Índice Geral das Seções Índice da Seção Atual Índice da Obra Atual Anterior: Capítulo 4 Seguinte: Capítulo 6
CAPÍTULO 5.
NOEL was
received by his friend with the greatest cordiality. Independently of the
associations and pursuits which they had common, it was no small luxury to
Maynard to escape from his monotonous intercourse with the mining officials to
the conversation of a friend and equal.
The escort, recruited, paid, and dismissed, had taken its departure, and the
friends passed the rest of the day in almost unintermitting
conversation. At first they reclined in the broad Verandah
by which the house was surrounded on three sides, and hence the view in every
direction was magnificent. The rear
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was
devoted to the stables and corral. Maynard had
selected for his private residence the most picturesque, and almost the most
inaccessible, spot in the whole neighbourhood. In his eagerness to surround his
bride with all attainable beauty, he had fixed their abode in an open spot on
the summit of the mountain, on the lower portion of which the works were
situated. It was evident that such site must be liable to inconvenience,
especially on the score of the absence of any water supply. But Maynard was
assured by his architect that such an objection did not merit consideration in a
country where no one dreamt of walking or driving, and everything was packed on
mules.
The view was indeed a fine one, consisting of mountains and gorges alternating
in endless succession, though with base and sterile sides; the great
silver-producing ranges of Guanaxuato being devoid of
all vegetation, save only in the spot where Maynard’s
lot had fallen. As they looked towards the north-east, the smoke of the works
could be discerned far below, rising from among the pines. And now and then the
din of the machinery and cries of the
muléros
reached the ears of the sitters in the verandah.
Sunset lit up the whole scene with a softness of tone that mitigated the
desolateness of its grandeur; and then the party abandoned a position which at
that elevation becomes disagreeably and dangerously chilly in the evening, and
spent the hours remaining until bedtime within doors.
Margaret and Edmund said little to each other, yet each felt as if there was a
perfect understanding between them. Her children, to Maynard’s surprise, took to
the stranger at once, and played with him as readily as with their mother. They
were literally little saints in the divine transparent innocence their
appearance, having all their mother’s refined sweetness and spirituality, and
even, in some slight degree, her subdued and thoughtful air.
The conversation that followed their evening meal and the removal of the children, attracted Margaret’s attention and excited her
interest to an extent which puzzled Noel. It turned upon his visit by the way to
the capital, and the opinion he had been led to form about the impending
intervention and its probable consequences. He fancied that Maynard evinced an
anxiety on the matter for reasons even more closely personal than any affecting
his mining enterprise. It also struck him
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as
curious that the husband and wife rarely addressed each other, but directed
their remarks to him. It seemed to him as if some foregone conclusion had been
come to by Maynard, which Margaret deprecated, but owned her inability to
withstand, and to counteract which she trusted to circumstances.
One of the questions thus mooted was that of the safety of foreigners in the
event of a hostile invasion by the European powers; for this was clearly the
point to which public affairs were tending. It was generally believed that a
joint expedition was even now approaching the shores of
It was late in the evening when Maynard left the room to receive in his office,
from one of his administradors, the
day’s report of work done. His absence enabled Noel and Margaret to exchange the
first free words since their meeting on the mountain path. Curiously enough,
although each had longed to talk to the other, yet, when the opportunity came,
neither seemed ready to take advantage of it. Margaret turned over some work
that she held in her hand, and Noel took up a book from the table.
‘Pray,’ said he, ‘at length, what did you mean to-day by saying that you had
long expected me?’
Margaret felt a relief at his thus breaking the silence, and also at his not
addressing her with the formal ‘Mrs. Maynard,’ though she had no idea that she
derived satisfaction from that slight circumstance. Neither had she any idea
what reply to make to the question. She would have expressed astonishment at his
recollection of her remark, but that every minute circumstance of their meeting
was deeply engraved upon her own memory. So she said, forcing a slight smile, –
‘I cannot tell. Ask me something else.’
‘When I remember,’ he said, ‘how intimately connected our respective friends and
relations have long been, it seems very wonderful that we should not have met
long ago in England, instead of waiting until I had to seek you out on this
remote pinnacle.’
‘Is not everything wonderful?’ asked Margaret, in a slightly
(p. 226)
impatient tone,
and added, – ‘yes, you are right. Though now I see you I find
it difficult not to fancy that I have known you always.’
‘From hearing me mentioned by the Bevans, and James?’
he suggested but she only shook her head.
‘If either of us knows the other by report,’ he continued, I can certainly claim
to know you best; for I must have heard you spoken of far oftener than you can
possibly have heard of me. Why,’ he went on, with a growing animation that began
to communicate itself to her, I even ventured to ransack your nest at
Porlock Cove while it was yet warm with your presence, and saw your
drawings, and talked with your nurse about your convent life – or death, rather.
And then, Sophia Bevan’s
letters are always at least half about you. How she would enjoy being here,
chatting with us now! Poor dear Sophy! I hope yon
learnt to appreciate her thoroughness?’
‘Oh yes, I have indeed. At first I did not understand her. I had seen so few
people, and she was so clever, that I think I was frightened. Things seemed to
come to her without her having to think for them. I thought then, by the way you
were generally spoken of, that – that you would not have remained away from her
all these years.’
She said this with an arch smile, and an air that showed that she was now
instinctively aware that Edmund had no tender feeling on the subject which she
could wound by a blunt reference to it.
‘You understand our friendship better now, then?’ he asked.
‘I understand that being what I understood you to be, you had not those feelings
for Miss –– for my cousin, which I could not understand your having, unless you
were very different from what I had come to imagine.’
‘You mean that report in some way belied me to you?’
‘Only in making you out to be engaged to Sophia. It was
because report made you what you are that I – I hardly thought you suited to
each other.’
‘I see. Then I correspond to the eidolon, (which, as James
will tell you, means, not idol, but image or likeness,) which report had drawn
of me for you.’
‘I do not think I learnt you from reports,’ she returned; ‘they came afterwards.
I suppose I am very foolish and fanciful but the idea always haunted me that
somewhere in the
(p. 227)
world I had a
brother, who was ever near, but yet failed to become visible to me. I even
fancied what he was like, and felt certain that I should recognise him whenever
I might see him. And sometimes it seemed to me, from what I heard at Linnwood, as if you must be something like him. Even Sophia
laughed at me once for taking your part when she was scolding you in your
absence; and I said I was not thinking of you at all, but of my imaginary
brother, whom it seemed to me that she was finding fault with for something that
I did not dislike in him.’
‘And you never saw him?’ said Noel, in so gentle and kindly a tone, as not to
startle her into self-consciousness by a strange voice, until––?
Raising her head so as to throw back the masses of auburn hair, which fell
forward on her work, and looking him full in the face, she replied, –
‘I never saw anybody like him until to-day.’
Noel did not immediately make any reply. It seemed to him that a veil had been
removed from his eyes. He recalled his first distant glimpse of Porlock Cove, and the fair tenant of its limpid waters; and
the lineaments which, drawing solely upon his imagination, he had given to his
Psyche. He thought of the obscure suggestions contained in Sophia Bevan’s letters, and of Lord Littmass’s
strange proposal, and Sophia’s comments thereon. These memories ran rapidly
through his mind, blending themselves as they came with
the revelation that Margaret had just made to him of her own interior life, a
revelation which he now thought he understood far better than she did. He saw
that Margaret and himself were indeed one and identical in temperament, in
character, in soul; the other half of each other, long dreamt of, and yearned
for; and now at length found – found when too late. He shuddered as his mind
reached the thought; and as he shuddered he heard at the door the quick step of
James Maynard.
Maynard entered the room, saying in loud cheerful voice, –
‘Now, Margaret, you must be thinking of bed. Our traveller must be tired.’
He had been absent only some fifteen or twenty minutes, but to both Margaret and
Edmund it seemed that an eternity had unveiled itself in the interval. She rose,
saying, –
‘Then I will at once say buenas noches;’ and placing her
hand frankly in that of Noel, added, you will find a choice of
(p. 228)
sleeping places
in your room. But I do not think that the usual Mexican pests will trouble you
in this house, so that you need not use the hammock unless you prefer it.’
And running up to her own room she threw herself down on her knees, and poured
out her soul in thanksgiving for having had her brother sent to her at last.
Maynard and Noel talked yet some time longer, and when at length Edmund went
into the room prepared for him, he started to see the familiar air of comfort
and home that it possessed, notwithstanding the foreign elements which entered
into its composition. James looked keenly round it, and said in a tone of
half-surly sprightliness, –
‘Ah, I see you have made friends with Margaret already,’ – a speech that ought
to have been quite unintelligible to Noel, but was not. Looking round after
James had left him, he found on the table some books, which, to judge by the
lightly pencilled marks, must have been her special favourites; and on the walls
were hung some of her own drawings, one of which was a watercolour sketch of
Porlock Cove with its sandy beach and enclosing cliffs, and a white
figure dimly apparent through superincumbent
waters. And the legend beneath was that of Sabrina: –
‘Under the glassy, cool, translucent wave.’
It suggested to
Noel, Margaret herself dwelling in a dream, and unconscious of the meaning of
the world by which she was surrounded; or one in whom the current of being ran
deep, like a stream at the bottom of a cleft mountain,
unreached
by light from the day above.
Índice Geral das Seções Índice da Seção Atual Índice da Obra Atual Anterior: Capítulo 4 Seguinte: Capítulo 6
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