there. I was sure she was
|
||
with me, and I could not help talking to her. Having reached the
|
||
Heights, I rushed eagerly to the door. It was fastened; and, I
|
||
remember, that accursed Earnshaw and my wife opposed my entrance. I
|
||
remember stopping to kick the breath out of him, and then hurrying
|
||
upstairs, to my room and hers. I looked round impatiently—I felt her by
|
||
me—I could _almost_ see her, and yet I _could not_! I ought to have
|
||
sweat blood then, from the anguish of my yearning—from the fervour of
|
||
my supplications to have but one glimpse! I had not one. She showed
|
||
herself, as she often was in life, a devil to me! And, since then,
|
||
sometimes more and sometimes less, I’ve been the sport of that
|
||
intolerable torture! Infernal! keeping my nerves at such a stretch
|
||
that, if they had not resembled catgut, they would long ago have
|
||
relaxed to the feebleness of Linton’s. When I sat in the house with
|
||
Hareton, it seemed that on going out I should meet her; when I walked
|
||
on the moors I should meet her coming in. When I went from home I
|
||
hastened to return; she _must_ be somewhere at the Heights, I was
|
||
certain! And when I slept in her chamber—I was beaten out of that. I
|
||
couldn’t lie there; for the moment I closed my eyes, she was either
|
||
outside the window, or sliding back the panels, or entering the room,
|
||
or even resting her darling head on the same pillow as she did when a
|
||
child; and I must open my lids to see. And so I opened and closed them
|
||
a hundred times a night—to be always disappointed! It racked me! I’ve
|
||
often groaned aloud, till that old rascal Joseph no doubt believed that
|
||
my conscience was playing the fiend inside of me. Now, since I’ve seen
|
||
her, I’m pacified—a little. It was a strange way of killing: not by
|
||
inches, but by fractions of hairbreadths, to beguile me with the
|
||
spectre of a hope through eighteen years!”
|
||
|
||
Mr. Heathcliff paused and wiped his forehead; his hair clung to it, wet
|
||
with perspiration; his eyes were fixed on the red embers of the fire,
|
||
the brows not contracted, but raised next the temples; diminishing the
|
||
grim aspect of his countenance, but imparting a peculiar look of
|
||
trouble, and a painful appearance of mental tension towards one
|
||
absorbing subject. He only half addressed me, and I maintained silence.
|
||
I didn’t like to hear him talk! After a short period he resumed his
|
||
meditation on the picture, took it down and leant it against the sofa
|
||
to contemplate it at better advantage; and while so occupied Catherine
|
||
entered, announcing that she was ready, when her pony should be
|
||
saddled.
|
||
|
||
“Send that over to-morrow,” said Heathcliff to me; then turning to her,
|
||
he added: “You may do without your pony: it is a fine evening, and
|
||
you’ll need no ponies at Wuthering Heights; for what journeys you take,
|
||
your own feet will serve you. Come along.”
|
||
|
||
“Good-bye, Ellen!” whispered my dear little mistress. As she kissed me,
|
||
her lips felt like ice. “Come and see me, Ellen; don’t forget.”
|
||
|
||
“Take care you do no such thing, Mrs. Dean!” said her new father. “When
|
||
I wish to speak to you I’ll come here. I want none of your prying at my
|
||
house!”
|
||
|
||
He signed her to precede him; and casting back a look that cut my
|
||
heart, she obeyed. I watched them, from the window, walk down the
|
||
garden. Heathcliff fixed Catherine’s arm under his: though she disputed
|
||
the act at first evidently; and with rapid strides he hurried her into
|
||
the alley, whose trees concealed them.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXX
|
||
|
||
|
||
I have paid a visit to the Heights, but I have not seen her since she
|
||
left: Joseph held the door in his hand when I called to ask after her,
|
||
and wouldn’t let me pass. He said Mrs. Linton was “thrang,” and the
|
||
master was not in. Zillah has told me something of the way they go on,
|
||
otherwise I should hardly know who was dead and who living. She thinks
|
||
Catherine haughty, and does not like her, I can guess by her talk. My
|
||
young lady asked some aid of her when she first came; but Mr.
|
||
Heathcliff told her to follow her own business, and let his
|
||
daughter-in-law look after herself; and Zillah willingly acquiesced,
|
||
being a narrow-minded, selfish woman. Catherine evinced a child’s
|
||
annoyance at this neglect; repaid it with contempt, and thus enlisted
|
||
my informant among her enemies, as securely as if she had done her some
|
||
great wrong. I had a long talk with Zillah about six weeks ago, a
|
||
little before you came, one day when we foregathered on the moor; and
|
||
this is what she told me.
|
||
|
||
“The first thing Mrs. Linton did,” she said, “on her arrival at the
|
||
Heights, was to run upstairs, without even wishing good-evening to me
|
||
and Joseph; she shut herself into Linton’s room, and remained till
|
||
morning. Then, while the master and Earnshaw were at breakfast, she
|
||
entered the house, and asked all in a quiver if the doctor might be
|
||
sent for? her cousin was very ill.
|
||
|
||
“‘We know that!’ answered Heathcliff; ‘but his life is not worth a
|
||
farthing, and I won’t spend a farthing on him.’
|
||
|
||
“‘But I cannot tell how to do,’ she said; ‘and if nobody will help me,
|
||
he’ll die!’
|
||
|
||
“‘Walk out of the room,’ cried the master, ‘and let me never hear a
|
||
word more about him! None here care what becomes of him; if you do, act
|
||
the nurse; if you do not, lock him up and leave him.’
|
||
|
||
“Then she began to bother me, and I said I’d had enough plague with the
|
||
tiresome thing; we each had our tasks, and hers was to wait on Linton:
|
||
Mr. Heathcliff bid me leave that labour to her.
|
||
|
||
“How they managed together, I can’t tell. I fancy he fretted a great
|
||
deal, and moaned hisseln night and day; and she had precious little
|
||
rest: one could guess by her white face and heavy eyes. She sometimes
|
||
came into the kitchen all wildered like, and looked as if she would
|
||
fain beg assistance; but I was not going to disobey the master: I never
|
||
dare disobey him, Mrs. Dean; and, though I thought it wrong that
|
||
Kenneth should not be sent for, it was no concern of mine either to
|
||
advise or complain, and I always refused to meddle. Once or twice,
|
||
after we had gone to bed, I’ve happened to open my door again and seen
|
||
her sitting crying on the stairs’-top; and then I’ve shut myself in
|
||
quick, for fear of being moved to interfere. I did pity her then, I’m
|
||
sure: still I didn’t wish to lose my place, you know.
|
||
|
||
“At last, one night she came boldly into my chamber, and frightened me
|
||
out of my wits, by saying, ‘Tell Mr. Heathcliff that his son is
|
||
dying—I’m sure he is, this time. Get up, instantly, and tell him.’
|
||
|
||
“Having uttered this speech, she vanished again. I lay a quarter of an
|
||
hour listening and trembling. Nothing stirred—the house was quiet.
|
||
|
||
“She’s mistaken, I said to myself. He’s got over it. I needn’t disturb
|
||
them; and I began to doze. But my sleep was marred a second time by a
|
||
sharp ringing of the bell—the only bell we have, put up on purpose for
|
||
Linton; and the master called to me to see what was the matter, and
|
||
inform them that he wouldn’t have that noise repeated.
|
||
|
||
“I delivered Catherine’s message. He cursed to himself, and in a few
|
||
minutes came out with a lighted candle, and proceeded to their room. I
|
||
followed. Mrs. Heathcliff was seated by the bedside, with her hands
|
||
folded on her knees. Her father-in-law went up, held the light to
|
||
Linton’s face, looked at him, and touched him; afterwards he turned to
|
||
her.
|
||
|
||
“‘Now—Catherine,’ he said, ‘how do you feel?’
|
||
|
||
“She was dumb.
|
||
|
||
“‘How do you feel, Catherine?’ he repeated.
|
||
|
||
“‘He’s safe, and I’m free,’ she answered: ‘I should feel well—but,’ she
|
||
continued, with a bitterness she couldn’t conceal, ‘you have left me so
|
||
long to struggle against death alone, that I feel and see only death! I
|
||
feel like death!’
|
||
|
||
“And she looked like it, too! I gave her a little wine. Hareton and
|
||
Joseph, who had been wakened by the ringing and the sound of feet, and
|
||
heard our talk from outside, now entered. Joseph was fain, I believe,
|
||
of the lad’s removal; Hareton seemed a thought bothered: though he was
|
||
more taken up with staring at Catherine than thinking of Linton. But
|
||
the master bid him get off to bed again: we didn’t want his help. He
|
||
afterwards made Joseph remove the body to his chamber, and told me to
|
||
return to mine, and Mrs. Heathcliff remained by herself.
|
||
|
||
“In the morning, he sent me to tell her she must come down to
|
||
breakfast: she had undressed, and appeared going to sleep, and said she
|
||
was ill; at which I hardly wondered. I informed Mr. Heathcliff, and he
|
||
replied,—‘Well, let her be till after the funeral; and go up now and
|
||
then to get her what is needful; and, as soon as she seems better, tell
|
||
me.’”
|
||
|
||
Cathy stayed upstairs a fortnight, according to Zillah; who visited her
|
||
twice a day, and would have been rather more friendly, but her attempts
|
||
at increasing kindness were proudly and promptly repelled.
|
||
|
||
Heathcliff went up once, to show her Linton’s will. He had bequeathed
|
||
the whole of his, and what had been her, moveable property, to his
|
||
father: the poor creature was threatened, or coaxed, into that act
|
||
during her week’s absence, when his uncle died. The lands, being a
|
||
minor, he could not meddle with. However, Mr. Heathcliff has claimed
|
||
and kept them in his wife’s right and his also: I suppose legally; at
|
||
any rate, Catherine, destitute of cash and friends, cannot disturb his
|
||
possession.
|
||
|
||
“Nobody,” said Zillah, “ever approached her door, except that once, but
|
||
I; and nobody asked anything about her. The first occasion of her
|
||
coming down into the house was on a Sunday afternoon. She had cried
|
||
out, when I carried up her dinner, that she couldn’t bear any longer
|
||
being in the cold; and I told her the master was going to Thrushcross
|
||
Grange, and Earnshaw and I needn’t hinder her from descending; so, as
|
||
soon as she heard Heathcliff’s horse trot off, she made her appearance,
|
||
donned in black, and her yellow curls combed back behind her ears as
|
||
plain as a Quaker: she couldn’t comb them out.
|
||
|
||
“Joseph and I generally go to chapel on Sundays:” the kirk, (you know,
|
||
has no minister now, explained Mrs. Dean; and they call the Methodists’
|
||
or Baptists’ place, I can’t say which it is, at Gimmerton, a chapel.)
|
||
“Joseph had gone,” she continued, “but I thought proper to bide at
|
||
home. Young folks are always the better for an elder’s over-looking;
|
||
and Hareton, with all his bashfulness, isn’t a model of nice behaviour.
|
||
I let him know that his cousin would very likely sit with us, and she
|
||
had been always used to see the Sabbath respected; so he had as good
|
||
leave his guns and bits of indoor work alone, while she stayed. He
|
||
coloured up at the news, and cast his eyes over his hands and clothes.
|
||
The train-oil and gunpowder were shoved out of sight in a minute. I saw
|
||
he meant to give her his company; and I guessed, by his way, he wanted
|
||
to be presentable; so, laughing, as I durst not laugh when the master
|
||
is by, I offered to help him, if he would, and joked at his confusion.
|
||
He grew sullen, and began to swear.
|
||
|
||
“Now, Mrs. Dean,” Zillah went on, seeing me not pleased by her manner,
|
||
“you happen think your young lady too fine for Mr. Hareton; and happen
|
||
you’re right: but I own I should love well to bring her pride a peg
|
||
lower. And what will all her learning and her daintiness do for her,
|
||
now? She’s as poor as you or I: poorer, I’ll be bound: you’re saving,
|
||
and I’m doing my little all that road.”
|
||
|
||
Hareton allowed Zillah to give him her aid; and she flattered him into
|
||
a good humour; so, when Catherine came, half forgetting her former
|
||
insults, he tried to make himself agreeable, by the housekeeper’s
|
||
account.
|
||
|
||
“Missis walked in,” she said, “as chill as an icicle, and as high as a
|
||
princess. I got up and offered her my seat in the arm-chair. No, she
|
||
turned up her nose at my civility. Earnshaw rose, too, and bid her come
|
||
to the settle, and sit close by the fire: he was sure she was starved.
|
||
|
||
“‘I’ve been starved a month and more,’ she answered, resting on the
|
||
word as scornful as she could.
|
||
|
||
“And she got a chair for herself, and placed it at a distance from both
|
||
of us. Having sat till she was warm, she began to look round, and
|
||
discovered a number of books on the dresser; she was instantly upon her
|
||
feet again, stretching to reach them: but they were too high up. Her
|
||
cousin, after watching her endeavours a while, at last summoned courage
|
||
to help her; she held her frock, and he filled it with the first that
|
||
came to hand.
|
||
|
||
“That was a great advance for the lad. She didn’t thank him; still, he
|
||
felt gratified that she had accepted his assistance, and ventured to
|
||
stand behind as she examined them, and even to stoop and point out what
|
||
struck his fancy in certain old pictures which they contained; nor was
|
||
he daunted by the saucy style in which she jerked the page from his
|
||
finger: he contented himself with going a bit farther back and looking
|
||
at her instead of the book. She continued reading, or seeking for
|
||
something to read. His attention became, by degrees, quite centred in
|
||
the study of her thick silky curls: her face he couldn’t see, and she
|
||
couldn’t see him. And, perhaps, not quite awake to what he did, but
|
||
attracted like a child to a candle, at last he proceeded from staring
|
||
to touching; he put out his hand and stroked one curl, as gently as if
|
||
it were a bird. He might have stuck a knife into her neck, she started
|
||
round in such a taking.
|
||
|
||
“‘Get away this moment! How dare you touch me? Why are you stopping
|
||
there?’ she cried, in a tone of disgust. ‘I can’t endure you! I’ll go
|
||
upstairs again, if you come near me.’
|
||
|
||
“Mr. Hareton recoiled, looking as foolish as he could do: he sat down
|
||
in the settle very quiet, and she continued turning over her volumes
|
||
another half hour; finally, Earnshaw crossed over, and whispered to me.
|
||
|
||
“‘Will you ask her to read to us, Zillah? I’m stalled of doing naught;
|
||
and I do like—I could like to hear her! Dunnot say I wanted it, but ask
|
||
of yourseln.’
|
||
|
||
“‘Mr. Hareton wishes you would read to us, ma’am,’ I said, immediately.
|
||
‘He’d take it very kind—he’d be much obliged.’
|
||
|
||
“She frowned; and looking up, answered—
|
||
|
||
“‘Mr. Hareton, and the whole set of you, will be good enough to
|
||
understand that I reject any pretence at kindness you have the
|
||
hypocrisy to offer! I despise you, and will have nothing to say to any
|
||
of you! When I would have given my life for one kind word, even to see
|
||
one of your faces, you all kept off. But I won’t complain to you! I’m
|
||
driven down here by the cold; not either to amuse you or enjoy your
|
||
society.’
|
||
|
||
“‘What could I ha’ done?’ began Earnshaw. ‘How was I to blame?’
|
||
|
||
“‘Oh! you are an exception,’ answered Mrs. Heathcliff. ‘I never missed
|
||
such a concern as you.’
|
||
|
||
“‘But I offered more than once, and asked,’ he said, kindling up at her
|
||
pertness, ‘I asked Mr. Heathcliff to let me wake for you—’
|
||
|
||
“‘Be silent! I’ll go out of doors, or anywhere, rather than have your
|
||
disagreeable voice in my ear!’ said my lady.
|
||
|
||
“Hareton muttered she might go to hell, for him! and unslinging his
|
||
gun, restrained himself from his Sunday occupations no longer. He
|
||
talked now, freely enough; and she presently saw fit to retreat to her
|
||
solitude: but the frost had set in, and, in spite of her pride, she was
|
||
forced to condescend to our company, more and more. However, I took
|
||
care there should be no further scorning at my good nature: ever since,
|
||
I’ve been as stiff as herself; and she has no lover or liker among us:
|
||
and she does not deserve one; for, let them say the least word to her,
|
||
and she’ll curl back without respect of any one. She’ll snap at the
|
||
master himself, and as good as dares him to thrash her; and the more
|
||
hurt she gets, the more venomous she grows.”
|
||
|
||
At first, on hearing this account from Zillah, I determined to leave my
|
||
situation, take a cottage, and get Catherine to come and live with me:
|
||
but Mr. Heathcliff would as soon permit that as he would set up Hareton
|
||
in an independent house; and I can see no remedy, at present, unless
|
||
she could marry again; and that scheme it does not come within my
|
||
province to arrange.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
Thus ended Mrs. Dean’s story. Notwithstanding the doctor’s prophecy, I
|
||
am rapidly recovering strength; and though it be only the second week
|
||
in January, I propose getting out on horseback in a day or two, and
|
||
riding over to Wuthering Heights, to inform my landlord that I shall
|
||
spend the next six months in London; and, if he likes, he may look out
|
||
for another tenant to take the place after October. I would not pass
|
||
another winter here for much.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXXI
|
||
|
||
|
||
Yesterday was bright, calm, and frosty. I went to the Heights as I
|
||
proposed: my housekeeper entreated me to bear a little note from her to
|
||
her young lady, and I did not refuse, for the worthy woman was not
|
||
conscious of anything odd in her request. The front door stood open,
|
||
but the jealous gate was fastened, as at my last visit; I knocked and
|
||
invoked Earnshaw from among the garden-beds; he unchained it, and I
|
||
entered. The fellow is as handsome a rustic as need be seen. I took
|
||
particular notice of him this time; but then he does his best
|
||
apparently to make the least of his advantages.
|
||
|
||
I asked if Mr. Heathcliff were at home? He answered, No; but he would
|
||
be in at dinner-time. It was eleven o’clock, and I announced my
|
||
intention of going in and waiting for him; at which he immediately
|
||
flung down his tools and accompanied me, in the office of watchdog, not
|
||
as a substitute for the host.
|
||
|
||
We entered together; Catherine was there, making herself useful in
|
||
preparing some vegetables for the approaching meal; she looked more
|
||
sulky and less spirited than when I had seen her first. She hardly
|
||
raised her eyes to notice me, and continued her employment with the
|
||
same disregard to common forms of politeness as before; never returning
|
||
my bow and good-morning by the slightest acknowledgment.
|
||
|
||
“She does not seem so amiable,” I thought, “as Mrs. Dean would persuade
|
||
me to believe. She’s a beauty, it is true; but not an angel.”
|
||
|
||
Earnshaw surlily bid her remove her things to the kitchen. “Remove them
|
||
yourself,” she said, pushing them from her as soon as she had done; and
|
||
retiring to a stool by the window, where she began to carve figures of
|
||
birds and beasts out of the turnip-parings in her lap. I approached
|
||
her, pretending to desire a view of the garden; and, as I fancied,
|
||
adroitly dropped Mrs. Dean’s note on to her knee, unnoticed by
|
||
Hareton—but she asked aloud, “What is that?” And chucked it off.
|
||
|
||
“A letter from your old acquaintance, the housekeeper at the Grange,” I
|
||
answered; annoyed at her exposing my kind deed, and fearful lest it
|
||
should be imagined a missive of my own. She would gladly have gathered
|
||
it up at this information, but Hareton beat her; he seized and put it
|
||
in his waistcoat, saying Mr. Heathcliff should look at it first.
|
||
Thereat, Catherine silently turned her face from us, and, very
|
||
stealthily, drew out her pocket-handkerchief and applied it to her
|
||
eyes; and her cousin, after struggling awhile to keep down his softer
|
||
feelings, pulled out the letter and flung it on the floor beside her,
|
||
as ungraciously as he could. Catherine caught and perused it eagerly;
|
||
then she put a few questions to me concerning the inmates, rational and
|
||
irrational, of her former home; and gazing towards the hills, murmured
|
||
in soliloquy:
|
||
|
||
“I should like to be riding Minny down there! I should like to be
|
||
climbing up there! Oh! I’m tired—I’m _stalled_, Hareton!” And she leant
|
||
her pretty head back against the sill, with half a yawn and half a
|
||
sigh, and lapsed into an aspect of abstracted sadness: neither caring
|
||
nor knowing whether we remarked her.
|
||
|
||
“Mrs. Heathcliff,” I said, after sitting some time mute, “you are not
|
||
aware that I am an acquaintance of yours? so intimate that I think it
|
||
strange you won’t come and speak to me. My housekeeper never wearies of
|
||
talking about and praising you; and she’ll be greatly disappointed if I
|
||
return with no news of or from you, except that you received her letter
|
||
and said nothing!”
|
||
|
||
She appeared to wonder at this speech, and asked,—
|
||
|
||
“Does Ellen like you?”
|
||
|
||
“Yes, very well,” I replied, hesitatingly.
|
||
|
||
“You must tell her,” she continued, “that I would answer her letter,
|
||
but I have no materials for writing: not even a book from which I might
|
||
tear a leaf.”
|
||
|
||
“No books!” I exclaimed. “How do you contrive to live here without
|
||
them? if I may take the liberty to inquire. Though provided with a
|
||
large library, I’m frequently very dull at the Grange; take my books
|
||
away, and I should be desperate!”
|
||
|
||
“I was always reading, when I had them,” said Catherine; “and Mr.
|
||
Heathcliff never reads; so he took it into his head to destroy my
|
||
books. I have not had a glimpse of one for weeks. Only once, I searched
|
||
through Joseph’s store of theology, to his great irritation; and once,
|
||
Hareton, I came upon a secret stock in your room—some Latin and Greek,
|
||
and some tales and poetry: all old friends. I brought the last here—and
|
||
you gathered them, as a magpie gathers silver spoons, for the mere love
|
||
of stealing! They are of no use to you; or else you concealed them in
|
||
the bad spirit that, as you cannot enjoy them, nobody else shall.
|
||
Perhaps _your_ envy counselled Mr. Heathcliff to rob me of my
|
||
treasures? But I’ve most of them written on my brain and printed in my
|
||
heart, and you cannot deprive me of those!”
|
||
|
||
Earnshaw blushed crimson when his cousin made this revelation of his
|
||
private literary accumulations, and stammered an indignant denial of
|
||
her accusations.
|
||
|
||
“Mr. Hareton is desirous of increasing his amount of knowledge,” I
|
||
said, coming to his rescue. “He is not _envious_, but _emulous_ of your
|
||
attainments. He’ll be a clever scholar in a few years.”
|
||
|
||
“And he wants me to sink into a dunce, meantime,” answered Catherine.
|
||
“Yes, I hear him trying to spell and read to himself, and pretty
|
||
blunders he makes! I wish you would repeat Chevy Chase as you did
|
||
yesterday: it was extremely funny. I heard you; and I heard you turning
|
||
over the dictionary to seek out the hard words, and then cursing
|
||
because you couldn’t read their explanations!”
|
||
|
||
The young man evidently thought it too bad that he should be laughed at
|
||
for his ignorance, and then laughed at for trying to remove it. I had a
|
||
similar notion; and, remembering Mrs. Dean’s anecdote of his first
|
||
attempt at enlightening the darkness in which he had been reared, I
|
||
observed,—“But, Mrs. Heathcliff, we have each had a commencement, and
|
||
each stumbled and tottered on the threshold; had our teachers scorned
|
||
instead of aiding us, we should stumble and totter yet.”
|
||
|
||
“Oh!” she replied, “I don’t wish to limit his acquirements: still, he
|
||
has no right to appropriate what is mine, and make it ridiculous to me
|
||
with his vile mistakes and mispronunciations! Those books, both prose
|
||
and verse, are consecrated to me by other associations; and I hate to
|
||
have them debased and profaned in his mouth! Besides, of all, he has
|
||
selected my favourite pieces that I love the most to repeat, as if out
|
||
of deliberate malice.”
|
||
|
||
Hareton’s chest heaved in silence a minute: he laboured under a severe
|
||
sense of mortification and wrath, which it was no easy task to
|
||
suppress. I rose, and, from a gentlemanly idea of relieving his
|
||
embarrassment, took up my station in the doorway, surveying the
|
||
external prospect as I stood. He followed my example, and left the
|
||
room; but presently reappeared, bearing half a dozen volumes in his
|
||
hands, which he threw into Catherine’s lap, exclaiming,—“Take them! I
|
||
never want to hear, or read, or think of them again!”
|
||
|
||
“I won’t have them now,” she answered. “I shall connect them with you,
|
||
and hate them.”
|
||
|
||
She opened one that had obviously been often turned over, and read a
|
||
portion in the drawling tone of a beginner; then laughed, and threw it
|
||
from her. “And listen,” she continued, provokingly, commencing a verse
|
||
of an old ballad in the same fashion.
|
||
|
||
But his self-love would endure no further torment: I heard, and not
|
||
altogether disapprovingly, a manual check given to her saucy tongue.
|
||
The little wretch had done her utmost to hurt her cousin’s sensitive
|
||
though uncultivated feelings, and a physical argument was the only mode
|
||
he had of balancing the account, and repaying its effects on the
|
||
inflictor. He afterwards gathered the books and hurled them on the
|
||
fire. I read in his countenance what anguish it was to offer that
|
||
sacrifice to spleen. I fancied that as they consumed, he recalled the
|
||
pleasure they had already imparted, and the triumph and ever-increasing
|
||
pleasure he had anticipated from them; and I fancied I guessed the
|
||
incitement to his secret studies also. He had been content with daily
|
||
labour and rough animal enjoyments, till Catherine crossed his path.
|
||
Shame at her scorn, and hope of her approval, were his first prompters
|
||
to higher pursuits; and instead of guarding him from one and winning
|
||
him to the other, his endeavours to raise himself had produced just the
|
||
contrary result.
|
||
|
||
“Yes, that’s all the good that such a brute as you can get from them!”
|
||
cried Catherine, sucking her damaged lip, and watching the
|
||
conflagration with indignant eyes.
|
||
|
||
“You’d _better_ hold your tongue, now,” he answered fiercely.
|
||
|
||
And his agitation precluded further speech; he advanced hastily to the
|
||
entrance, where I made way for him to pass. But ere he had crossed the
|
||
door-stones, Mr. Heathcliff, coming up the causeway, encountered him,
|
||
and laying hold of his shoulder asked,—“What’s to do now, my lad?”
|
||
|
||
“Naught, naught,” he said, and broke away to enjoy his grief and anger
|
||
in solitude.
|
||
|
||
Heathcliff gazed after him, and sighed.
|
||
|
||
“It will be odd if I thwart myself,” he muttered, unconscious that I
|
||
was behind him. “But when I look for his father in his face, I find
|
||
_her_ every day more! How the devil is he so like? I can hardly bear to
|
||
see him.”
|
||
|
||
He bent his eyes to the ground, and walked moodily in. There was a
|
||
restless, anxious expression in his countenance, I had never remarked
|
||
there before; and he looked sparer in person. His daughter-in-law, on
|
||
perceiving him through the window, immediately escaped to the kitchen,
|
||
so that I remained alone.
|
||
|
||
“I’m glad to see you out of doors again, Mr. Lockwood,” he said, in
|
||
reply to my greeting; “from selfish motives partly: I don’t think I
|
||
could readily supply your loss in this desolation. I’ve wondered more
|
||
than once what brought you here.”
|
||
|
||
“An idle whim, I fear, sir,” was my answer; “or else an idle whim is
|
||
going to spirit me away. I shall set out for London next week; and I
|
||
must give you warning that I feel no disposition to retain Thrushcross
|
||
Grange beyond the twelve months I agreed to rent it. I believe I shall
|
||
not live there any more.”
|
||
|
||
“Oh, indeed; you’re tired of being banished from the world, are you?”
|
||
he said. “But if you be coming to plead off paying for a place you
|
||
won’t occupy, your journey is useless: I never relent in exacting my
|
||
due from any one.”
|
||
|
||
“I’m coming to plead off nothing about it,” I exclaimed, considerably
|
||
irritated. “Should you wish it, I’ll settle with you now,” and I drew
|
||
my note-book from my pocket.
|
||
|
||
“No, no,” he replied, coolly; “you’ll leave sufficient behind to cover
|
||
your debts, if you fail to return: I’m not in such a hurry. Sit down
|
||
and take your dinner with us; a guest that is safe from repeating his
|
||
visit can generally be made welcome. Catherine! bring the things in:
|
||
where are you?”
|
||
|
||
Catherine reappeared, bearing a tray of knives and forks.
|
||
|
||
“You may get your dinner with Joseph,” muttered Heathcliff, aside, “and
|
||
remain in the kitchen till he is gone.”
|
||
|
||
She obeyed his directions very punctually: perhaps she had no
|
||
temptation to transgress. Living among clowns and misanthropists, she
|
||
probably cannot appreciate a better class of people when she meets
|
||
them.
|
||
|
||
With Mr. Heathcliff, grim and saturnine, on the one hand, and Hareton,
|
||
absolutely dumb, on the other, I made a somewhat cheerless meal, and
|
||
bade adieu early. I would have departed by the back way, to get a last
|
||
glimpse of Catherine and annoy old Joseph; but Hareton received orders
|
||
to lead up my horse, and my host himself escorted me to the door, so I
|
||
could not fulfil my wish.
|
||
|
||
“How dreary life gets over in that house!” I reflected, while riding
|
||
down the road. “What a realisation of something more romantic than a
|
||
fairy tale it would have been for Mrs. Linton Heathcliff, had she and I
|
||
struck up an attachment, as her good nurse desired, and migrated
|
||
together into the stirring atmosphere of the town!”
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXXII
|
||
|
||
|
||
1802.—This September I was invited to devastate the moors of a friend
|
||
in the north, and on my journey to his abode, I unexpectedly came
|
||
within fifteen miles of Gimmerton. The ostler at a roadside
|
||
public-house was holding a pail of water to refresh my horses, when a
|
||
cart of very green oats, newly reaped, passed by, and he
|
||
remarked,—“Yon’s frough Gimmerton, nah! They’re allas three wick’ after
|
||
other folk wi’ ther harvest.”
|
||
|
||
“Gimmerton?” I repeated—my residence in that locality had already grown
|
||
dim and dreamy. “Ah! I know. How far is it from this?”
|
||
|
||
“Happen fourteen mile o’er th’ hills; and a rough road,” he answered.
|
||
|
||
A sudden impulse seized me to visit Thrushcross Grange. It was scarcely
|
||
noon, and I conceived that I might as well pass the night under my own
|
||
roof as in an inn. Besides, I could spare a day easily to arrange
|
||
matters with my landlord, and thus save myself the trouble of invading
|
||
the neighbourhood again. Having rested awhile, I directed my servant to
|
||
inquire the way to the village; and, with great fatigue to our beasts,
|
||
we managed the distance in some three hours.
|
||
|
||
I left him there, and proceeded down the valley alone. The grey church
|
||
looked greyer, and the lonely churchyard lonelier. I distinguished a
|
||
moor-sheep cropping the short turf on the graves. It was sweet, warm
|
||
weather—too warm for travelling; but the heat did not hinder me from
|
||
enjoying the delightful scenery above and below: had I seen it nearer
|
||
August, I’m sure it would have tempted me to waste a month among its
|
||
solitudes. In winter nothing more dreary, in summer nothing more
|
||
divine, than those glens shut in by hills, and those bluff, bold swells
|
||
of heath.
|
||
|
||
I reached the Grange before sunset, and knocked for admittance; but the
|
||
family had retreated into the back premises, I judged, by one thin,
|
||
blue wreath, curling from the kitchen chimney, and they did not hear. I
|
||
rode into the court. Under the porch, a girl of nine or ten sat
|
||
knitting, and an old woman reclined on the housesteps, smoking a
|
||
meditative pipe.
|
||
|
||
“Is Mrs. Dean within?” I demanded of the dame.
|
||
|
||
“Mistress Dean? Nay!” she answered, “she doesn’t bide here: shoo’s up
|
||
at th’ Heights.”
|
||
|
||
“Are you the housekeeper, then?” I continued.
|
||
|
||
“Eea, Aw keep th’ hause,” she replied.
|
||
|
||
“Well, I’m Mr. Lockwood, the master. Are there any rooms to lodge me
|
||
in, I wonder? I wish to stay all night.”
|
||
|
||
“T’ maister!” she cried in astonishment. “Whet, whoiver knew yah wur
|
||
coming? Yah sud ha’ send word. They’s nowt norther dry nor mensful
|
||
abaht t’ place: nowt there isn’t!”
|
||
|
||
She threw down her pipe and bustled in, the girl followed, and I
|
||
entered too; soon perceiving that her report was true, and, moreover,
|
||
that I had almost upset her wits by my unwelcome apparition, I bade her
|
||
be composed. I would go out for a walk; and, meantime she must try to
|
||
prepare a corner of a sitting-room for me to sup in, and a bedroom to
|
||
sleep in. No sweeping and dusting, only good fire and dry sheets were
|
||
necessary. She seemed willing to do her best; though she thrust the
|
||
hearth-brush into the grates in mistake for the poker, and
|
||
malappropriated several other articles of her craft: but I retired,
|
||
confiding in her energy for a resting-place against my return.
|
||
Wuthering Heights was the goal of my proposed excursion. An
|
||
after-thought brought me back, when I had quitted the court.
|
||
|
||
“All well at the Heights?” I inquired of the woman.
|
||
|
||
“Eea, f’r owt ee knaw!” she answered, skurrying away with a pan of hot
|
||
cinders.
|
||
|
||
I would have asked why Mrs. Dean had deserted the Grange, but it was
|
||
impossible to delay her at such a crisis, so I turned away and made my
|
||
exit, rambling leisurely along, with the glow of a sinking sun behind,
|
||
and the mild glory of a rising moon in front—one fading, and the other
|
||
brightening—as I quitted the park, and climbed the stony by-road
|
||
branching off to Mr. Heathcliff’s dwelling. Before I arrived in sight
|
||
of it, all that remained of day was a beamless amber light along the
|
||
west: but I could see every pebble on the path, and every blade of
|
||
grass, by that splendid moon. I had neither to climb the gate nor to
|
||
knock—it yielded to my hand. That is an improvement, I thought. And I
|
||
noticed another, by the aid of my nostrils; a fragrance of stocks and
|
||
wallflowers wafted on the air from amongst the homely fruit-trees.
|
||
|
||
Both doors and lattices were open; and yet, as is usually the case in a
|
||
coal-district, a fine red fire illumined the chimney: the comfort which
|
||
the eye derives from it renders the extra heat endurable. But the house
|
||
of Wuthering Heights is so large that the inmates have plenty of space
|
||
for withdrawing out of its influence; and accordingly what inmates
|
||
there were had stationed themselves not far from one of the windows. I
|
||
could both see them and hear them talk before I entered, and looked and
|
||
listened in consequence; being moved thereto by a mingled sense of
|
||
curiosity and envy, that grew as I lingered.
|
||
|
||
“Con-_trary_!” said a voice as sweet as a silver bell. “That for the
|
||
third time, you dunce! I’m not going to tell you again. Recollect, or
|
||
I’ll pull your hair!”
|
||
|
||
“Contrary, then,” answered another, in deep but softened tones. “And
|
||
now, kiss me, for minding so well.”
|
||
|
||
“No, read it over first correctly, without a single mistake.”
|
||
|
||
The male speaker began to read: he was a young man, respectably dressed
|
||
and seated at a table, having a book before him. His handsome features
|
||
glowed with pleasure, and his eyes kept impatiently wandering from the
|
||
page to a small white hand over his shoulder, which recalled him by a
|
||
smart slap on the cheek, whenever its owner detected such signs of
|
||
inattention. Its owner stood behind; her light, shining ringlets
|
||
blending, at intervals, with his brown locks, as she bent to
|
||
superintend his studies; and her face—it was lucky he could not see her
|
||
face, or he would never have been so steady. I could; and I bit my lip
|
||
in spite, at having thrown away the chance I might have had of doing
|
||
something besides staring at its smiting beauty.
|
||
|
||
The task was done, not free from further blunders; but the pupil
|
||
claimed a reward, and received at least five kisses; which, however, he
|
||
generously returned. Then they came to the door, and from their
|
||
conversation I judged they were about to issue out and have a walk on
|
||
the moors. I supposed I should be condemned in Hareton Earnshaw’s
|
||
heart, if not by his mouth, to the lowest pit in the infernal regions
|
||
if I showed my unfortunate person in his neighbourhood then; and
|
||
feeling very mean and malignant, I skulked round to seek refuge in the
|
||
kitchen. There was unobstructed admittance on that side also; and at
|
||
the door sat my old friend Nelly Dean, sewing and singing a song; which
|
||
was often interrupted from within by harsh words of scorn and
|
||
intolerance, uttered in far from musical accents.
|
||
|
||
“I’d rayther, by th’ haulf, hev’ ’em swearing i’ my lugs fro’h morn to
|
||
neeght, nor hearken ye hahsiver!” said the tenant of the kitchen, in
|
||
answer to an unheard speech of Nelly’s. “It’s a blazing shame, that I
|
||
cannot oppen t’ blessed Book, but yah set up them glories to sattan,
|
||
and all t’ flaysome wickednesses that iver were born into th’ warld!
|
||
Oh! ye’re a raight nowt; and shoo’s another; and that poor lad ’ll be
|
||
lost atween ye. Poor lad!” he added, with a groan; “he’s witched: I’m
|
||
sartin on’t. Oh, Lord, judge ’em, for there’s norther law nor justice
|
||
among wer rullers!”
|
||
|
||
“No! or we should be sitting in flaming fagots, I suppose,” retorted
|
||
the singer. “But wisht, old man, and read your Bible like a Christian,
|
||
and never mind me. This is ‘Fairy Annie’s Wedding’—a bonny tune—it goes
|
||
to a dance.”
|
||
|
||
Mrs. Dean was about to recommence, when I advanced; and recognising me
|
||
directly, she jumped to her feet, crying—“Why, bless you, Mr. Lockwood!
|
||
How could you think of returning in this way? All’s shut up at
|
||
Thrushcross Grange. You should have given us notice!”
|
||
|
||
“I’ve arranged to be accommodated there, for as long as I shall stay,”
|
||
I answered. “I depart again to-morrow. And how are you transplanted
|
||
here, Mrs. Dean? tell me that.”
|
||
|
||
“Zillah left, and Mr. Heathcliff wished me to come, soon after you went
|
||
to London, and stay till you returned. But, step in, pray! Have you
|
||
walked from Gimmerton this evening?”
|
||
|
||
“From the Grange,” I replied; “and while they make me lodging room
|
||
there, I want to finish my business with your master; because I don’t
|
||
think of having another opportunity in a hurry.”
|
||
|
||
“What business, sir?” said Nelly, conducting me into the house. “He’s
|
||
gone out at present, and won’t return soon.”
|
||
|
||
“About the rent,” I answered.
|
||
|
||
“Oh! then it is with Mrs. Heathcliff you must settle,” she observed;
|
||
“or rather with me. She has not learnt to manage her affairs yet, and I
|
||
act for her: there’s nobody else.”
|
||
|
||
I looked surprised.
|
||
|
||
“Ah! you have not heard of Heathcliff’s death, I see,” she continued.
|
||
|
||
“Heathcliff dead!” I exclaimed, astonished. “How long ago?”
|
||
|
||
“Three months since: but sit down, and let me take your hat, and I’ll
|
||
tell you all about it. Stop, you have had nothing to eat, have you?”
|
||
|
||
“I want nothing: I have ordered supper at home. You sit down too. I
|
||
never dreamt of his dying! Let me hear how it came to pass. You say you
|
||
don’t expect them back for some time—the young people?”
|
||
|
||
“No—I have to scold them every evening for their late rambles: but they
|
||
don’t care for me. At least, have a drink of our old ale; it will do
|
||
you good: you seem weary.”
|
||
|
||
She hastened to fetch it before I could refuse, and I heard Joseph
|
||
asking whether “it warn’t a crying scandal that she should have
|
||
followers at her time of life? And then, to get them jocks out o’ t’
|
||
maister’s cellar! He fair shaamed to ’bide still and see it.”
|
||
|
||
She did not stay to retaliate, but re-entered in a minute, bearing a
|
||
reaming silver pint, whose contents I lauded with becoming earnestness.
|
||
And afterwards she furnished me with the sequel of Heathcliff’s
|
||
history. He had a “queer” end, as she expressed it.
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
|
||
I was summoned to Wuthering Heights, within a fortnight of your leaving
|
||
us, she said; and I obeyed joyfully, for Catherine’s sake. My first
|
||
interview with her grieved and shocked me: she had altered so much
|
||
since our separation. Mr. Heathcliff did not explain his reasons for
|
||
taking a new mind about my coming here; he only told me he wanted me,
|
||
and he was tired of seeing Catherine: I must make the little parlour my
|
||
sitting-room, and keep her with me. It was enough if he were obliged to
|
||
see her once or twice a day. She seemed pleased at this arrangement;
|
||
and, by degrees, I smuggled over a great number of books, and other
|
||
articles, that had formed her amusement at the Grange; and flattered
|
||
myself we should get on in tolerable comfort. The delusion did not last
|
||
long. Catherine, contented at first, in a brief space grew irritable
|
||
and restless. For one thing, she was forbidden to move out of the
|
||
garden, and it fretted her sadly to be confined to its narrow bounds as
|
||
spring drew on; for another, in following the house, I was forced to
|
||
quit her frequently, and she complained of loneliness: she preferred
|
||
quarrelling with Joseph in the kitchen to sitting at peace in her
|
||
solitude. I did not mind their skirmishes: but Hareton was often
|
||
obliged to seek the kitchen also, when the master wanted to have the
|
||
house to himself; and though in the beginning she either left it at his
|
||
approach, or quietly joined in my occupations, and shunned remarking or
|
||
addressing him—and though he was always as sullen and silent as
|
||
possible—after a while, she changed her behaviour, and became incapable
|
||
of letting him alone: talking at him; commenting on his stupidity and
|
||
idleness; expressing her wonder how he could endure the life he
|
||
lived—how he could sit a whole evening staring into the fire, and
|
||
dozing.
|
||
|
||
“He’s just like a dog, is he not, Ellen?” she once observed, “or a
|
||
cart-horse? He does his work, eats his food, and sleeps eternally! What
|
||
a blank, dreary mind he must have! Do you ever dream, Hareton? And, if
|
||
you do, what is it about? But you can’t speak to me!”
|
||
|
||
Then she looked at him; but he would neither open his mouth nor look
|
||
again.
|
||
|
||
“He’s, perhaps, dreaming now,” she continued. “He twitched his shoulder
|
||
as Juno twitches hers. Ask him, Ellen.”
|
||
|
||
“Mr. Hareton will ask the master to send you upstairs, if you don’t
|
||
behave!” I said. He had not only twitched his shoulder but clenched his
|
||
fist, as if tempted to use it.
|
||
|
||
“I know why Hareton never speaks, when I am in the kitchen,” she
|
||
exclaimed, on another occasion. “He is afraid I shall laugh at him.
|
||
Ellen, what do you think? He began to teach himself to read once; and,
|
||
because I laughed, he burned his books, and dropped it: was he not a
|
||
fool?”
|
||
|
||
“Were not you naughty?” I said; “answer me that.”
|
||
|
||
“Perhaps I was,” she went on; “but I did not expect him to be so silly.
|
||
Hareton, if I gave you a book, would you take it now? I’ll try!”
|
||
|
||
She placed one she had been perusing on his hand; he flung it off, and
|
||
muttered, if she did not give over, he would break her neck.
|
||
|
||
“Well, I shall put it here,” she said, “in the table-drawer; and I’m
|
||
going to bed.”
|
||
|
||
Then she whispered me to watch whether he touched it, and departed. But
|
||
he would not come near it; and so I informed her in the morning, to her
|
||
great disappointment. I saw she was sorry for his persevering sulkiness
|
||
and indolence: her conscience reproved her for frightening him off
|
||
improving himself: she had done it effectually. But her ingenuity was
|
||
at work to remedy the injury: while I ironed, or pursued other such
|
||
stationary employments as I could not well do in the parlour, she would
|
||
bring some pleasant volume and read it aloud to me. When Hareton was
|
||
there, she generally paused in an interesting part, and left the book
|
||
lying about: that she did repeatedly; but he was as obstinate as a
|
||
mule, and, instead of snatching at her bait, in wet weather he took to
|
||
smoking with Joseph; and they sat like automatons, one on each side of
|
||
the fire, the elder happily too deaf to understand her wicked nonsense,
|
||
as he would have called it, the younger doing his best to seem to
|
||
disregard it. On fine evenings the latter followed his shooting
|
||
expeditions, and Catherine yawned and sighed, and teased me to talk to
|
||
her, and ran off into the court or garden the moment I began; and, as a
|
||
last resource, cried, and said she was tired of living: her life was
|
||
useless.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Heathcliff, who grew more and more disinclined to society, had
|
||
almost banished Earnshaw from his apartment. Owing to an accident at
|
||
the commencement of March, he became for some days a fixture in the
|
||
kitchen. His gun burst while out on the hills by himself; a splinter
|
||
cut his arm, and he lost a good deal of blood before he could reach
|
||
home. The consequence was that, perforce, he was condemned to the
|
||
fireside and tranquillity, till he made it up again. It suited
|
||
Catherine to have him there: at any rate, it made her hate her room
|
||
upstairs more than ever: and she would compel me to find out business
|
||
below, that she might accompany me.
|
||
|
||
On Easter Monday, Joseph went to Gimmerton fair with some cattle; and,
|
||
in the afternoon, I was busy getting up linen in the kitchen. Earnshaw
|
||
sat, morose as usual, at the chimney corner, and my little mistress was
|
||
beguiling an idle hour with drawing pictures on the window-panes,
|
||
varying her amusement by smothered bursts of songs, and whispered
|
||
ejaculations, and quick glances of annoyance and impatience in the
|
||
direction of her cousin, who steadfastly smoked, and looked into the
|
||
grate. At a notice that I could do with her no longer intercepting my
|
||
light, she removed to the hearthstone. I bestowed little attention on
|
||
her proceedings, but, presently, I heard her begin—“I’ve found out,
|
||
Hareton, that I want—that I’m glad—that I should like you to be my
|
||
cousin now, if you had not grown so cross to me, and so rough.”
|
||
|
||
Hareton returned no answer.
|
||
|
||
“Hareton, Hareton, Hareton! do you hear?” she continued.
|
||
|
||
“Get off wi’ ye!” he growled, with uncompromising gruffness.
|
||
|
||
“Let me take that pipe,” she said, cautiously advancing her hand and
|
||
abstracting it from his mouth.
|
||
|
||
Before he could attempt to recover it, it was broken, and behind the
|
||
fire. He swore at her and seized another.
|
||
|
||
“Stop,” she cried, “you must listen to me first; and I can’t speak
|
||
while those clouds are floating in my face.”
|
||
|
||
“Will you go to the devil!” he exclaimed, ferociously, “and let me be!”
|
||
|
||
“No,” she persisted, “I won’t: I can’t tell what to do to make you talk
|
||
to me; and you are determined not to understand. When I call you
|
||
stupid, I don’t mean anything: I don’t mean that I despise you. Come,
|
||
you shall take notice of me, Hareton: you are my cousin, and you shall
|
||
own me.”
|
||
|
||
“I shall have naught to do wi’ you and your mucky pride, and your
|
||
damned mocking tricks!” he answered. “I’ll go to hell, body and soul,
|
||
before I look sideways after you again. Side out o’ t’ gate, now, this
|
||
minute!”
|
||
|
||
Catherine frowned, and retreated to the window-seat chewing her lip,
|
||
and endeavouring, by humming an eccentric tune, to conceal a growing
|
||
tendency to sob.
|
||
|
||
“You should be friends with your cousin, Mr. Hareton,” I interrupted,
|
||
“since she repents of her sauciness. It would do you a great deal of
|
||
good: it would make you another man to have her for a companion.”
|
||
|
||
“A companion!” he cried; “when she hates me, and does not think me fit
|
||
to wipe her shoon! Nay, if it made me a king, I’d not be scorned for
|
||
seeking her good-will any more.”
|
||
|
||
“It is not I who hate you, it is you who hate me!” wept Cathy, no
|
||
longer disguising her trouble. “You hate me as much as Mr. Heathcliff
|
||
does, and more.”
|
||
|
||
“You’re a damned liar,” began Earnshaw: “why have I made him angry, by
|
||
taking your part, then, a hundred times? and that when you sneered at
|
||
and despised me, and—Go on plaguing me, and I’ll step in yonder, and
|
||
say you worried me out of the kitchen!”
|
||
|
||
“I didn’t know you took my part,” she answered, drying her eyes; “and I
|
||
was miserable and bitter at everybody; but now I thank you, and beg you
|
||
to forgive me: what can I do besides?”
|
||
|
||
She returned to the hearth, and frankly extended her hand. He blackened
|
||
and scowled like a thunder-cloud, and kept his fists resolutely
|
||
clenched, and his gaze fixed on the ground. Catherine, by instinct,
|
||
must have divined it was obdurate perversity, and not dislike, that
|
||
prompted this dogged conduct; for, after remaining an instant
|
||
undecided, she stooped and impressed on his cheek a gentle kiss. The
|
||
little rogue thought I had not seen her, and, drawing back, she took
|
||
her former station by the window, quite demurely. I shook my head
|
||
reprovingly, and then she blushed and whispered—“Well! what should I
|
||
have done, Ellen? He wouldn’t shake hands, and he wouldn’t look: I must
|
||
show him some way that I like him—that I want to be friends.”
|
||
|
||
Whether the kiss convinced Hareton, I cannot tell: he was very careful,
|
||
for some minutes, that his face should not be seen, and when he did
|
||
raise it, he was sadly puzzled where to turn his eyes.
|
||
|
||
Catherine employed herself in wrapping a handsome book neatly in white
|
||
paper, and having tied it with a bit of ribbon, and addressed it to
|
||
“Mr. Hareton Earnshaw,” she desired me to be her ambassadress, and
|
||
convey the present to its destined recipient.
|
||
|
||
“And tell him, if he’ll take it, I’ll come and teach him to read it
|
||
right,” she said; “and, if he refuse it, I’ll go upstairs, and never
|
||
tease him again.”
|
||
|
||
I carried it, and repeated the message; anxiously watched by my
|
||
employer. Hareton would not open his fingers, so I laid it on his knee.
|
||
He did not strike it off, either. I returned to my work. Catherine
|
||
leaned her head and arms on the table, till she heard the slight rustle
|
||
of the covering being removed; then she stole away, and quietly seated
|
||
herself beside her cousin. He trembled, and his face glowed: all his
|
||
rudeness and all his surly harshness had deserted him: he could not
|
||
summon courage, at first, to utter a syllable in reply to her
|
||
questioning look, and her murmured petition.
|
||
|
||
“Say you forgive me, Hareton, do. You can make me so happy by speaking
|
||
that little word.”
|
||
|
||
He muttered something inaudible.
|
||
|
||
“And you’ll be my friend?” added Catherine, interrogatively.
|
||
|
||
“Nay, you’ll be ashamed of me every day of your life,” he answered;
|
||
“and the more ashamed, the more you know me; and I cannot bide it.”
|
||
|
||
“So you won’t be my friend?” she said, smiling as sweet as honey, and
|
||
creeping close up.
|
||
|
||
I overheard no further distinguishable talk, but, on looking round
|
||
again, I perceived two such radiant countenances bent over the page of
|
||
the accepted book, that I did not doubt the treaty had been ratified on
|
||
both sides; and the enemies were, thenceforth, sworn allies.
|
||
|
||
The work they studied was full of costly pictures; and those and their
|
||
position had charm enough to keep them unmoved till Joseph came home.
|
||
He, poor man, was perfectly aghast at the spectacle of Catherine seated
|
||
on the same bench with Hareton Earnshaw, leaning her hand on his
|
||
shoulder; and confounded at his favourite’s endurance of her proximity:
|
||
it affected him too deeply to allow an observation on the subject that
|
||
night. His emotion was only revealed by the immense sighs he drew, as
|
||
he solemnly spread his large Bible on the table, and overlaid it with
|
||
dirty bank-notes from his pocket-book, the produce of the day’s
|
||
transactions. At length he summoned Hareton from his seat.
|
||
|
||
“Tak’ these in to t’ maister, lad,” he said, “and bide there. I’s gang
|
||
up to my own rahm. This hoile’s neither mensful nor seemly for us: we
|
||
mun side out and seearch another.”
|
||
|
||
“Come, Catherine,” I said, “we must ‘side out’ too: I’ve done my
|
||
ironing. Are you ready to go?”
|
||
|
||
“It is not eight o’clock!” she answered, rising unwillingly. “Hareton,
|
||
I’ll leave this book upon the chimney-piece, and I’ll bring some more
|
||
to-morrow.”
|
||
|
||
“Ony books that yah leave, I shall tak’ into th’ hahse,” said Joseph,
|
||
“and it’ll be mitch if yah find ’em agean; soa, yah may plase yerseln!”
|
||
|
||
Cathy threatened that his library should pay for hers; and, smiling as
|
||
she passed Hareton, went singing upstairs: lighter of heart, I venture
|
||
to say, than ever she had been under that roof before; except, perhaps,
|
||
during her earliest visits to Linton.
|
||
|
||
The intimacy thus commenced grew rapidly; though it encountered
|
||
temporary interruptions. Earnshaw was not to be civilized with a wish,
|
||
and my young lady was no philosopher, and no paragon of patience; but
|
||
both their minds tending to the same point—one loving and desiring to
|
||
esteem, and the other loving and desiring to be esteemed—they contrived
|
||
in the end to reach it.
|
||
|
||
You see, Mr. Lockwood, it was easy enough to win Mrs. Heathcliff’s
|
||
heart. But now, I’m glad you did not try. The crown of all my wishes
|
||
will be the union of those two. I shall envy no one on their wedding
|
||
day: there won’t be a happier woman than myself in England!
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXXIII
|
||
|
||
|
||
On the morrow of that Monday, Earnshaw being still unable to follow his
|
||
ordinary employments, and therefore remaining about the house, I
|
||
speedily found it would be impracticable to retain my charge beside me,
|
||
as heretofore. She got downstairs before me, and out into the garden,
|
||
where she had seen her cousin performing some easy work; and when I
|
||
went to bid them come to breakfast, I saw she had persuaded him to
|
||
clear a large space of ground from currant and gooseberry bushes, and
|
||
they were busy planning together an importation of plants from the
|
||
Grange.
|
||
|
||
I was terrified at the devastation which had been accomplished in a
|
||
brief half-hour; the black-currant trees were the apple of Joseph’s
|
||
eye, and she had just fixed her choice of a flower-bed in the midst of
|
||
them.
|
||
|
||
“There! That will be all shown to the master,” I exclaimed, “the minute
|
||
it is discovered. And what excuse have you to offer for taking such
|
||
liberties with the garden? We shall have a fine explosion on the head
|
||
of it: see if we don’t! Mr. Hareton, I wonder you should have no more
|
||
wit than to go and make that mess at her bidding!”
|
||
|
||
“I’d forgotten they were Joseph’s,” answered Earnshaw, rather puzzled;
|
||
“but I’ll tell him I did it.”
|
||
|
||
We always ate our meals with Mr. Heathcliff. I held the mistress’s post
|
||
in making tea and carving; so I was indispensable at table. Catherine
|
||
usually sat by me, but to-day she stole nearer to Hareton; and I
|
||
presently saw she would have no more discretion in her friendship than
|
||
she had in her hostility.
|
||
|
||
“Now, mind you don’t talk with and notice your cousin too much,” were
|
||
my whispered instructions as we entered the room. “It will certainly
|
||
annoy Mr. Heathcliff, and he’ll be mad at you both.”
|
||
|
||
“I’m not going to,” she answered.
|
||
|
||
The minute after, she had sidled to him, and was sticking primroses in
|
||
his plate of porridge.
|
||
|
||
He dared not speak to her there: he dared hardly look; and yet she went
|
||
on teasing, till he was twice on the point of being provoked to laugh.
|
||
I frowned, and then she glanced towards the master: whose mind was
|
||
occupied on other subjects than his company, as his countenance
|
||
evinced; and she grew serious for an instant, scrutinizing him with
|
||
deep gravity. Afterwards she turned, and recommenced her nonsense; at
|
||
last, Hareton uttered a smothered laugh. Mr. Heathcliff started; his
|
||
eye rapidly surveyed our faces. Catherine met it with her accustomed
|
||
look of nervousness and yet defiance, which he abhorred.
|
||
|
||
“It is well you are out of my reach,” he exclaimed. “What fiend
|
||
possesses you to stare back at me, continually, with those infernal
|
||
eyes? Down with them! and don’t remind me of your existence again. I
|
||
thought I had cured you of laughing.”
|
||
|
||
“It was me,” muttered Hareton.
|
||
|
||
“What do you say?” demanded the master.
|
||
|
||
Hareton looked at his plate, and did not repeat the confession. Mr.
|
||
Heathcliff looked at him a bit, and then silently resumed his breakfast
|
||
and his interrupted musing. We had nearly finished, and the two young
|
||
people prudently shifted wider asunder, so I anticipated no further
|
||
disturbance during that sitting: when Joseph appeared at the door,
|
||
revealing by his quivering lip and furious eyes that the outrage
|
||
committed on his precious shrubs was detected. He must have seen Cathy
|
||
and her cousin about the spot before he examined it, for while his jaws
|
||
worked like those of a cow chewing its cud, and rendered his speech
|
||
difficult to understand, he began:—
|
||
|
||
“I mun hev’ my wage, and I mun goa! I _hed_ aimed to dee wheare I’d
|
||
sarved fur sixty year; and I thowt I’d lug my books up into t’ garret,
|
||
and all my bits o’ stuff, and they sud hev’ t’ kitchen to theirseln;
|
||
for t’ sake o’ quietness. It wur hard to gie up my awn hearthstun, but
|
||
I thowt I _could_ do that! But nah, shoo’s taan my garden fro’ me, and
|
||
by th’ heart, maister, I cannot stand it! Yah may bend to th’ yoak an
|
||
ye will—I noan used to ’t, and an old man doesn’t sooin get used to new
|
||
barthens. I’d rayther arn my bite an’ my sup wi’ a hammer in th’ road!”
|
||
|
||
“Now, now, idiot!” interrupted Heathcliff, “cut it short! What’s your
|
||
grievance? I’ll interfere in no quarrels between you and Nelly. She may
|
||
thrust you into the coal-hole for anything I care.”
|
||
|
||
“It’s noan Nelly!” answered Joseph. “I sudn’t shift for Nelly—nasty ill
|
||
nowt as shoo is. Thank God! _shoo_ cannot stale t’ sowl o’ nob’dy! Shoo
|
||
wer niver soa handsome, but what a body mud look at her ’bout winking.
|
||
It’s yon flaysome, graceless quean, that’s witched our lad, wi’ her
|
||
bold een and her forrard ways—till—Nay! it fair brusts my heart! He’s
|
||
forgotten all I’ve done for him, and made on him, and goan and riven up
|
||
a whole row o’ t’ grandest currant-trees i’ t’ garden!” and here he
|
||
lamented outright; unmanned by a sense of his bitter injuries, and
|
||
Earnshaw’s ingratitude and dangerous condition.
|
||
|
||
“Is the fool drunk?” asked Mr. Heathcliff. “Hareton, is it you he’s
|
||
finding fault with?”
|
||
|
||
“I’ve pulled up two or three bushes,” replied the young man; “but I’m
|
||
going to set ’em again.”
|
||
|
||
“And why have you pulled them up?” said the master.
|
||
|
||
Catherine wisely put in her tongue.
|
||
|
||
“We wanted to plant some flowers there,” she cried. “I’m the only
|
||
person to blame, for I wished him to do it.”
|
||
|
||
“And who the devil gave _you_ leave to touch a stick about the place?”
|
||
demanded her father-in-law, much surprised. “And who ordered _you_ to
|
||
obey her?” he added, turning to Hareton.
|
||
|
||
The latter was speechless; his cousin replied—“You shouldn’t grudge a
|
||
few yards of earth for me to ornament, when you have taken all my
|
||
land!”
|
||
|
||
“Your land, insolent slut! You never had any,” said Heathcliff.
|
||
|
||
“And my money,” she continued; returning his angry glare, and meantime
|
||
biting a piece of crust, the remnant of her breakfast.
|
||
|
||
“Silence!” he exclaimed. “Get done, and begone!”
|
||
|
||
“And Hareton’s land, and his money,” pursued the reckless thing.
|
||
“Hareton and I are friends now; and I shall tell him all about you!”
|
||
|
||
The master seemed confounded a moment: he grew pale, and rose up,
|
||
eyeing her all the while, with an expression of mortal hate.
|
||
|
||
“If you strike me, Hareton will strike you,” she said; “so you may as
|
||
well sit down.”
|
||
|
||
“If Hareton does not turn you out of the room, I’ll strike him to
|
||
hell,” thundered Heathcliff. “Damnable witch! dare you pretend to rouse
|
||
him against me? Off with her! Do you hear? Fling her into the kitchen!
|
||
I’ll kill her, Ellen Dean, if you let her come into my sight again!”
|
||
|
||
Hareton tried, under his breath, to persuade her to go.
|
||
|
||
“Drag her away!” he cried, savagely. “Are you staying to talk?” And he
|
||
approached to execute his own command.
|
||
|
||
“He’ll not obey you, wicked man, any more,” said Catherine; “and he’ll
|
||
soon detest you as much as I do.”
|
||
|
||
“Wisht! wisht!” muttered the young man, reproachfully; “I will not hear
|
||
you speak so to him. Have done.”
|
||
|
||
“But you won’t let him strike me?” she cried.
|
||
|
||
“Come, then,” he whispered earnestly.
|
||
|
||
It was too late: Heathcliff had caught hold of her.
|
||
|
||
“Now, _you_ go!” he said to Earnshaw. “Accursed witch! this time she
|
||
has provoked me when I could not bear it; and I’ll make her repent it
|
||
for ever!”
|
||
|
||
He had his hand in her hair; Hareton attempted to release her locks,
|
||
entreating him not to hurt her that once. Heathcliff’s black eyes
|
||
flashed; he seemed ready to tear Catherine in pieces, and I was just
|
||
worked up to risk coming to the rescue, when of a sudden his fingers
|
||
relaxed; he shifted his grasp from her head to her arm, and gazed
|
||
intently in her face. Then he drew his hand over his eyes, stood a
|
||
moment to collect himself apparently, and turning anew to Catherine,
|
||
said, with assumed calmness—“You must learn to avoid putting me in a
|
||
passion, or I shall really murder you some time! Go with Mrs. Dean, and
|
||
keep with her; and confine your insolence to her ears. As to Hareton
|
||
Earnshaw, if I see him listen to you, I’ll send him seeking his bread
|
||
where he can get it! Your love will make him an outcast and a beggar.
|
||
Nelly, take her; and leave me, all of you! Leave me!”
|
||
|
||
I led my young lady out: she was too glad of her escape to resist; the
|
||
other followed, and Mr. Heathcliff had the room to himself till dinner.
|
||
I had counselled Catherine to dine upstairs; but, as soon as he
|
||
perceived her vacant seat, he sent me to call her. He spoke to none of
|
||
us, ate very little, and went out directly afterwards, intimating that
|
||
he should not return before evening.
|
||
|
||
The two new friends established themselves in the house during his
|
||
absence; where I heard Hareton sternly check his cousin, on her
|
||
offering a revelation of her father-in-law’s conduct to his father. He
|
||
said he wouldn’t suffer a word to be uttered in his disparagement: if
|
||
he were the devil, it didn’t signify; he would stand by him; and he’d
|
||
rather she would abuse himself, as she used to, than begin on Mr.
|
||
Heathcliff. Catherine was waxing cross at this; but he found means to
|
||
make her hold her tongue, by asking how she would like _him_ to speak
|
||
ill of her father? Then she comprehended that Earnshaw took the
|
||
master’s reputation home to himself; and was attached by ties stronger
|
||
than reason could break—chains, forged by habit, which it would be
|
||
cruel to attempt to loosen. She showed a good heart, thenceforth, in
|
||
avoiding both complaints and expressions of antipathy concerning
|
||
Heathcliff; and confessed to me her sorrow that she had endeavoured to
|
||
raise a bad spirit between him and Hareton: indeed, I don’t believe she
|
||
has ever breathed a syllable, in the latter’s hearing, against her
|
||
oppressor since.
|
||
|
||
When this slight disagreement was over, they were friends again, and as
|
||
busy as possible in their several occupations of pupil and teacher. I
|
||
came in to sit with them, after I had done my work; and I felt so
|
||
soothed and comforted to watch them, that I did not notice how time got
|
||
on. You know, they both appeared in a measure my children: I had long
|
||
been proud of one; and now, I was sure, the other would be a source of
|
||
equal satisfaction. His honest, warm, and intelligent nature shook off
|
||
rapidly the clouds of ignorance and degradation in which it had been
|
||
bred; and Catherine’s sincere commendations acted as a spur to his
|
||
industry. His brightening mind brightened his features, and added
|
||
spirit and nobility to their aspect: I could hardly fancy it the same
|
||
individual I had beheld on the day I discovered my little lady at
|
||
Wuthering Heights, after her expedition to the Crags. While I admired
|
||
and they laboured, dusk drew on, and with it returned the master. He
|
||
came upon us quite unexpectedly, entering by the front way, and had a
|
||
full view of the whole three, ere we could raise our heads to glance at
|
||
him. Well, I reflected, there was never a pleasanter, or more harmless
|
||
sight; and it will be a burning shame to scold them. The red fire-light
|
||
glowed on their two bonny heads, and revealed their faces animated with
|
||
the eager interest of children; for, though he was twenty-three and she
|
||
eighteen, each had so much of novelty to feel and learn, that neither
|
||
experienced nor evinced the sentiments of sober disenchanted maturity.
|
||
|
||
They lifted their eyes together, to encounter Mr. Heathcliff: perhaps
|
||
you have never remarked that their eyes are precisely similar, and they
|
||
are those of Catherine Earnshaw. The present Catherine has no other
|
||
likeness to her, except a breadth of forehead, and a certain arch of
|
||
the nostril that makes her appear rather haughty, whether she will or
|
||
not. With Hareton the resemblance is carried farther: it is singular at
|
||
all times, _then_ it was particularly striking; because his senses were
|
||
alert, and his mental faculties wakened to unwonted activity. I suppose
|
||
this resemblance disarmed Mr. Heathcliff: he walked to the hearth in
|
||
evident agitation; but it quickly subsided as he looked at the young
|
||
man: or, I should say, altered its character; for it was there yet. He
|
||
took the book from his hand, and glanced at the open page, then
|
||
returned it without any observation; merely signing Catherine away: her
|
||
companion lingered very little behind her, and I was about to depart
|
||
also, but he bid me sit still.
|
||
|
||
“It is a poor conclusion, is it not?” he observed, having brooded
|
||
a while on the scene he had just witnessed: “an absurd termination to
|
||
my violent exertions? I get levers and mattocks to demolish the two
|
||
houses, and train myself to be capable of working like Hercules, and
|
||
when everything is ready and in my power, I find the will to lift a
|
||
slate off either roof has vanished! My old enemies have not beaten me;
|
||
now would be the precise time to revenge myself on their
|
||
representatives: I could do it; and none could hinder me. But where is
|
||
the use? I don’t care for striking: I can’t take the trouble to raise
|
||
my hand! That sounds as if I had been labouring the whole time only to
|
||
exhibit a fine trait of magnanimity. It is far from being the case: I
|
||
have lost the faculty of enjoying their destruction, and I am too idle
|
||
to destroy for nothing.
|
||
|
||
“Nelly, there is a strange change approaching; I’m in its shadow at
|
||
present. I take so little interest in my daily life that I hardly
|
||
remember to eat and drink. Those two who have left the room are the
|
||
only objects which retain a distinct material appearance to me; and
|
||
that appearance causes me pain, amounting to agony. About _her_ I won’t
|
||
speak; and I don’t desire to think; but I earnestly wish she were
|
||
invisible: her presence invokes only maddening sensations. _He_ moves
|
||
me differently: and yet if I could do it without seeming insane, I’d
|
||
never see him again! You’ll perhaps think me rather inclined to become
|
||
so,” he added, making an effort to smile, “if I try to describe the
|
||
thousand forms of past associations and ideas he awakens or embodies.
|
||
But you’ll not talk of what I tell you; and my mind is so eternally
|
||
secluded in itself, it is tempting at last to turn it out to another.
|
||
|
||
“Five minutes ago Hareton seemed a personification of my youth, not a
|
||
human being; I felt to him in such a variety of ways, that it would
|
||
have been impossible to have accosted him rationally. In the first
|
||
place, his startling likeness to Catherine connected him fearfully with
|
||
her. That, however, which you may suppose the most potent to arrest my
|
||
imagination, is actually the least: for what is not connected with her
|
||
to me? and what does not recall her? I cannot look down to this floor,
|
||
but her features are shaped in the flags! In every cloud, in every
|
||
tree—filling the air at night, and caught by glimpses in every object
|
||
by day—I am surrounded with her image! The most ordinary faces of men
|
||
and women—my own features—mock me with a resemblance. The entire world
|
||
is a dreadful collection of memoranda that she did exist, and that I
|
||
have lost her! Well, Hareton’s aspect was the ghost of my immortal
|
||
love; of my wild endeavours to hold my right; my degradation, my pride,
|
||
my happiness, and my anguish—
|
||
|
||
“But it is frenzy to repeat these thoughts to you: only it will let you
|
||
know why, with a reluctance to be always alone, his society is no
|
||
benefit; rather an aggravation of the constant torment I suffer: and it
|
||
partly contributes to render me regardless how he and his cousin go on
|
||
together. I can give them no attention any more.”
|
||
|
||
“But what do you mean by a _change_, Mr. Heathcliff?” I said, alarmed
|
||
at his manner: though he was neither in danger of losing his senses,
|
||
nor dying, according to my judgment: he was quite strong and healthy;
|
||
and, as to his reason, from childhood he had a delight in dwelling on
|
||
dark things, and entertaining odd fancies. He might have had a
|
||
monomania on the subject of his departed idol; but on every other point
|
||
his wits were as sound as mine.
|
||
|
||
“I shall not know that till it comes,” he said; “I’m only half
|
||
conscious of it now.”
|
||
|
||
“You have no feeling of illness, have you?” I asked.
|
||
|
||
“No, Nelly, I have not,” he answered.
|
||
|
||
“Then you are not afraid of death?” I pursued.
|
||
|
||
“Afraid? No!” he replied. “I have neither a fear, nor a presentiment,
|
||
nor a hope of death. Why should I? With my hard constitution and
|
||
temperate mode of living, and unperilous occupations, I ought to, and
|
||
probably _shall_, remain above ground till there is scarcely a black
|
||
hair on my head. And yet I cannot continue in this condition! I have to
|
||
remind myself to breathe—almost to remind my heart to beat! And it is
|
||
like bending back a stiff spring: it is by compulsion that I do the
|
||
slightest act not prompted by one thought; and by compulsion that I
|
||
notice anything alive or dead, which is not associated with one
|
||
universal idea. I have a single wish, and my whole being and faculties
|
||
are yearning to attain it. They have yearned towards it so long, and so
|
||
unwaveringly, that I’m convinced it _will_ be reached—and
|
||
_soon_—because it has devoured my existence: I am swallowed up in the
|
||
anticipation of its fulfilment. My confessions have not relieved me;
|
||
but they may account for some otherwise unaccountable phases of humour
|
||
which I show. O God! It is a long fight; I wish it were over!”
|
||
|
||
He began to pace the room, muttering terrible things to himself, till I
|
||
was inclined to believe, as he said Joseph did, that conscience had
|
||
turned his heart to an earthly hell. I wondered greatly how it would
|
||
end. Though he seldom before had revealed this state of mind, even by
|
||
looks, it was his habitual mood, I had no doubt: he asserted it
|
||
himself; but not a soul, from his general bearing, would have
|
||
conjectured the fact. You did not when you saw him, Mr. Lockwood: and
|
||
at the period of which I speak, he was just the same as then; only
|
||
fonder of continued solitude, and perhaps still more laconic in
|
||
company.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXXIV
|
||
|
||
|
||
For some days after that evening, Mr. Heathcliff shunned meeting us at
|
||
meals; yet he would not consent formally to exclude Hareton and Cathy.
|
||
He had an aversion to yielding so completely to his feelings, choosing
|
||
rather to absent himself; and eating once in twenty-four hours seemed
|
||
sufficient sustenance for him.
|
||
|
||
One night, after the family were in bed, I heard him go downstairs, and
|
||
out at the front door. I did not hear him re-enter, and in the morning
|
||
I found he was still away. We were in April then: the weather was sweet
|
||
and warm, the grass as green as showers and sun could make it, and the
|
||
two dwarf apple-trees near the southern wall in full bloom. After
|
||
breakfast, Catherine insisted on my bringing a chair and sitting with
|
||
my work under the fir-trees at the end of the house; and she beguiled
|
||
Hareton, who had perfectly recovered from his accident, to dig and
|
||
arrange her little garden, which was shifted to that corner by the
|
||
influence of Joseph’s complaints. I was comfortably revelling in the
|
||
spring fragrance around, and the beautiful soft blue overhead, when my
|
||
young lady, who had run down near the gate to procure some primrose
|
||
roots for a border, returned only half laden, and informed us that Mr.
|
||
Heathcliff was coming in. “And he spoke to me,” she added, with a
|
||
perplexed countenance.
|
||
|
||
“What did he say?” asked Hareton.
|
||
|
||
“He told me to begone as fast as I could,” she answered. “But he looked
|
||
so different from his usual look that I stopped a moment to stare at
|
||
him.”
|
||
|
||
“How?” he inquired.
|
||
|
||
“Why, almost bright and cheerful. No, _almost_ nothing—_very much_
|
||
excited, and wild, and glad!” she replied.
|
||
|
||
“Night-walking amuses him, then,” I remarked, affecting a careless
|
||
manner: in reality as surprised as she was, and anxious to ascertain
|
||
the truth of her statement; for to see the master looking glad would
|
||
not be an every-day spectacle. I framed an excuse to go in. Heathcliff
|
||
stood at the open door; he was pale, and he trembled: yet, certainly,
|
||
he had a strange joyful glitter in his eyes, that altered the aspect of
|
||
his whole face.
|
||
|
||
“Will you have some breakfast?” I said. “You must be hungry, rambling
|
||
about all night!” I wanted to discover where he had been, but I did not
|
||
like to ask directly.
|
||
|
||
“No, I’m not hungry,” he answered, averting his head, and speaking
|
||
rather contemptuously, as if he guessed I was trying to divine the
|
||
occasion of his good humour.
|
||
|
||
I felt perplexed: I didn’t know whether it were not a proper
|
||
opportunity to offer a bit of admonition.
|
||
|
||
“I don’t think it right to wander out of doors,” I observed, “instead
|
||
of being in bed: it is not wise, at any rate this moist season. I
|
||
daresay you’ll catch a bad cold, or a fever: you have something the
|
||
matter with you now!”
|
||
|
||
“Nothing but what I can bear,” he replied; “and with the greatest
|
||
pleasure, provided you’ll leave me alone: get in, and don’t annoy me.”
|
||
|
||
I obeyed: and, in passing, I noticed he breathed as fast as a cat.
|
||
|
||
“Yes!” I reflected to myself, “we shall have a fit of illness. I cannot
|
||
conceive what he has been doing.”
|
||
|
||
That noon he sat down to dinner with us, and received a heaped-up plate
|
||
from my hands, as if he intended to make amends for previous fasting.
|
||
|
||
“I’ve neither cold nor fever, Nelly,” he remarked, in allusion to my
|
||
morning’s speech; “and I’m ready to do justice to the food you give
|
||
me.”
|
||
|
||
He took his knife and fork, and was going to commence eating, when the
|
||
inclination appeared to become suddenly extinct. He laid them on the
|
||
table, looked eagerly towards the window, then rose and went out. We
|
||
saw him walking to and fro in the garden while we concluded our meal,
|
||
and Earnshaw said he’d go and ask why he would not dine: he thought we
|
||
had grieved him some way.
|
||
|
||
“Well, is he coming?” cried Catherine, when her cousin returned.
|
||
|
||
“Nay,” he answered; “but he’s not angry: he seemed rarely pleased
|
||
indeed; only I made him impatient by speaking to him twice; and then he
|
||
bid me be off to you: he wondered how I could want the company of
|
||
anybody else.”
|
||
|
||
I set his plate to keep warm on the fender; and after an hour or two he
|
||
re-entered, when the room was clear, in no degree calmer: the same
|
||
unnatural—it was unnatural—appearance of joy under his black brows; the
|
||
same bloodless hue, and his teeth visible, now and then, in a kind of
|
||
smile; his frame shivering, not as one shivers with chill or weakness,
|
||
but as a tight-stretched cord vibrates—a strong thrilling, rather than
|
||
trembling.
|
||
|
||
I will ask what is the matter, I thought; or who should? And I
|
||
exclaimed—“Have you heard any good news, Mr. Heathcliff? You look
|
||
uncommonly animated.”
|
||
|
||
“Where should good news come from to me?” he said. “I’m animated with
|
||
hunger; and, seemingly, I must not eat.”
|
||
|
||
“Your dinner is here,” I returned; “why won’t you get it?”
|
||
|
||
“I don’t want it now,” he muttered, hastily: “I’ll wait till supper.
|
||
And, Nelly, once for all, let me beg you to warn Hareton and the other
|
||
away from me. I wish to be troubled by nobody: I wish to have this
|
||
place to myself.”
|
||
|
||
“Is there some new reason for this banishment?” I inquired. “Tell me
|
||
why you are so queer, Mr. Heathcliff? Where were you last night? I’m
|
||
not putting the question through idle curiosity, but—”
|
||
|
||
“You are putting the question through very idle curiosity,” he
|
||
interrupted, with a laugh. “Yet I’ll answer it. Last night I was on the
|
||
threshold of hell. To-day, I am within sight of my heaven. I have my
|
||
eyes on it: hardly three feet to sever me! And now you’d better go!
|
||
You’ll neither see nor hear anything to frighten you, if you refrain
|
||
from prying.”
|
||
|
||
Having swept the hearth and wiped the table, I departed; more perplexed
|
||
than ever.
|
||
|
||
He did not quit the house again that afternoon, and no one intruded on
|
||
his solitude; till, at eight o’clock, I deemed it proper, though
|
||
unsummoned, to carry a candle and his supper to him. He was leaning
|
||
against the ledge of an open lattice, but not looking out: his face was
|
||
turned to the interior gloom. The fire had smouldered to ashes; the
|
||
room was filled with the damp, mild air of the cloudy evening; and so
|
||
still, that not only the murmur of the beck down Gimmerton was
|
||
distinguishable, but its ripples and its gurgling over the pebbles, or
|
||
through the large stones which it could not cover. I uttered an
|
||
ejaculation of discontent at seeing the dismal grate, and commenced
|
||
shutting the casements, one after another, till I came to his.
|
||
|
||
“Must I close this?” I asked, in order to rouse him; for he would not
|
||
stir.
|
||
|
||
The light flashed on his features as I spoke. Oh, Mr. Lockwood, I
|
||
cannot express what a terrible start I got by the momentary view! Those
|
||
deep black eyes! That smile, and ghastly paleness! It appeared to me,
|
||
not Mr. Heathcliff, but a goblin; and, in my terror, I let the candle
|
||
bend towards the wall, and it left me in darkness.
|
||
|
||
“Yes, close it,” he replied, in his familiar voice. “There, that is
|
||
pure awkwardness! Why did you hold the candle horizontally? Be quick,
|
||
and bring another.”
|
||
|
||
I hurried out in a foolish state of dread, and said to Joseph—“The
|
||
master wishes you to take him a light and rekindle the fire.” For I
|
||
dared not go in myself again just then.
|
||
|
||
Joseph rattled some fire into the shovel, and went: but he brought it
|
||
back immediately, with the supper-tray in his other hand, explaining
|
||
that Mr. Heathcliff was going to bed, and he wanted nothing to eat till
|
||
morning. We heard him mount the stairs directly; he did not proceed to
|
||
his ordinary chamber, but turned into that with the panelled bed: its
|
||
window, as I mentioned before, is wide enough for anybody to get
|
||
through; and it struck me that he plotted another midnight excursion,
|
||
of which he had rather we had no suspicion.
|
||
|
||
“Is he a ghoul or a vampire?” I mused. I had read of such hideous
|
||
incarnate demons. And then I set myself to reflect how I had tended him
|
||
in infancy, and watched him grow to youth, and followed him almost
|
||
through his whole course; and what absurd nonsense it was to yield to
|
||
that sense of horror. “But where did he come from, the little dark
|
||
thing, harboured by a good man to his bane?” muttered Superstition, as
|
||
I dozed into unconsciousness. And I began, half dreaming, to weary
|
||
myself with imagining some fit parentage for him; and, repeating my
|
||
waking meditations, I tracked his existence over again, with grim
|
||
variations; at last, picturing his death and funeral: of which, all I
|
||
can remember is, being exceedingly vexed at having the task of
|
||
dictating an inscription for his monument, and consulting the sexton
|
||
about it; and, as he had no surname, and we could not tell his age, we
|
||
were obliged to content ourselves with the single word, “Heathcliff.”
|
||
That came true: we were. If you enter the kirkyard, you’ll read, on his
|
||
headstone, only that, and the date of his death.
|
||
|
||
Dawn restored me to common sense. I rose, and went into the garden, as
|
||
soon as I could see, to ascertain if there were any footmarks under his
|
||
window. There were none. “He has stayed at home,” I thought, “and he’ll
|
||
be all right to-day.” I prepared breakfast for the household, as was my
|
||
usual custom, but told Hareton and Catherine to get theirs ere the
|
||
master came down, for he lay late. They preferred taking it out of
|
||
doors, under the trees, and I set a little table to accommodate them.
|
||
|
||
On my re-entrance, I found Mr. Heathcliff below. He and Joseph were
|
||
conversing about some farming business; he gave clear, minute
|
||
directions concerning the matter discussed, but he spoke rapidly, and
|
||
turned his head continually aside, and had the same excited expression,
|
||
even more exaggerated. When Joseph quitted the room he took his seat in
|
||
the place he generally chose, and I put a basin of coffee before him.
|
||
He drew it nearer, and then rested his arms on the table, and looked at
|
||
the opposite wall, as I supposed, surveying one particular portion, up
|
||
and down, with glittering, restless eyes, and with such eager interest
|
||
that he stopped breathing during half a minute together.
|
||
|
||
“Come now,” I exclaimed, pushing some bread against his hand, “eat and
|
||
drink that, while it is hot: it has been waiting near an hour.”
|
||
|
||
He didn’t notice me, and yet he smiled. I’d rather have seen him gnash
|
||
his teeth than smile so.
|
||
|
||
“Mr. Heathcliff! master!” I cried, “don’t, for God’s sake, stare as if
|
||
you saw an unearthly vision.”
|
||
|
||
“Don’t, for God’s sake, shout so loud,” he replied. “Turn round, and
|
||
tell me, are we by ourselves?”
|
||
|
||
“Of course,” was my answer; “of course we are.”
|
||
|
||
Still, I involuntarily obeyed him, as if I was not quite sure. With a
|
||
sweep of his hand he cleared a vacant space in front among the
|
||
breakfast things, and leant forward to gaze more at his ease.
|
||
|
||
Now, I perceived he was not looking at the wall; for when I regarded
|
||
him alone, it seemed exactly that he gazed at something within two
|
||
yards’ distance. And whatever it was, it communicated, apparently, both
|
||
pleasure and pain in exquisite extremes: at least the anguished, yet
|
||
raptured, expression of his countenance suggested that idea. The
|
||
fancied object was not fixed, either: his eyes pursued it with
|
||
unwearied diligence, and, even in speaking to me, were never weaned
|
||
away. I vainly reminded him of his protracted abstinence from food: if
|
||
he stirred to touch anything in compliance with my entreaties, if he
|
||
stretched his hand out to get a piece of bread, his fingers clenched
|
||
before they reached it, and remained on the table, forgetful of their
|
||
aim.
|
||
|
||
I sat, a model of patience, trying to attract his absorbed attention
|
||
from its engrossing speculation; till he grew irritable, and got up,
|
||
asking why I would not allow him to have his own time in taking his
|
||
meals? and saying that on the next occasion I needn’t wait: I might set
|
||
the things down and go. Having uttered these words he left the house,
|
||
slowly sauntered down the garden path, and disappeared through the
|
||
gate.
|
||
|
||
The hours crept anxiously by: another evening came. I did not retire to
|
||
rest till late, and when I did, I could not sleep. He returned after
|
||
midnight, and, instead of going to bed, shut himself into the room
|
||
beneath. I listened, and tossed about, and, finally, dressed and
|
||
descended. It was too irksome to lie there, harassing my brain with a
|
||
hundred idle misgivings.
|
||
|
||
I distinguished Mr. Heathcliff’s step, restlessly measuring the floor,
|
||
and he frequently broke the silence by a deep inspiration, resembling a
|
||
groan. He muttered detached words also; the only one I could catch was
|
||
the name of Catherine, coupled with some wild term of endearment or
|
||
suffering; and spoken as one would speak to a person present; low and
|
||
earnest, and wrung from the depth of his soul. I had not courage to
|
||
walk straight into the apartment; but I desired to divert him from his
|
||
reverie, and therefore fell foul of the kitchen fire, stirred it, and
|
||
began to scrape the cinders. It drew him forth sooner than I expected.
|
||
He opened the door immediately, and said—“Nelly, come here—is it
|
||
morning? Come in with your light.”
|
||
|
||
“It is striking four,” I answered. “You want a candle to take upstairs:
|
||
you might have lit one at this fire.”
|
||
|
||
“No, I don’t wish to go upstairs,” he said. “Come in, and kindle _me_ a
|
||
fire, and do anything there is to do about the room.”
|
||
|
||
“I must blow the coals red first, before I can carry any,” I replied,
|
||
getting a chair and the bellows.
|
||
|
||
He roamed to and fro, meantime, in a state approaching distraction; his
|
||
heavy sighs succeeding each other so thick as to leave no space for
|
||
common breathing between.
|
||
|
||
“When day breaks I’ll send for Green,” he said; “I wish to make some
|
||
legal inquiries of him while I can bestow a thought on those matters,
|
||
and while I can act calmly. I have not written my will yet; and how to
|
||
leave my property I cannot determine. I wish I could annihilate it from
|
||
the face of the earth.”
|
||
|
||
“I would not talk so, Mr. Heathcliff,” I interposed. “Let your will be
|
||
a while: you’ll be spared to repent of your many injustices yet! I
|
||
never expected that your nerves would be disordered: they are, at
|
||
present, marvellously so, however; and almost entirely through your own
|
||
fault. The way you’ve passed these three last days might knock up a
|
||
Titan. Do take some food, and some repose. You need only look at
|
||
yourself in a glass to see how you require both. Your cheeks are
|
||
hollow, and your eyes blood-shot, like a person starving with hunger
|
||
and going blind with loss of sleep.”
|
||
|
||
“It is not my fault that I cannot eat or rest,” he replied. “I assure
|
||
you it is through no settled designs. I’ll do both, as soon as I
|
||
possibly can. But you might as well bid a man struggling in the water
|
||
rest within arms’ length of the shore! I must reach it first, and then
|
||
I’ll rest. Well, never mind Mr. Green: as to repenting of my
|
||
injustices, I’ve done no injustice, and I repent of nothing. I’m too
|
||
happy; and yet I’m not happy enough. My soul’s bliss kills my body, but
|
||
does not satisfy itself.”
|
||
|
||
“Happy, master?” I cried. “Strange happiness! If you would hear me
|
||
without being angry, I might offer some advice that would make you
|
||
happier.”
|
||
|
||
“What is that?” he asked. “Give it.”
|
||
|
||
“You are aware, Mr. Heathcliff,” I said, “that from the time you were
|
||
thirteen years old you have lived a selfish, unchristian life; and
|
||
probably hardly had a Bible in your hands during all that period. You
|
||
must have forgotten the contents of the book, and you may not have
|
||
space to search it now. Could it be hurtful to send for some one—some
|
||
minister of any denomination, it does not matter which—to explain it,
|
||
and show you how very far you have erred from its precepts; and how
|
||
unfit you will be for its heaven, unless a change takes place before
|
||
you die?”
|
||
|
||
“I’m rather obliged than angry, Nelly,” he said, “for you remind me of
|
||
the manner in which I desire to be buried. It is to be carried to the
|
||
churchyard in the evening. You and Hareton may, if you please,
|
||
accompany me: and mind, particularly, to notice that the sexton obeys
|
||
my directions concerning the two coffins! No minister need come; nor
|
||
need anything be said over me.—I tell you I have nearly attained _my_
|
||
heaven; and that of others is altogether unvalued and uncoveted by me.”
|
||
|
||
“And supposing you persevered in your obstinate fast, and died by that
|
||
means, and they refused to bury you in the precincts of the kirk?” I
|
||
said, shocked at his godless indifference. “How would you like it?”
|
||
|
||
“They won’t do that,” he replied: “if they did, you must have me
|
||
removed secretly; and if you neglect it you shall prove, practically,
|
||
that the dead are not annihilated!”
|
||
|
||
As soon as he heard the other members of the family stirring he retired
|
||
to his den, and I breathed freer. But in the afternoon, while Joseph
|
||
and Hareton were at their work, he came into the kitchen again, and,
|
||
with a wild look, bid me come and sit in the house: he wanted somebody
|
||
with him. I declined; telling him plainly that his strange talk and
|
||
manner frightened me, and I had neither the nerve nor the will to be
|
||
his companion alone.
|
||
|
||
“I believe you think me a fiend,” he said, with his dismal laugh:
|
||
“something too horrible to live under a decent roof.” Then turning to
|
||
Catherine, who was there, and who drew behind me at his approach, he
|
||
added, half sneeringly,—“Will _you_ come, chuck? I’ll not hurt you. No!
|
||
to you I’ve made myself worse than the devil. Well, there is _one_ who
|
||
won’t shrink from my company! By God! she’s relentless. Oh, damn it!
|
||
It’s unutterably too much for flesh and blood to bear—even mine.”
|
||
|
||
He solicited the society of no one more. At dusk he went into his
|
||
chamber. Through the whole night, and far into the morning, we heard
|
||
him groaning and murmuring to himself. Hareton was anxious to enter;
|
||
but I bid him fetch Mr. Kenneth, and he should go in and see him. When
|
||
he came, and I requested admittance and tried to open the door, I found
|
||
it locked; and Heathcliff bid us be damned. He was better, and would be
|
||
left alone; so the doctor went away.
|
||
|
||
The following evening was very wet: indeed, it poured down till
|
||
day-dawn; and, as I took my morning walk round the house, I observed
|
||
the master’s window swinging open, and the rain driving straight in. He
|
||
cannot be in bed, I thought: those showers would drench him through. He
|
||
must either be up or out. But I’ll make no more ado, I’ll go boldly and
|
||
look.
|
||
|
||
Having succeeded in obtaining entrance with another key, I ran to
|
||
unclose the panels, for the chamber was vacant; quickly pushing them
|
||
aside, I peeped in. Mr. Heathcliff was there—laid on his back. His eyes
|
||
met mine so keen and fierce, I started; and then he seemed to smile. I
|
||
could not think him dead: but his face and throat were washed with
|
||
rain; the bed-clothes dripped, and he was perfectly still. The lattice,
|
||
flapping to and fro, had grazed one hand that rested on the sill; no
|
||
blood trickled from the broken skin, and when I put my fingers to it, I
|
||
could doubt no more: he was dead and stark!
|
||
|
||
I hasped the window; I combed his black long hair from his forehead; I
|
||
tried to close his eyes: to extinguish, if possible, that frightful,
|
||
life-like gaze of exultation before any one else beheld it. They would
|
||
not shut: they seemed to sneer at my attempts; and his parted lips and
|
||
sharp white teeth sneered too! Taken with another fit of cowardice, I
|
||
cried out for Joseph. Joseph shuffled up and made a noise, but
|
||
resolutely refused to meddle with him.
|
||
|
||
“Th’ divil’s harried off his soul,” he cried, “and he may hev’ his
|
||
carcass into t’ bargin, for aught I care! Ech! what a wicked ’un he
|
||
looks, girning at death!” and the old sinner grinned in mockery. I
|
||
thought he intended to cut a caper round the bed; but suddenly
|
||
composing himself, he fell on his knees, and raised his hands, and
|
||
returned thanks that the lawful master and the ancient stock were
|
||
restored to their rights.
|
||
|
||
I felt stunned by the awful event; and my memory unavoidably recurred
|
||
to former times with a sort of oppressive sadness. But poor Hareton,
|
||
the most wronged, was the only one who really suffered much. He sat by
|
||
the corpse all night, weeping in bitter earnest. He pressed its hand,
|
||
and kissed the sarcastic, savage face that every one else shrank from
|
||
contemplating; and bemoaned him with that strong grief which springs
|
||
naturally from a generous heart, though it be tough as tempered steel.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Kenneth was perplexed to pronounce of what disorder the master
|
||
died. I concealed the fact of his having swallowed nothing for four
|
||
days, fearing it might lead to trouble, and then, I am persuaded, he
|
||
did not abstain on purpose: it was the consequence of his strange
|
||
illness, not the cause.
|
||
|
||
We buried him, to the scandal of the whole neighbourhood, as he wished.
|
||
Earnshaw and I, the sexton, and six men to carry the coffin,
|
||
comprehended the whole attendance. The six men departed when they had
|
||
let it down into the grave: we stayed to see it covered. Hareton, with
|
||
a streaming face, dug green sods, and laid them over the brown mould
|
||
himself: at present it is as smooth and verdant as its companion
|
||
mounds—and I hope its tenant sleeps as soundly. But the country folks,
|
||
if you ask them, would swear on the Bible that he _walks_: there are
|
||
those who speak to having met him near the church, and on the moor, and
|
||
even within this house. Idle tales, you’ll say, and so say I. Yet that
|
||
old man by the kitchen fire affirms he has seen two on ’em looking out
|
||
of his chamber window on every rainy night since his death:—and an odd
|
||
thing happened to me about a month ago. I was going to the Grange one
|
||
evening—a dark evening, threatening thunder—and, just at the turn of
|
||
the Heights, I encountered a little boy with a sheep and two lambs
|
||
before him; he was crying terribly; and I supposed the lambs were
|
||
skittish, and would not be guided.
|
||
|
||
“What is the matter, my little man?” I asked.
|
||
|
||
“There’s Heathcliff and a woman yonder, under t’ nab,” he blubbered,
|
||
“un’ I darnut pass ’em.”
|
||
|
||
I saw nothing; but neither the sheep nor he would go on, so I bid him
|
||
take the road lower down. He probably raised the phantoms from
|
||
thinking, as he traversed the moors alone, on the nonsense he had heard
|
||
his parents and companions repeat. Yet, still, I don’t like being out
|
||
in the dark now; and I don’t like being left by myself in this grim
|
||
house: I cannot help it; I shall be glad when they leave it, and shift
|
||
to the Grange.
|
||
|
||
“They are going to the Grange, then?” I said.
|
||
|
||
“Yes,” answered Mrs. Dean, “as soon as they are married, and that will
|
||
be on New Year’s Day.”
|
||
|
||
“And who will live here then?”
|
||
|
||
“Why, Joseph will take care of the house, and, perhaps, a lad to keep
|
||
him company. They will live in the kitchen, and the rest will be shut
|
||
up.”
|
||
|
||
“For the use of such ghosts as choose to inhabit it?” I observed.
|
||
|
||
“No, Mr. Lockwood,” said Nelly, shaking her head. “I believe the dead
|
||
are at peace: but it is not right to speak of them with levity.”
|
||
|
||
At that moment the garden gate swung to; the ramblers were returning.
|
||
|
||
“_They_ are afraid of nothing,” I grumbled, watching their approach
|
||
through the window. “Together, they would brave Satan and all his
|
||
legions.”
|
||
|
||
As they stepped on to the door-stones, and halted to take a last look
|
||
at the moon—or, more correctly, at each other by her light—I felt
|
||
irresistibly impelled to escape them again; and, pressing a remembrance
|
||
into the hand of Mrs. Dean, and disregarding her expostulations at my
|
||
rudeness, I vanished through the kitchen as they opened the house-door;
|
||
and so should have confirmed Joseph in his opinion of his
|
||
fellow-servant’s gay indiscretions, had he not fortunately recognised
|
||
me for a respectable character by the sweet ring of a sovereign at his
|
||
feet.
|
||
|
||
My walk home was lengthened by a diversion in the direction of the
|
||
kirk. When beneath its walls, I perceived decay had made progress, even
|
||
in seven months: many a window showed black gaps deprived of glass; and
|
||
slates jutted off, here and there, beyond the right line of the roof,
|
||
to be gradually worked off in coming autumn storms.
|
||
|
||
I sought, and soon discovered, the three headstones on the slope next
|
||
the moor: the middle one grey, and half buried in heath; Edgar Linton’s
|
||
only harmonized by the turf and moss creeping up its foot; Heathcliff’s
|
||
still bare.
|
||
|
||
I lingered round them, under that benign sky: watched the moths
|
||
fluttering among the heath and harebells, listened to the soft wind
|
||
breathing through the grass, and wondered how any one could ever
|
||
imagine unquiet slumbers for the sleepers in that quiet earth.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
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