Englishwoman's Love Letters - Page 22/59

You told me, dearest, that I should find your mother formidable. It is

true; I did. She is a person very much in the grand pagan style: I admire

it, but I cannot flow in that sort of company, and I think she meant to

crush me. You were very wise to leave her to come alone.

I like her: I mean I believe that under that terribleness she has a

heart of gold, which once opened would never shut: but she has not

opened it to me. I believe she could have a great charity, that no

evil-doing would dismay her: "stanch" sums her up. But I have done

nothing wrong enough yet to bring me into her good graces. Loving her

son, even, though, I fear, a great offense, has done me no good turn.

Perhaps that is her inconsistency: women are sure to be inconsistent

somewhere: it is their birthright.

I began to study her at once, to find you: it did not take long. How I

could love her, if she would let me!

You know her far far better than I, and want no advice: otherwise I

would say--never praise me to her; quote my follies rather! To give

ground for her distaste to revel in will not deepen me in her bad books

so much as attempts to warp her judgment.

I need not go through it all: she will have told you all that is to the

purpose about our meeting. She bristled in, a brave old fighting figure,

announcing compulsion in every line, but with all her colors flying. She

waited for the door to close, then said, "My son has bidden me come, I

suppose it is my duty: he is his own master now."

We only shook hands. Our talk was very little of you. I showed her all the

horses, the dogs, and the poultry; she let the inspection appear to

conclude with myself: asked me my habits, and said I looked healthy. I

owned I felt it. "Looks and feelings are the most deceptive things in the

world," she told me; adding that "poor stock" got more than its share of

these. And when she said it I saw quite plainly that she meant me.

I wonder where she gets the notion: for we are a long-lived race, both

sides of the family. I guessed that she would like frankness, and was as

frank as I could be, pretending no deference to her objections. "You

think you suit each other?" she asked me. My answer, "He suits me!"

pleased her maternal palate, I think. "Any girl might say that!" she

admitted. (She might indeed!) This is the part of our interview she will not have repeated to you.

I was due at Hillyn when she was preparing to go: Aunt N---- came in,

and I left her to do the honors while I slipped on my habit. I rode by

your mother's carriage as far as the Greenway, where we branched. I

suppose that is what her phrase means that you quote about my "making a

trophy of her," and marching her a prisoner across the borders before

all the world!