Kenilworth - Page 83/408

"That could bode no good to the place he honoured with his residence,"

said Gosling.

"No, by the rood!" replied Tressilian. "Misunderstanding and misery

followed his presence, yet so strangely that I am at this moment at a

loss to trace the gradations of their encroachment upon a family which

had, till then, been so happy. For a time Amy Robsart received the

attentions of this man Varney with the indifference attached to common

courtesies; then followed a period in which she seemed to regard him

with dislike, and even with disgust; and then an extraordinary species

of connection appeared to grow up betwixt them. Varney dropped those

airs of pretension and gallantry which had marked his former approaches;

and Amy, on the other hand, seemed to renounce the ill-disguised disgust

with which she had regarded them. They seemed to have more of privacy

and confidence together than I fully liked, and I suspected that they

met in private, where there was less restraint than in our presence.

Many circumstances, which I noticed but little at the time--for I deemed

her heart as open as her angelic countenance--have since arisen on my

memory, to convince me of their private understanding. But I need not

detail them--the fact speaks for itself. She vanished from her father's

house; Varney disappeared at the same time; and this very day I have

seen her in the character of his paramour, living in the house of his

sordid dependant Foster, and visited by him, muffled, and by a secret

entrance."

"And this, then, is the cause of your quarrel? Methinks, you should

have been sure that the fair lady either desired or deserved your

interference."

"Mine host," answered Tressilian, "my father--such I must ever consider

Sir Hugh Robsart--sits at home struggling with his grief, or, if so

far recovered, vainly attempting to drown, in the practice of

his field-sports, the recollection that he had once a daughter--a

recollection which ever and anon breaks from him under circumstances the

most pathetic. I could not brook the idea that he should live in misery,

and Amy in guilt; and I endeavoured to-seek her out, with the hope of

inducing her to return to her family. I have found her, and when I have

either succeeded in my attempt, or have found it altogether unavailing,

it is my purpose to embark for the Virginia voyage."

"Be not so rash, good sir," replied Giles Gosling, "and cast not

yourself away because a woman--to be brief--IS a woman, and changes

her lovers like her suit of ribands, with no better reason than mere

fantasy. And ere we probe this matter further, let me ask you what

circumstances of suspicion directed you so truly to this lady's

residence, or rather to her place of concealment?"