The garden is going on very well. We are rather short of water, and therefore
not quite as bright as I had hoped; but we are preparing with untiring industry
for future brightness. Your commands have been obeyed in all things, and
Morrison always says ‘The mistress didn’t mean this’, or ‘The mistress did
intend that’. God bless the mistress is what I now say, and send her home, to
her own home, to her flowers, and her fruit, and her house, and her husband, as
soon as may be, with no more of those delays which are to me so grievous, and
which seem to me to be so unnecessary. That is my prayer.
Yours ever and always, J. G.
“I didn’t give commands,” Alice said to herself, as she sat with the letter
at her solitary breakfast-table. “He asked me how I liked the things, and of
course I was obliged to say. I was obliged to seem to care, even if I didn’t
care.” Such were her first thoughts as she put the letter back into its
envelope, after reading it the second time. When she opened it, which she did
quickly, not pausing a moment lest she should suspect herself of fearing to see
what might be its contents, her mind was full of that rebuke which her aunt had
anticipated, and which she had almost taught herself to expect. She had torn the
letter open rapidly, and had dashed at its contents with quick eyes. In half a
moment she had seen what was the nature of the reply respecting the proposed
companion of her tour, and then she had completed her reading slowly enough “No;
I gave no commands,” she repeated to herself, as though she might thereby
absolve herself from blame in reference to some possible future accusations,
which might perhaps be brought against her under certain circumstances which she
was contemplating.
Then she considered the letter bit by bit, taking it backwards, and sipping
her tea every now and then amidst her thoughts. No; she had no home, no house,
there. She had no husband — not as yet. He spoke of their engagement as though
it were a betrothal, as betrothals used to be of yore; as though they were
already in some sort married. Such betrothals were not made nowadays. There
still remained, both to him and to her, a certain liberty of extricating
themselves from this engagement. Should he come to her and say that he found
that their contemplated marriage would not make him happy, would not she release
him without a word of reproach? Would not she regard him as much more honourable
in doing so than in adhering to a marriage which was distasteful to him? And if
she would so judge him — judge him and certainly acquit him, was it not
reasonable that she under similar circumstances should expect a similar
acquittal? Then she declared to herself that she carried on this argument within
her own breast simply as an argument, induced to do so by that assertion on his
part that he was already her husband — that his house was even now her home. She
had no intention of using that power which was still hers. She had no wish to go
back from her pledged word. She thought that she had no such wish. She loved him
much, and admired him even more than she loved him. He was noble, generous,
clever, good — so good as to be almost perfect; nay, for aught she knew he was
perfect. Would that he had some faults! Would that he had! Would that he had!
How could she, full of faults as she knew herself to be — how could she hope to
make happy a man perfect as he was! But then there would be no doubt as to her
present duty. She loved him, and that was everything. Having told him that she
loved him, and having on that score accepted his love, nothing but a change in
her heart towards him could justify her in seeking to break the bond which bound
them together. She did love him, and she loved him only.
But she had once loved her cousin. Yes, truly it was so. In her thoughts she
did not now deny it. She had loved him, and was tormented by a feeling that she
had had a more full delight in that love than in this other that had sprung up
subsequently. She had told herself that this had come of her youth — that love
at twenty was sweeter than it could be afterwards. There had been a something of
rapture in that earlier dream which could never be repeated — which could never
live, indeed, except in a dream. Now, now that she was older and perhaps wiser,
love meant a partnership, in which each partner would be honest to the other, in
which each would wish and strive for the other’s welfare, so that thus their
joint welfare might be ensured. Then, in those early girlish days, it had meant
a total abnegation of self. The one was of earth, and therefore possible. The
other had been a ray from heaven — and impossible, except in a dream.
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