EMILY BRONTË
WUTHERING HEIGHTS
PART TWO
CHAPTER XI
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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 cheek 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 up- stairs. 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 up-stairs 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 up-stairs,
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 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 farm-house, 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 up-stairs,' 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 wdd 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
brooken 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 o'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 down-stairs, 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 allus
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 manoeuvres,
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 idiotcy, 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 up-stairs; I have something to say
to Ellen Dean in private. That's not the way: up-stairs, 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 manservant 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 up-stairs.
-
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 are 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 kirk-yard, 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
up-stairs to his chamber; looking 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 bear 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 up-stairs,
with the wild snow blowing outside, and my thoughts continually reverting
to the kirk-yard 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 look, 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
he 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
sporting 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; commanding
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 looked, 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 she 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 farm-house, 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 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 up-stairs, 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 heu'
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 up-stairs, 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 enough for him's gooid enough for ye, I's rayther think!'
-
'I shan'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.
The Brontë Sisters
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