flow; it was dangerous to blame him, harshly.
She let them roll down, figuring to herself with quiet
simplicity of mind that her spirit was independent
of them as long as she restrained her hands from being
accomplices by brushing them away, as weeping girls
do that cry for comfort. Nevil had saved her brother’s
life, and had succoured her countrymen; he loved her,
and was a hero. He should not have said he loved
her; that was wrong; and it was shameful that he should
have urged her to disobey her father. But this
hero’s love of her might plead excuses she did
not know of; and if he was to be excused, he, unhappy
that he was, had a claim on her for more than tears.
She wept resentfully. Forces above her own swayed
and hurried her like a lifeless body dragged by flying
wheels: they could not unnerve her will, or rather,
what it really was, her sense of submission to a destiny.
Looked at from the height of the palm-waving cherubs
over the fallen martyr in the picture, she seemed
as nerveless as a dreamy girl. The raised arms
and bent elbows were an illusion of indifference.
Her shape was rigid from hands to feet, as if to keep
in a knot the resolution of her mind; for the second
and in that young season the stronger nature grafted
by her education fixed her to the religious duty of
obeying and pleasing her father, in contempt, almost
in abhorrence, of personal inclinations tending to
thwart him and imperil his pledged word. She knew
she had inclinations to be tender. Her hands released,
how promptly might she not have been confiding her
innumerable perplexities of sentiment and emotion
to paper, undermining self-governance; self-respect,
perhaps! Further than that, she did not understand
the feelings she struggled with; nor had she any impulse
to gaze on him, the cause of her trouble, who walked
beside her brother below, talking betweenwhiles in
the night’s grave undertones. Her trouble
was too overmastering; it had seized her too mysteriously,
coming on her solitariness without warning in the first
watch of the night, like a spark crackling serpentine
along dry leaves to sudden flame. A thought of
Nevil and a regret had done it.
CHAPTER VIII
A NIGHT ON THE ADRIATIC
The lovers met after Roland had spoken to his sister—not
exactly to advocate the cause of Nevil, though he
was under the influence of that grave night’s
walk with him, but to sound her and see whether she
at all shared Nevil’s view of her situation.
Roland felt the awfulness of a French family arrangement
of a marriage, and the impertinence of a foreign Cupid’s
intrusion, too keenly to plead for his friend:
at the same time he loved his friend and his sister,
and would have been very ready to smile blessings
on them if favourable circumstances had raised a signal;
if, for example, apoplexy or any other cordial ex machina
intervention had removed the middle-aged marquis; and,
perhaps, if Renee had shown the repugnance to her