CHAPTER 16
ONE morning confusion seemed to reign in the house, and Jemima came in
terror, to inform Maria, "that her master had left it, with a determination,
she was assured (and too many circumstances corroborated the opinion, to leave
a doubt of its truth) of never returning. I am prepared then," said
Jemima, "to accompany you in your flight."
Maria started up, her eyes darting towards the door, as if afraid that some
one should fasten it on her for ever.
Jemima continued, "I have perhaps no right now to expect the
performance of your promise; but on you it depends to reconcile me with the
human race."
"But Darnford!"--exclaimed Maria, mournfully--sitting down again,
and crossing her arms--"I have no child to go to, and liberty has lost its
sweets."
"I am much mistaken, if Darnford is not the
cause of my master's flight--his keepers assure me, that they have promised to
confine him two days longer, and then he will be free--you cannot see him; but
they will give a letter to him the moment he is free.--In that inform him where
he may find you in London; fix on some hotel. Give me your clothes; I will send
them out of the house with mine, and we will slip out at the garden-gate. Write
your letter while I make these arrangements, but lose no time!"
In an agitation of spirit, not to be calmed, Maria began to write to Darnford. She called him by the sacred name of
"husband," and bade him "hasten to her, to share her fortune, or
she would return to him."—An hotel in the Adelphi
was the place of rendezvous.
The letter was sealed and given in charge; and with light footsteps, yet terrified
at the sound of them, she descended, scarcely breathing, and with an indistinct
fear that she should never get out at the garden gate. Jemima went first.
A being, with a visage that would have suited one possessed by a devil, crossed
the path, and seized Maria by the arm. Maria had no fear but of being
detained--"Who are you? what are you?" for
the form was scarcely human. "If you are made of flesh and blood,"
his ghastly eyes glared on her, "do not stop me!"
"Woman," interrupted a sepulchral voice, "what have I to do
with thee?"--Still he grasped her hand, muttering a curse.
"No, no; you have nothing to do with me," she exclaimed, "this is a moment of life and death!"--
With supernatural force she broke from him, and, throwing her arms round Jemima,
cried, "Save me!" The being, from whose grasp she had loosed herself,
took up a stone as they opened the door, and with a kind of hellish sport threw
it after them. They were out of his reach.
When Maria arrived in town, she drove to the hotel already fixed on. But she
could not sit still--her child was ever before her; and all that had passed
during her confinement, appeared to be a dream. She went to the house in the
suburbs, where, as she now discovered, her babe had been sent. The moment she
entered, her heart grew sick; but she wondered not that it had proved its
grave. She made the necessary enquiries, and the church-yard was pointed out,
in which it rested under a turf. A little frock which the nurse's child wore
(Maria had made it herself) caught her eye. The nurse was glad to sell it for
half-a-guinea, and Maria hastened away with the relic, and, reentering the
hackney-coach which waited for her, gazed on it, till she reached her hotel.
She then waited on the attorney who had made her uncle's will, and explained
to him her situation. He readily advanced her some of the money which still
remained in his hands, and promised to take the whole of the case into consideration.
Maria only wished to be permitted to remain in quiet--She found that several
bills, apparently with her signature, had been presented to her agent, nor was
she for a moment at a loss to guess by whom they had been forged; yet, equally
averse to threaten or intreat, she requested her
friend [the solicitor] to call on Mr. Venables. He
was not to be found at home; but at length his agent, the attorney, offered a
conditional promise to Maria, to leave her in peace, as long as she behaved
with propriety, if she would give up the notes. Maria inconsiderately
consented--Darnford was arrived, and she wished to be
only alive to love; she wished to forget the anguish she felt whenever she
thought of her child.
They took a ready furnished lodging together, for she was above disguise;
Jemima insisting on being considered as her house-keeper, and to receive the
customary stipend. On no other terms would she remain with her friend.
Darnford was
indefatigable in tracing the mysterious circumstances of his confinement. The
cause was simply, that a relation, a very distant one, to whom he was heir, had
died intestate, leaving a considerable fortune. On the news of Darnford's arrival [in England, a person, intrusted with the management of the property, and who had
the writings in his possession, determining, by one bold stroke, to strip Darnford of the succession,] had planned his confinement;
and [as soon as he had taken the measures he judged most conducive to his
object, this ruffian, together with his instrument,] the keeper of the private
mad-house, left the kingdom. Darnford, who still
pursued his enquiries, at last discovered that they had fixed their place of
refuge at Paris.
Maria and he determined therefore, with the faithful Jemima, to visit that
metropolis, and accordingly were preparing for the journey, when they were
informed that Mr. Venables had commenced an action
against Darnford for seduction and adultery. The
indignation Maria felt cannot be explained; she repented of the forbearance she
had exercised in giving up the notes. Darnford could
not put off his journey, without risking the loss of his property: Maria
therefore furnished him with money for his expedition; and determined to remain
in London till the termination of this affair.
She visited some ladies with whom she had formerly been intimate, but was
refused admittance; and at the opera, or Ranelagh,
they could not recollect her. Among these ladies there were some, not her most
intimate acquaintance, who were generally supposed to avail themselves of the cloke of marriage, to conceal a mode of conduct,
that would for ever have damned their fame, had they been innocent,
seduced girls. These particularly stood aloof.--Had she remained with her
husband, practicing insincerity, and neglecting her child to manage an
intrigue, she would still have been visited and respected. If, instead of
openly living with her lover, she could have condescended to call into play a
thousand arts, which, degrading her own mind, might have allowed the people who
were not deceived, to pretend to be so, she would have been caressed and treated
like an honourable woman. "And Brutus* is an honourable man!" said Mark-Antony with equal
sincerity.
* The name in the manuscript is
by mistake written Caesar.EDITOR. [Godwin's note]
With Darnford she did not taste uninterrupted
felicity; there was a volatility in his manner which
often distressed her; but love gladdened the scene; besides, he was the most
tender, sympathizing creature in the world. A fondness for the sex often gives
an appearance of humanity to the behaviour of men,
who have small pretensions to the reality; and they seem to love others, when
they are only pursuing their own gratification. Darnford
appeared ever willing to avail himself of her taste and acquirements, while she
endeavoured to profit by his decision of character,
and to eradicate some of the romantic notions, which had taken root in her
mind, while in adversity she had brooded over visions of unattainable bliss.
The real affections of life, when they are allowed to burst forth, are buds
pregnant with joy and all the sweet emotions of the soul; yet they branch out
with wild ease, unlike the artificial forms of felicity, sketched by an
imagination painful alive. The substantial happiness, which enlarges and
civilizes the mind, may be compared to the pleasure experienced in roving
through nature at large, inhaling the sweet gale natural to the clime; while
the reveries of a feverish imagination continually sport themselves in gardens
full of aromatic shrubs, which cloy while they delight, and weaken the sense of
pleasure they gratify. The heaven of fancy, below or beyond the stars, in this
life, or in those ever-smiling regions surrounded by the unmarked ocean of
futurity, have an insipid uniformity which palls. Poets have imagined scenes of
bliss; but, sencing out sorrow, all the extatic emotions of the Soul, and even its grandeur, seem
to be equally excluded. We dose over the unruffled lake, and long to scale the
rocks which fence the happy valley of contentment, though serpents hiss in the
pathless desert, and danger lurks in the unexplored wiles. Maria found herself more indulgent as she was happier, and discovered
virtues, in characters she had before disregarded, while chasing the phantoms
of elegance and excellence, which sported in the meteors that exhale in the
marshes of misfortune. The heart is often shut by romance against social
pleasure; and, fostering a sickly sensibility, grows callous to the soft
touches of humanity.
To part with Darnford was indeed cruel.--It was
to feel most painfully alone; but she rejoiced to think, that she should spare
him the care and perplexity of the suit, and meet him again, all his own.
Marriage, as at present constituted, she considered as leading to immorality--yet,
as the odium of society impedes usefulness, she wished to avow her affection to
Darnford, by becoming his wife according to
established rules; not to be confounded with women who act from very different motives,
though her conduct would be just the same without the ceremony as with it, and
her expectations from him not less firm. The being summoned to defend herself from a charge which she was determined to plead
guilty to, was still galling, as it roused bitter reflections on the situation
of women in society.