书城外语曼斯菲尔德庄园(纯爱·英文馆)
5608800000148

第148章

This dreadful communication could not be kept from the rest of the family.Sir Thomas set off;Edmund would go with him;and the others had been left in a state of wretchedness,inferior only to what followed the receipt of the next letters from London.Everything was by that time public beyond a hope.The servant of Mrs Rushworth,the mother,had exposure in her power,and,supported by her mistress,was not to be silenced.The two ladies,even in the short time they had been together,had disagreed;and the bitterness of the elder against her daughter-in-law might,perhaps,arise almost as much from the personal disrespect with which she had herself been treated,as from sensibility for her son.

However that might be,she was unmanageable.But had she been less obstinate,or of less weight with her son,who was always guided by the last speaker,by the person who could get hold of and shut him up,the case would still have been hopeless,for Mrs Rushworth did not appear again,and there was every reason to conclude her to be concealed somewhere with Mr Crawford,who had quitted his uncle's house,as for a journey,on the very day of her absenting herself.

Sir Thomas,however,remained yet a little longer in town,in the hope of discovering,and snatching her from further vice,though all was lost on the side of character.

His present state,Fanny could hardly bear to think of.There was but one of his children who was not at this time a source of misery to him.Tom's complaints had been greatly heightened by the shock of his sister's conduct,and his recovery so much thrown back by it,that even Lady Bertram had been struck by the difference,and all her alarms were regularly sent off to her husband;and Julia's elopement,the additional blow which had met him on his arrival in London,though its force had been deadened at the moment,must,she knew,be sorely felt.She saw that it was.His letters expressed how much he deplored it.Under any circumstances it would have been an unwelcome alliance,but to have it so clandestinely formed,and such a period chosen for its completion,placed Julia's feelings in a most unfavourable light,and severely aggravated the folly of her choice.He called it a bad thing,done in the worst manner,and at the worst time;and though Julia was yet as more pardonable than Maria as folly than vice,he could not but regard the step she had taken,as opening the worst probabilities of a conclusion hereafter,like her sister's.Such was his opinion of the set into which she had thrown herself.

Fanny felt for him most acutely.He could have no comfort but in Edmund.Every other child must be racking his heart.His displeasure against herself she trusted,reasoning differently from Mrs Norris,would now be done away.She should be justified.Mr Crawford would have fully acquitted her conduct in refusing him,but this,though most material to herself,would be poor consolation to Sir Thomas.Her uncle's displeasure was terrible to her;but what could her justification,or her gratitude and attachment do for him?His stay must be on Edmund alone.

She was mistaken,however,in supposing that Edmund gave his father no present pain.It was of a much less poignant nature than what the others excited;but Sir Thomas was considering his happiness as very deeply involved in the offence of his sister and friend,cut off by it as he must be from the woman,whom he had been pursuing with undoubted attachment,and strong probability of success;and who in everything but this despicable brother,would have been so eligible a connection.He was aware of what Edmund must be suffering on his own behalf in addition to all the rest,when they were in town;he had seen or conjectured his feelings,and having reason to think that one interview with Miss Crawford had taken place,from which Edmund derived only increased distress,had been as anxious on that account as on others,to get him out of town,and had engaged him in taking Fanny home to her aunt,with a view to his relief and benefit,no less than theirs.Fanny was not in the secret of her uncle's feelings,Sir Thomas not in the secret of Miss Crawford's character.Had he been privy to her conversation with his son,he would not have wished her to belong to him,though her twenty thousand pounds had been forty.

That Edmund must be for ever divided from Miss Crawford,did not admit of a doubt with Fanny;and yet,till she knew that he felt the same,her own conviction was insufficient.She thought he did,but she wanted to be assured of it.If he would now speak to her with the unreserve which had sometimes been too much for her before,it would be most consoling;but that she found was not to be.She seldom saw him-never alone-he probably avoided being alone with her.What was to be inferred?That his judgment submitted to all his own peculiar and bitter share of this family affliction,but that it was too keenly felt to be a subject of the slightest communication.This must be his state.He yielded,but it was with agonies,which did not admit of speech.Long,long would it be ere Miss Crawford's name passed his lips again,or she could hope for a renewal of such confidential intercourse as had been.