Of course I’m very glad. You have known my mind from the first to the last,
and, therefore, what would be the good of my mincing matters? No woman wishes
her dearest friend to marry a man to whom she herself is antipathetic. You would
have been as much lost to me, had you become Mrs Grey of Nethercoats,
Cambridgeshire, as though you had gone to heaven. I don’t say but what
Nethercoats may be a kind of heaven — but then one doesn’t wish one’s friend
that distant sort of happiness. A flat Eden I can fancy it, hemmed in by broad
dykes, in which cream and eggs are very plentiful, where an Adam and an Eve
might drink the choicest tea out of the finest china, with toast buttered to
perfection, from year’s end to year’s end; into which no money troubles would
ever find their way, nor yet any naughty novels. But such an Eden is not
tempting to me, nor, as I think, to you. I can fancy you stretching your poor
neck over the dyke, longing to fly away that you might cease to be at rest, but
knowing that the matrimonial dragon was too strong for any such flight. If ever
bird banged his wings to pieces against gilded bars, you would have banged yours
to pieces in that cage.
You say that you have failed to make him understand that the matter is
settled. I need not say that of course it is settled, and that he must be made
to understand it. You owe it to him now to put him out of all doubt. He is, I
suppose, accessible to the words of a mortal, god though he be. But I do not
fear about this, for, after all, you have as much firmness about you as most
people — perhaps as much as he has at bottom, though you may not have so many
occasions to show it.
As to that other matter I can only say that you shall be obliged, as far as
it is in my power to obey you. For what may come out from me by word of mouth
when we are together, I will not answer with certainty. But my pen is under
better control, and it shall not write the offending name.
And now I must tell you a little about myself — or rather, I am inclined to
spin a yarn, and tell you a great deal. I have got such a lover! But I did
describe him before. Of course it’s Mr Cheesacre. If I were to say that he
hasn’t declared himself, I should hardly give you a fair idea of my success. And
yet he has not declared himself — and, which is worse, is very anxious to marry
a rival. But it’s a strong point in my favour that my rival wants him to take
me, and that he will assuredly be driven to make me an offer sooner or later, in
obedience to her orders. My aunt is my rival, and I do not feel the least doubt
as to his having offered to her half a dozen times. But then she has another
lover, Captain Bellfield, and I see that she prefers him. He is a penniless
scamp and looks as though he drank. He paints his whiskers too, which I don’t
like; and, being forty, tries to look like twenty-five. Otherwise he is
agreeable enough, and I rather approve of my aunt’s taste in preferring him.
But my lover has solid attractions, and allures me on by a description of the
fat cattle which he sends to market. He is a man of substance, and should I ever
become Mrs Cheesacre, I have reason to think that I shall not be left in want.
We went up to his place on a visit the other day. Oileymead is the name of my
future home: not so pretty as Nethercoats, is it? And we had such a time there!
We reached the place at ten and left it at four, and he managed to give us three
meals. I’m sure we had before our eyes at different times every bit of china,
delf, glass, and plate in the establishment. He made us go into the cellar, and
told us how much wine he had got there, and how much beer. ‘It’s all paid for,
Mrs Greenow, every bottle of it,’ he said, turning round to my aunt, with a
pathetic earnestness, for which I had hardly given him credit. ‘Everything in
this house is my own; it’s all paid for. I don’t call anything a man’s own till
it is paid for. Now that jacket that Bellfield swells about with on the sands at
Yarmouth — that’s not his own — and it’s not like to be either.’ And then he
winked his eye as though bidding my aunt to think of that before she encouraged
such a lover as Bellfield. He took us into every bedroom, and disclosed to us
all the glories of his upper chambers. It would have done you good to see him
lifting the counterpanes, and bidding my aunt feel the texture of the blankets!
And then to see her turn round to me and say: ‘Kate, it’s simply the best
furnished house I ever went over in my life!’ — ‘It does seem very comfortable,’
said I. ‘Comfortable!’ said he. ‘Yes, I don’t think there’s anybody can say that
Oileymead isn’t comfortable.’ I did so think of you and Nethercoats. The
attractions are the same — only in the one place you would have a god for your
keeper, and in the other a brute. For myself, if ever I’m to have a keeper at
all, I shall prefer a man. But when we got to the farmyard his eloquence reached
the highest pitch. ‘Mrs Greenow,’ said he, ‘look at that,’ and he pointed to
heaps of manure raised like the streets of a little city. ‘Look at that!’
‘There’s a great deal,’ said my aunt. ‘I believe you,’ said he. ‘I’ve more muck
upon this place here than any farmer in Norfolk, gentle or simple; I don’t care
who the other is.’ Only fancy, Alice; it may all be mine; the blankets, the
wine, the muck, and the rest of it. So my aunt assured me when we got home that
evening. When I remarked that the wealth had been exhibited to her and not to
me, she did not affect to deny it, but treated that as a matter of no moment.
‘He wants a wife, my dear,’ she said, ‘and you may pick him up tomorrow by
putting out your hand.’ When I remarked that his mind seemed to be intent on low
things, and specially named the muck, she only laughed at me. ‘Money’s never
dirty,’ she said, ‘nor yet what makes money.’ She talks of taking lodgings in
Norwich for the winter, saying that in her widowed state she will be as well
there as anywhere else, and she wants me to stay with her up to Christmas.
Indeed she first proposed the Norwich plan on the ground that it might be useful
to me — with a view to Mr Cheesacre, of course; but I fancy that she is
unwilling to tear herself away from Captain Bellfield. At any rate to Norwich
she will go, and I have promised not to leave her before the second week in
November. With all her absurdities I like her. Her faults are terrible faults,
but she has not the fault of hiding them by falsehood. She is never stupid, and
she is very good-natured. She would have allowed me to equip myself from head to
foot at her expense, if I would have accepted her liberality, and absolutely
offered to give me my trousseau if I would marry Mr Cheesacre.
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