Jane Eyre - Page 87/412

I thanked her for her considerate choice, and as I really felt

fatigued with my long journey, expressed my readiness to retire.

She took her candle, and I followed her from the room. First she

went to see if the hall-door was fastened; having taken the key from

the lock, she led the way upstairs. The steps and banisters were of

oak; the staircase window was high and latticed; both it and the

long gallery into which the bedroom doors opened looked as if they

belonged to a church rather than a house. A very chill and vault-

like air pervaded the stairs and gallery, suggesting cheerless ideas

of space and solitude; and I was glad, when finally ushered into my

chamber, to find it of small dimensions, and furnished in ordinary,

modern style.

When Mrs. Fairfax had bidden me a kind good-night, and I had

fastened my door, gazed leisurely round, and in some measure effaced

the eerie impression made by that wide hall, that dark and spacious

staircase, and that long, cold gallery, by the livelier aspect of my

little room, I remembered that, after a day of bodily fatigue and

mental anxiety, I was now at last in safe haven. The impulse of

gratitude swelled my heart, and I knelt down at the bedside, and

offered up thanks where thanks were due; not forgetting, ere I rose,

to implore aid on my further path, and the power of meriting the

kindness which seemed so frankly offered me before it was earned.

My couch had no thorns in it that night; my solitary room no fears.

At once weary and content, I slept soon and soundly: when I awoke

it was broad day.

The chamber looked such a bright little place to me as the sun shone

in between the gay blue chintz window curtains, showing papered

walls and a carpeted floor, so unlike the bare planks and stained

plaster of Lowood, that my spirits rose at the view. Externals have

a great effect on the young: I thought that a fairer era of life

was beginning for me, one that was to have its flowers and

pleasures, as well as its thorns and toils. My faculties, roused by

the change of scene, the new field offered to hope, seemed all

astir. I cannot precisely define what they expected, but it was

something pleasant: not perhaps that day or that month, but at an

indefinite future period.

I rose; I dressed myself with care: obliged to be plain--for I had

no article of attire that was not made with extreme simplicity--I

was still by nature solicitous to be neat. It was not my habit to

be disregardful of appearance or careless of the impression I made:

on the contrary, I ever wished to look as well as I could, and to

please as much as my want of beauty would permit. I sometimes

regretted that I was not handsomer; I sometimes wished to have rosy

cheeks, a straight nose, and small cherry mouth; I desired to be

tall, stately, and finely developed in figure; I felt it a

misfortune that I was so little, so pale, and had features so

irregular and so marked. And why had I these aspirations and these

regrets? It would be difficult to say: I could not then distinctly

say it to myself; yet I had a reason, and a logical, natural reason

too. However, when I had brushed my hair very smooth, and put on my

black frock--which, Quakerlike as it was, at least had the merit of

fitting to a nicety--and adjusted my clean white tucker, I thought I

should do respectably enough to appear before Mrs. Fairfax, and that

my new pupil would not at least recoil from me with antipathy.

Having opened my chamber window, and seen that I left all things

straight and neat on the toilet table, I ventured forth.