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Chapter XX--A noble marriage

A Lady of Quality





When the duke came back from France, and to pay his first eager
visit to his bride that was to be, her ladyship's lacqueys led him
not to the Panelled Parlour, but to a room which he had not entered
before, it being one she had had the fancy to have remodelled and
made into a beautiful closet for herself, her great wealth rendering
it possible for her to accomplish changes without the loss of time
the owners of limited purses are subjected to in the carrying out of
plans. This room she had made as unlike the Panelled Parlour as two
rooms would be unlike one another. Its panellings were white, its
furnishings were bright and delicate, its draperies flowered with
rosebuds tied in clusters with love-knots of pink and blue; it had a
large bow-window, through which the sunlight streamed, and it was
blooming with great rose-bowls overrunning with sweetness.

From a seat in the morning sunshine among the flowers and plants
in the bow-window, there rose a tall figure in a snow-white robe--a
figure like that of a beautiful stately girl who was half an angel.
It was my lady, who came to him with blushing cheeks and radiant
shining eyes, and was swept into his arms in such a passion of love
and blessed tenderness as Heaven might have smiled to see.

"My love! my love!" he breathed. "My life! my life and
soul!"

"My Gerald!" she cried. "My Gerald--let me say it on your
breast a thousand times!"

"My wife!" he said--"so soon my wife and all my own until life's
end."

"Nay, nay," she cried, her cheek pressed to his own, "through
all eternity, for Love's life knows no end."

As it had seemed to her poor lord who had died, so it seemed to
this man who lived and so worshipped her--that the wonder of her
sweetness was a thing to marvel at with passionate reverence. Being
a man of greater mind and poetic imagination than Dunstanwolde, and
being himself adored by her, as that poor gentleman had not had the
good fortune to be, he had ten thousand-fold the power and reason to
see the tender radiance of her. As she was taller than other women,
so her love seemed higher and greater, and as free from any touch of
earthly poverty of feeling as her beauty was from any flaw. In it
there could be no doubt, no pride; it could be bounded by no limit,
measured by no rule, its depths sounded by no plummet.

His very soul was touched by her great longing to give to him
the feeling, and to feel herself, that from the hour that she had
become his, her past life was a thing blotted out.

"I am a new created thing," she said; "until you called me
'Love' I had no life! All before was darkness. 'Twas you, my
Gerald, who said, 'Let there be light, and there was light.'"

"Hush, hush, sweet love," he said. "Your words would make me
too near God's self."

"Sure Love is God," she cried, her hands upon his shoulders, her
face uplifted. "What else? Love we know; Love we worship and kneel
to; Love conquers us and gives us Heaven. Until I knew it, I
believed naught. Now I kneel each night and pray, and pray, but to
be pardoned and made worthy."

Never before, it was true, had she knelt and prayed, but from
this time no nun in her convent knelt oftener or prayed more
ardently, and her prayer was ever that the past might be forgiven
her, the future blessed, and she taught how to so live that there
should be no faintest shadow in the years to come.

"I know not What is above me," she said. "I cannot lie and say
I love It and believe, but if there is aught, sure It must be a power
which is great, else had the world not been so strange a thing, and
I--and those who live in it--and if He made us, He must know He is to
blame when He has made us weak or evil. And He must understand why
we have been so made, and when we throw ourselves into the dust
before Him, and pray for help and pardon, surely--surely He will lend
an ear! We know naught, we have been told naught; we have but an old
book which has been handed down through strange hands and strange
tongues, and may be but poor history. We have so little, and we are
threatened so; but for love's sake I will pray the poor prayers we
are given, and for love's sake there is no dust too low for me to lie
in while I plead."

This was the strange truth--though 'twas not so strange if the
world feared not to admit such things--that through her Gerald, who
was but noble and high-souled man, she was led to bow before God's
throne as the humblest and holiest saint bows, though she had not
learned belief and only had learned love.

"But life lasts so short a while," she said to Osmonde. "It
seems so short when it is spent in such joy as this; and when the day
comes--for, oh! Gerald, my soul sees it already--when the day comes
that I kneel by your bedside and see your eyes close, or you kneel by
mine, it must be that the one who waits behind shall know the parting
is not all."

"It could not be all, beloved," Osmonde said. "Love is sure,
eternal."

Often in these blissful hours her way was almost like a child's,
she was so tender and so clinging. At times her beauteous, great
eyes were full of an imploring which made them seem soft with tears,
and thus they were now as she looked up at him.

"I will do all I can," she said. "I will obey every law, I will
pray often and give alms, and strive to be dutiful and--holy, that in
the end He will not thrust me from you; that I may stay near-- even
in the lowest place, even in the lowest--that I may see your face and
know that you see mine. We are so in His power, He can do aught with
us; but I will so obey Him and so pray that He will let me in."

To Anne she went with curious humility, questioning her as to
her religious duties and beliefs, asking her what books she read, and
what services she attended.

"All your life you have been a religious woman," she said. "I
used to think it folly, but now--"

"But now--" said Anne.

"I know not what to think," she answered. "I would learn."

But when she listened to Anne's simple homilies, and read her
weighty sermons, they but made her restless and unsatisfied.

"Nay, 'tis not that," she said one day, with a deep sigh. "'Tis
more than that; 'tis deeper, and greater, and your sermons do not
hold it. They but set my brain to questioning and rebellion."

But a short time elapsed before the marriage was solemnised, and
such a wedding the world of fashion had not taken part in for years,
'twas said. Royalty honoured it; the greatest of the land were proud
to count themselves among the guests; the retainers, messengers, and
company of the two great houses were so numerous that in the west end
of the town the streets wore indeed quite a festal air, with the
passing to and fro of servants and gentlefolk with favours upon their
arms.

'Twas to the Tower of Camylott, the most beautiful and remote of
the bridegroom's several notable seats, that they removed their
household, when the irksomeness of the extended ceremonies and
entertainments were over--for these they were of too distinguished
rank to curtail as lesser personages might have done. But when all
things were over, the stately town houses closed, and their equipages
rolled out beyond the sight of town into the country roads, the great
duke and his great duchess sat hand in hand, gazing into each other's
eyes with as simple and ardent a joy as they had been but young
'prentice and country maid, flying to hide from the world their
love.

"There is no other woman who is so like a queen," Osmonde said,
with tenderest smiling. "And yet your eyes wear a look so young in
these days that they are like a child's. In all their beauty, I have
never seen them so before."

"It is because I am a new created thing, as I have told you,
love," she answered, and leaned towards him. "Do you not know I
never was a child. I bring myself to you new born. Make of me then
what a woman should be--to be beloved of husband and of God. Teach
me, my Gerald. I am your child and servant."

'Twas ever thus, that her words when they were such as these
were ended upon his breast as she was swept there by his impassioned
arm. She was so goddess-like and beautiful a being, her life one
strangely dominant and brilliant series of triumphs, and yet she came
to him with such softness and humility of passion, that scarcely
could he think himself a waking man.

"Surely," he said, "it is a thing too wondrous and too full of
joy's splendour to be true."

In the golden afternoon, when the sun was deepening and
mellowing towards its setting, they and their retinue entered
Camylott. The bells pealed from the grey belfry of the old church;
the villagers came forth in clean smocks and Sunday cloaks of
scarlet, and stood in the street and by the roadside curtseying and
baring their heads with rustic cheers; little country girls with red
cheeks threw posies before the horses' feet, and into the equipage
itself when they were of the bolder sort. Their chariot passed
beneath archways of flowers and boughs, and from the battlements of
the Tower of Camylott there floated a flag in the soft wind.

"God save your Graces," the simple people cried. "God give your
Graces joy and long life! Lord, what a beautiful pair they be. And
though her Grace was said to be a proud lady, how sweetly she smiles
at a poor body. God love ye, madam! Madam, God love ye!"

Her Grace of Osmonde leaned forward in her equipage and smiled
at the people with the face of an angel.

"I will teach them to love me, Gerald," she said. "I have not
had love enough."

"Has not all the world loved you?" he said.

"Nay," she answered, "only you, and Dunstanwolde and Anne."

Late at night they walked together on the broad terrace before
the Tower. The blue-black vault of heaven above them was studded
with myriads of God's brilliants; below them was spread out the
beauty of the land, the rolling plains, the soft low hills, the
forests and moors folded and hidden in the swathing robe of the
night; from the park and gardens floated upward the freshness of
acres of thick sward and deep fern thicket, the fragrance of roses
and a thousand flowers, the tender sighing of the wind through the
huge oaks and beeches bordering the avenues, and reigning like kings
over the seeming boundless grassy spaces.

As lovers have walked since the days of Eden they walked
together, no longer duke and duchess, but man and woman--near to
Paradise as human beings may draw until God breaks the chain binding
them to earth; and, indeed, it would seem that such hours are given
to the straining human soul that it may know that somewhere perfect
joy must be, since sometimes the gates are for a moment opened that
Heaven's light may shine through, so that human eyes may catch
glimpses of the white and golden glories within.

His arm held her, she leaned against him, their slow steps so
harmonising the one with the other that they accorded with the
harmony of music; the nightingales trilling and bubbling in the rose
trees were not affrighted by the low murmur of their voices;
perchance, this night they were so near to Nature that the barriers
were o'erpassed, and they and the singers were akin.

"Oh! to be a woman," Clorinda murmured. "To be a woman at last.
All other things I have been, and have been called 'Huntress,'
'Goddess,' 'Beauty,' 'Empress,' 'Conqueror,'--but never 'Woman.' And
had our paths not crossed, I think I never could have known what
'twas to be one, for to be a woman one must close with the man who is
one's mate. It must not be that one looks down, or only pities or
protects and guides; and only to a few a mate seems given. And
I--Gerald, how dare I walk thus at your side and feel your heart so
beat near mine, and know you love me, and so worship you--so worship
you--"

She turned and threw herself upon his breast, which was so
near.

"Oh, woman! woman!" he breathed, straining her close. "Oh,
woman who is mine, though I am but man."

"We are but one," she said; "one breath, one soul, one thought,
and one desire. Were it not so, I were not woman and your wife, nor
you man and my soul's lover as you are. If it were not so, we were
still apart, though we were wedded a thousand times. Apart, what are
we but like lopped-off limbs; welded together, we are--this." And for
a moment they spoke not, and a nightingale on the rose vine,
clambering o'er the terrace's balustrade, threw up its little head
and sang as if to the myriads of golden stars. They stood and
listened, hand in hand, her sweet breast rose and fell, her lovely
face was lifted to the bespangled sky.

"Of all this," she said, "I am a part, as I am a part of you.
To- night, as the great earth throbs, and as the stars tremble, and
as the wind sighs, so I, being woman, throb and am tremulous and sigh
also. The earth lives for the sun, and through strange mysteries
blooms forth each season with fruits and flowers; love is my sun, and
through its sacredness I may bloom too, and be as noble as the earth
and that it bears."







                                                                                    

 

 

Go back to the Burnett page for related resources.
Move on to the next section in this etext, Chapter XXI--An heir is born.

A Lady of Quality

Chapter I--The twenty-fourth day of November 1690
Chapter II--In which Sir Jeoffry encounters his offspring
Chapter III--Wherein Sir Jeoffry's boon companions drink a toast
Chapter IV--Lord Twemlow's chaplain visits his patron's kinsman, and Mistress Clorinda shines on her birthday night
Chapter V--"Not I," said she. "There thou mayst trust me. I would not be found out."
Chapter VI--Relating how Mistress Anne discovered a miniature
Chapter VII--'Twas the face of Sir John Oxon the moon shone upon
Chapter VIII--Two meet in the deserted rose garden, and the old Earl of Dunstanwolde is made a happy man
Chapter IX--"I give to him the thing he craves with all his soul-- myself"
Chapter X--"Yes--I have marked him"
Chapter XI--Wherein a noble life comes to an end
Chapter XII--Which treats of the obsequies of my Lord of Dunstanwolde, of his lady's widowhood, and of her return to town
Chapter XIII--Wherein a deadly war begins
Chapter XIV--Containing the history of the breaking of the horse Devil, and relates the returning of his Grace of Osmonde from France
Chapter XV--In which Sir John Oxon finds again a trophy he had lost
Chapter XVI--Dealing with that which was done in the Panelled Parlour
Chapter XVII--Wherein his Grace of Osmonde's courier arrives from France
Chapter XVIII--My Lady Dunstanwolde sits late alone and writes
Chapter XIX--A piteous story is told, and the old cellars walled in
Chapter XX--A noble marriage
Chapter XXI--An heir is born
Chapter XXII--Mother Anne
Chapter XXIII--"In One who will do justice, and demands that it shall be done to each thing He has made, by each who bears His image"
Chapter XXIV--The doves sate upon the window-ledge and lowly cooed and cooed

 


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