CHAPTER II.
In due time she brought forth a son, a feeble babe; and the following year
a daughter. After the mother's throes she felt very few
sentiments of maternal tenderness: the children were given to nurses, and she
played with her dogs. Want of exercise prevented the least chance of her
recovering strength; and two or three milk-fevers brought on a consumption, to
which her constitution tended. Her children all died in their infancy, except
the two first, and she began to grow fond of the son, as he was remarkably
handsome. For years she divided her time between the sofa, and the card-table.
She thought not of death, though on the borders of the
grave; nor did any of the duties of her station occur to her as necessary. Her
children were left in the nursery; and when Mary, the little blushing girl,
appeared, she would send the awkward thing away. To own the truth, she was
awkward enough, in a house without any play-mates; for her brother had been
sent to school, and she scarcely knew how to employ herself; she would ramble
about the garden, admire the flowers, and play with the dogs. An old house-keeper
told her stories, read to her, and, at last, taught her to read. Her mother
talked of enquiring for a governess when her health would permit; and, in the
interim desired her own maid to teach her French. As she had learned to read,
she perused with avidity every book that came in her way. Neglected in every respect, and left to the operations of her own mind,
she considered every thing that came under her inspection, and learned to
think. She had heard of a separate state, and that angels sometimes visited
this earth. She would sit in a thick wood in the park, and talk to them; make
little songs addressed to them, and sing them to tunes of her own composing;
and her native wood notes wild were sweet and touching.
Her father
always exclaimed against female acquirements, and was glad that his wife's
indolence and ill health made her not trouble herself about them. She had
besides another reason, she did not wish to have a fine tall girl brought
forward into notice as her daughter; she still expected to recover, and figure
away in the gay world. Her husband was very tyrannical and passionate; indeed
so very easily irritated when inebriated, that Mary was
continually in dread lest he should frighten her mother to death; her sickness
called forth all Mary's tenderness, and exercised her compassion so
continually, that it became more than a match for self-love, and was the
governing propensity of her heart through life. She was violent in her temper;
but she saw her father's faults, and would weep when obliged to compare his
temper with her own.—She did more; artless prayers rose to Heaven for pardon,
when she was conscious of having erred; and her contrition was so exceedingly
painful, that she watched diligently the first movements of anger and
impatience, to save herself this cruel remorse.
Sublime
ideas filled her young mind—always connected with devotional sentiments;
extemporary effusions of gratitude,
and rhapsodies of praise would burst often from her, when she listened to the
birds, or pursued the deer. She would gaze on the moon, and ramble through the
gloomy path, observing the various shapes the clouds assumed, and listen to the
sea that was not far distant. The wandering spirits, which she imagined
inhabited every part of nature, were her constant friends and confidants. She
began to consider the Great First Cause, formed just notions of his attributes,
and, in particular, dwelt on his wisdom and goodness. Could she have loved her
father or mother, had they returned her affection, she would not so soon, perhaps,
have sought out a new world.
Her
sensibility prompted her to search for an object to love; on earth it was not
to be found: her mother had often disappointed her, and the apparent partiality she shewed to her brother
gave her exquisite pain—produced a kind of habitual melancholy, led her into a
fondness for reading tales of woe, and made her almost realize the fictitious
distress.
She had not
any notion of death till a little chicken expired at her feet; and her father
had a dog hung in a passion. She then concluded animals had souls, or they
would not have been subjected to the caprice of man; but what was the soul of
man or beast? In this style year after year rolled on, her mother still
vegetating.
A little
girl who attended in the nursery fell sick. Mary paid her great attention;
contrary to her wish, she was sent out of the house to her mother, a poor
woman, whom necessity obliged to leave her sick child while she earned her
daily bread. The poor wretch, in a fit of delirium
stabbed herself, and Mary saw her dead body, and heard the dismal account; and
so strongly did it impress her imagination, that every
night of her life the bleeding corpse presented itself to her when the first
began to slumber. Tortured by it, she at last made a vow, that if she was ever
mistress of a family she would herself watch over every part of it. The
impression that this accident made was indelible.
As her
mother grew imperceptibly worse and worse, her father, who did not understand
such a lingering complaint, imagined his wife was only grown still more
whimsical, and that if she could be prevailed on to exert herself,
her health would soon be re-established. In general he treated her with
indifference; but when her illness at all interfered with his pleasures, he
expostulated in the most cruel
manner, and visibly harassed the invalid. Mary would then assiduously try to
turn his attention to something else; and when sent out of the room, would
watch at the door, until the storm was over, for unless it was, she could not
rest. Other causes also contributed to disturb her repose: her mother's luke-warm manner of performing her religious duties, filled her with anguish; and when she observed her
father's vices, the unbidden tears would flow. She was miserable when beggars were
driven from the gate without being relieved; if she could do it unperceived,
she would give them her own breakfast, and feel gratified, when, in consequence
of it, she was pinched by hunger.
She had
once, or twice, told her little secrets to her mother; they were laughed at,
and she determined never to do it again. In this manner
was she left to reflect on her own feelings; and so strengthened were they by
being meditated on, that her character early became singular and permanent. Her
understanding was strong and clear, when not clouded by her feelings; but she
was too much the creature of impulse, and the slave of compassion.