CHAPTER XIV.
The
Portuguese are certainly the most uncivilized nation in Europe. Dr. Johnson
would have said, "They have the least mind.".
And can such serve their Creator in spirit and in truth? No, the gross ritual
of Romish ceremonies is all they can comprehend: they
can do penance, but not conquer their revenge, or lust. Religion, or love, has
never humanized their hearts; they want the vital part; the mere body worships.
Taste is unknown; Gothic finery, and unnatural decorations, which they term
ornaments, are conspicuous in their churches and dress. Reverence for mental excellence is only to be found in a polished nation.
Could the
contemplation of such a people gratify Mary's heart? No: she turned disgusted
from the prospects—turned to a man of refinement. Henry had been some time ill
and low-spirited; Mary would have been attentive to any one in that situation;
but to him she was particularly so; she thought herself bound in gratitude, on
account of his constant endeavours to amuse Ann, and
prevent her dwelling on the dreary prospect before her, which sometimes she
could not help anticipating with a kind of quiet despair.
She found
some excuse for going more frequently into the room they all met in; nay, she
avowed her desire to amuse him: offered to read to him, and tried to draw him
into amusing conversations; and when she was full of
these little schemes, she looked at him with a degree of tenderness that she
was not conscious of. This divided attention was of use to her, and prevented
her continually thinking of Ann, whose fluctuating disorder often gave rise to
false hopes.
A trifling
thing occurred now which occasioned Mary some uneasiness. Her maid, a
well-looking girl, had captivated the clerk of a neighbouring
compting-house. As the match was an advantageous one,
Mary could not raise any objection to it, though at this juncture it was very
disagreeable to her to have a stranger about her person. However, the girl
consented to delay the marriage, as she had some affection for her mistress;
and, besides, looked forward to Ann's death as a time of harvest.
Henry's illness was not alarming, it was rather pleasing, as it gave Mary
an excuse to herself for shewing him how much she was
interested about him; and giving little artless proofs of affection, which the
purity of her heart made her never wish to restrain.
The only
visible return he made was not obvious to common observers. He would sometimes fix
his eyes on her, and take them off with a sigh that was coughed
away; or when he was leisurely walking into the room, and did not expect to see
her, he would quicken his steps, and come up to her with eagerness to ask some
trivial question. In the same style, he would try to detain her when he had
nothing to say—or said nothing.
Ann did not
take notice of either his or Mary's behaviour, nor
did she suspect that he was a favourite,
on any other account than his appearing neither well nor happy. She had often
seen that when a person was unfortunate, Mary's pity might easily be mistaken
for love, and, indeed, it was a temporary sensation of that kind. Such it
was—why it was so, let others define, I cannot argue against instincts. As
reason is cultivated in man, they are supposed to grow weaker, and this may
have given rise to the assertion, "That as judgment improves, genius
evaporates."