The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins - First Epoch - Chapter VIII.
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Kapitel 8
Als ich das Zimmer betrat, fand ich Miss Halcombe und eine ältere Dame am Mittagstisch sitzend.
Die ältere Dame, erwies sich, als ich ihr vorgestellt wurde, als ehemalige Gouvernante von Miss Fairlie, Mrs. Vesey, die mir von meiner lebhaften Begleiterin am Frühstückstisch kurz beschrieben worden war, da sie über "alle Kardinaltugenden verfügte und nichts galt." Ich kann kaum mehr tun, als mein bescheidenes Zeugnis ablegen für die Wahrhaftigkeit von Mrs.Halcombes Skizze des Charakters der alten Dame. Mrs. Vesey schaute wie die Personifizierung von menschlicher Gelassenheit und weiblicher Liebenswürdigkeit aus. Ein ruhiger Genuss einer ruhigen Existenz strahlte in müdem Lächeln auf ihrem rundlichen, gelassenen Gesicht. Einige von uns eilen und einige von uns schlendern durchs Leben. Mrs. Vesey saß durchs Leben. Saß im Haus, früh und spät; saß im Garten, saß unvermittelt an Fensterplätzen in Fluren; saß, (auf einem Campingstuhl) wenn ihre Freunde versuchten, sie zum Spazieren auszuführen; saß, bevor sie etwas betrachtete, bevor sie über etwas sprach, bevor sie auf die gängigsten Fragen mit Ja oder Nein antwortete - immer mit demselben gleichmütigen Lächeln auf ihren Lippen, derselben leer-wachsamen Drehung des Kopfes, derselben behaglich-angenehmen Stellung ihre Hände und Arme, unter jedem möglichen Wechsel häuslicher Umstände. Eine milde, eine gefügige, eine unbeschreiblich friedliche und harmlose alte Dame, die niemals etwa den Eindruck nahelegte, dass sie in der Tat seit der Stunde ihrer Geburt lebendig war. Die Natur hat so viel zu tun in dieser Welt und ist damit beschäftigt so eine riesige Vielfalt von Schöpfungen gleichzeitig hervorzubringen, dass sie sicherlich ab und an zu aufgeregt und wirr ist, um zwischen den verschiedenen Schöpfungen zu unterscheiden, mit denen sie zur selben Zeit weitermacht. Ausgehend von dieser Sichtweise, wird es immer meine persönliche Überzeugung sein, dass die Natur vom Hervorbringen von Kohlköpfen ganz in Anspruch genommen war, als Mrs. Vesey geboren wurde und dass die gute Dame für die Auswirkungen eines Vertieftseins von unser aller Mutter ins Pflanzenreich büßen musste.
"Nun, Mrs. Vesey", sagte Miss Halcombe und sah strahlender, aufgeweckter und für Neues bereiter aus, denn je, im Kontrast zu der unaufdringlichen alten Dame an ihrer Seite," was möchten Sie haben? Ein Kotelett?
Mrs. Vesey kreuzte ihre mit Grübchen versehenen Hände am Rand des Tisches, lächelte bedächtig und sagte, "Ja, Liebchen.
"Was ist das dort gegenüber von Mr. Hartright? Gekochtes Huhn, oder? Ich dachte, Sie mögen gekochtes Huhn lieber als Kotelett, Mrs. Vesey?
Mrs. Vesey nahm ihre Hände mit Grübchen vom Rand des Tisches und überkreuzte sie stattdessen auf ihrem Schoß; nickte nachdenklich zu dem gekochten Huhn und sagte,"Ja, Liebchen.
"Gut, aber was wollen Sie heute haben? Soll Mr. Hartright Ihnen etwas Huhn geben? oder soll ich Ihnen etwas Kotelett geben?
Mrs. Vesey tat eine ihrer Grübchenhände wieder zurück auf den Rand des Tisches; zögerte schläfrig und sagte,"Was Sie wünschen, Liebchen.
"Hab Erbarmen mit mir! Es geht um Ihren Geschmack, meine gute Dame, nicht um meinen. Ich vermute, Sie nehmen ein bisschen von beidem? Und ich schätze, Sie fangen mit dem Huhn an, weil Mr. Hartright aussieht, als ob er vor Bestreben brennt, es für Sie zu tranchieren.
Mrs. Vesey tat die andere Hand mit Grübchen zurück auf den Tisch; hellte sich einen Moment schwach auf; verdunkelte wieder im nächsten Moment ; verneigte sich gehorsam und sagte:" Bitte, Sir.
Sicherlich eine sanfte, nachgiebige, eine unsäglich friedliche und harmlose alte Dame! Aber für jetzt vielleicht genug von Mrs. Vesey.

In der ganzen Zeit gab es kein Zeichen von Miss Fairlie. Wir beendeten unser Mittagessen und sie war immer noch nicht erschienen. Miss Halcombe, deren flinken Augen nichts entging, bemerkte die Blicke, die ich von Zeit zu Zeit in Richtung Tür warf.
"Ich verstehe Sie, Mr. Hartright", sagte sie, "Sie wundern sich, was aus Ihrer anderen Schülerin geworden ist. Sie war unten, hat ihre Kopfschmerzen überwunden, aber sie hat ihren Appetit noch nicht genügend zurückgewonnen, um sich zum Mittagessen zu uns zu gesellen. Wenn Sie sich meiner Führung anvertrauen, kann ich, glaube ich, versprechen, sie irgendwo im Garten zu finden.
Sie nahm einen Sonnenschirm auf, der auf einem Stuhl neben ihr lag und führte mich durch eine Terrassentür am Ende des Raumes hinaus, die sich zum Rasen öffnete. Es ist fast unnötig zu sagen, dass wir Mrs. Vesey still am Tisch sitzend zurückließen, ihre Grübchenhände noch an der Kante desselben gekreuzt, offenbar in dieser Stellung für den Rest des Nachmittags niedergelassen.
Als wir den Rasen überquerten, sah Miss Halcombe mich bedeutsam an und schüttelte den Kopf.
"Dieses mysteriöse Abenteuer von Ihnen", sagte sie, "verbleibt noch immer kompliziert in seiner passenden mitternächtlichen Dunkelheit. Den ganzen Vormittag bin ich durch die Briefe meiner Mutter gegangen und habe noch nichts entdeckt. Aber, verzweifeln Sie nicht, Mr. Hartright. Dies ist eine Sache der Neugier; und Sie haben eine Frau als Verbündete bekommen. Unter solchen Bedingungen ist Erfolg sicher, früher oder später. Die Briefe sind nicht ausgeschöpft. Ich habe noch drei Stapel übrig und Sie können sich vertrauensvoll darauf verlassen, dass ich den ganzen Abend damit verbringen werde.
Hier blieb dann eine meiner Erwartungen vom Morgen doch unerfüllt. Ich begann mich als nächstes zu fragen, ob meine Vorstellung bei Miss Fairlie die Annahmen enttäuschen würde, die ich mir seit der Frühstückszeit über sie gebildet hatte.
"Und wie sind Sie mit Mr. Fairlie weitergekommen? " erkundigte sich Miss Halcombe, als wir die Rasenfläche verließen und uns zu einem Gebüsch wandten. "War er heute besonders nervös? Vergessen Sie eine Antwort in Erwägung zu ziehen, Mr. Hartright. Die reine Tatsache, dass Sie gezwungen sind nachzudenken, reicht mir. Ich sehe Ihrem Gesicht an, dass er besonders nervös war; und da ich liebenswürdigerweise nicht bereit bin, Sie in denselben Zustand zu stürzen, frage ich nicht weiter.
Wir bogen in einen windigen Weg ein, während sie sprach und erreichten ein hübsches aus Holz gebautes Sommerhaus in Form eines miniaturhaften Schweizer Chalets. Der eine Raum des Sommerhauses war von einer jungen Dame belegt, als wir die Stufen zur Tür hochstiegen. Sie stand neben einem ländlichen Tisch, sah hinaus auf den Ausblick landeinwärts auf Moor und Anhöhe, der durch eine Lücke in den Bäumen dargeboten wurde, und blätterte abwesend die Blätter ihres kleinen Skizzenbuches um, das an ihrer Seite lag. Das war Miss Fairlie.
Wie kann ich sie beschreiben? Wie kann ich sie von meinen eigenen Empfindungen trennen und von alldem, was später geschah? Wie kann ich sie so wiedersehen, wie sie aussah, als meine Augen zum ersten Mal auf ihr ruhten - wie sie nun für die Augen aussehen sollte, die sie durch diese Seiten sehen werden.
Das Aquarell, das ich von Laura Fairlie zu einem späteren Zeitpunkt, an dem Ort und in der Haltung gemacht habe, in der ich sie zum ersten Mal sah, liegt auf meinem Schreibtisch, während ich schreibe. Ich sehe es an und vor dem dunklen grünlich-braunen Hintergrund des Sommerhauses erwacht bei mir hell eine lichte, jugendliche Gestalt, in ein schlichtes Musselinkleid gekleidet, sein Muster durch breite, abwechelnde Streifen in feinem Blau und Weiß gebildet. Ein Schal von dem gleichen Material liegt frisch und eng um ihre Schultern, und ein kleiner Strohhut in natürlicher Farbe, schlicht und sparsam mit einem Band besetzt, das zum Kleid passt, bedeckt ihren Kopf und wirft seinen weichen, perlmuttfarbenen Schatten auf den oberen Teil ihres Gesichts. Ihr Haar von blassem und ausgebleichtem Braun- nicht flachsblond und dennoch fast so hell, nicht golden, und doch fast schimmernd, dass es hier und da fast mit dem Hutschatten verschmilzt. Es ist schlicht gescheitelt und über ihre Ohren zurückgezogen, und die Linie davon kräuselt sich auf natürliche Weise, wenn sie ihre Stirn kreuzt. Die Augenbrauen etwas dunkler als das Haar und die Augen von diesem sanften, klaren Türkisblau, so oft von Dichtern besungen, so selten im wahren Leben zu sehen. Liebliche Augenfarbe, liebliche Augenform - groß, weich und still nachdenklich - aber wunderschön vor allen Dingen in der klaren Aufrichtigkeit des Blicks, der in ihren geheimsten Tiefe verweilt und bei allen ihren Änderungen des Ausdrucks im Licht einer reineren und besseren Welt erstrahlt. Der Reiz - am sanftesten und dennoch eindeutigsten ausgedrückt - der über das ganze Gesicht gegossen war, überzog und verwandelte die sonstigen kleinen, naturbedingten, menschlichen Fehler, so dass es schwierig ist, die relativen Vor- und Nachteile der anderen Eigenschaften abzuschätzen. Es ist kaum zu sehen, dass der untere Bereich des Gesichtes in Richtung Kinn zu zart ausgebildet ist, um im völlig angemessenen Verhältnis zu dem oberen Bereich zu sein; dass sich die Nase adlerförmig gebogen fliehend (immer hart und grausam bei einer Frau, ganz gleich, wie entrückt perfekt es sein mag) ein bisschen ins Gegenteil verirrt und die ideale Geradlinigkeit verpasst hat; und dass die süßen, sensiblen Lippen Ziel eines unbedeutenden nervösen Zuckens sind, das sie an einer Ecke etwas nach oben zieht, in Richtung Wange, wenn sie lächelt. Diese Schönheitsfehler könnten möglicherweise in dem Gesicht einer anderen Frau bemerkt werden, aber es ist nicht einfach, sich in ihrem näher damit zu befassen, so unterschwellig sind sie mit allem, was in ihrem Ausdruck individuell und charakteristisch ist, verbunden und so eng hängt der Ausdruck des ganzen Mienenspiels und Lebens in jedem anderen Merkmal mit dem ergreifenden Antrieb der Augen zusammen.
Zeigt mir mein schlechtes Portrait von ihr, meine liebevolle, geduldige Arbeit langer und glücklicher Tage, diese Dinge? Ah, wie wenig davon sind in der matten, schematischen Zeichnung und wieviele davon in der Phantasie, womit ich es betrachte! Ein blondes, zartes Mädchen, in einem hübschen hellen Kleid, das mit den Blättern eines Skizzenbuchs herumspielt, während sie von ihm mit ehrlichen, unschuldigen, blauen Augen hochschaut - das ist es, was die Skizze sagen kann; vielleicht alles, was selbst die tiefergehenden Gedanken und die Zeichnung in ihrer Sprache sagen können. Die Frau, die erst unseren schattenhaften Vorstellungen von Schönheit, Leben, Licht und Form gibt, füllt eine Leere in unserer geistigen Natur, von der wir nichts wussten, bis sie auftauchte. Gefühle, die zu tief für Worte, fast zu tief für Gedanken sind, werden in diesen Augenblicken von anderen Reizen, als die, welche die Sinne empfinden und die Ausdrucksmittel realisieren, berührt. Das Geheimnis, welches der Schönheit von Frauen zugrunde liegt, wird niemals über den Bereich aller Ausdrucksformen erhoben werden, bis es seine Verwandtschaft mit den tieferen Mysterien in unseren eigenen Seelen einfordert. Dann, und nur dann, überschreitet es den engen Bereich, auf den das Licht in dieser Welt fällt, den Bereich von Stift und Feder.
Denk an sie, wie du an die erste Frau gedacht hast, die dein Herz zum Pochen gebracht hat, was der Rest ihres Geschlechts nicht imstande war zu tun. Lassen Sie die freundlichen, offenen, blauen Augen auf Ihre treffen, wie sie meine trafen, mit diesem einen unvergleichlichen Blick, an den wir uns beide so gut erinnern. Lass ihre Stimme die Musik sprechen, die du einst am meisten liebtest, so süß auf Ihr Ohr abgestimmt wie auf meines. Lassen Sie ihre Schritte, wie sie auf diesen Seiten kommen und gehen, so sein wie diese anderen Schritte, bei deren leichtem Tritt Ihr eigenes Herz einst im gleichen Takt schlug. Nehmen Sie sie als den imaginären Keimling Ihrer eigenen Fantasie und sie wird bei Ihnen umso deutlicher zu der lebendigen Frau wachsen, wie sie mir innewohnt.
Among the sensations that crowded on me, when my eyes first looked upon her—familiar sensations which we all know, which spring to life in most of our hearts, die again in so many, and renew their bright existence in so few—there was one that troubled and perplexed me: one that seemed strangely inconsistent and unaccountably out of place in Miss Fairlie's presence.
Mingling with the vivid impression produced by the charm of her fair face and head, her sweet expression, and her winning simplicity of manner, was another impression, which, in a shadowy way, suggested to me the idea of something wanting. At one time it seemed like something wanting in her: at another, like something wanting in myself, which hindered me from understanding her as I ought. The impression was always strongest in the most contradictory manner, when she looked at me; or, in other words, when I was most conscious of the harmony and charm of her face, and yet, at the same time, most troubled by the sense of an incompleteness which it was impossible to discover. Something wanting, something wanting—and where it was, and what it was, I could not say.
The effect of this curious caprice of fancy (as I thought it then) was not of a nature to set me at my ease, during a first interview with Miss Fairlie. The few kind words of welcome which she spoke found me hardly self-possessed enough to thank her in the customary phrases of reply. Mein Zögern beobachtend und ohne Zweifel einer vorübergehenden Befangenheit meinerseits zuordnend, natürlich genug, nahm Miss Halcome die Aufgabe zu sprechen so mühelos und bereitwillig, wie gewöhnlich, in ihre eigenen Hände.
"Sehen Sie hier, Mr. Hartright", sagte sie und zeigte auf das Skizzenbuch auf dem Tisch, und zu der kleinen zarten Hand, die immer noch darin herumblätterte. "Sicher werden Sie es begrüßen, dass Ihre Musterschülerin endlich gefunden wurde? Sobald sie hört, dass Sie im Haus sind, ergreift sie ihr unermessliches Skizzenbuch, sieht der weltumfassenden Natur geradewegs ins Gesicht und sehnt sich danach anzufangen!
Miss Fairlie lachte mit bereitwilliger guter Laune, die so strahlend in ihrem lieblichen Gesicht ausbrach, als ob sie Teil des Sonnenscheins über uns gewesen wäre.
"Ich muss keine Anerkennung für mich erhalten, wo keine Anerkennung angemessen ist", sagte sie, ihre klaren, ehrlichen, blauen Augen guckten abwechselnd zu Miss Halcombe und zu mir. "So gerne wie ich zeichne, ist mir meine eigene Ahnungslosigkeit so bewusst, dass ich furchtsamer als begierig bin anzufangen. Nun, wo ich weiß, dass Sie hier sind Mr. Hartright, ertappe ich mich dabei, über meine Skizzen zu gucken, wie ich es früher immer bei meinen Hausaufgaben gemacht habe, als ich klein war, und als ich traurig besorgt war, dass sie sich als nicht passend herausstellten, um gehört zu werden."
Sie machte das Geständnis sehr hübsch und einfach und mit reizender, kindlicher Ernsthaftigkeit zog sie das Skizzenbuch fort, nahe zu ihrer eigenen Seite des Tisches. Miss Halcombe löste das Problem der kleinen Verlegenheit unverzüglich auf ihre resolute unverblümte Art.
"Gut, schlecht oder mittelmäßig", sagte sie, " die Skizzen der Schüler müssen durch die Feuerprobe der Beurteilung durch den Lehrer - und damit Schluss. Ich schlage vor, wir nehmen sie mit uns in die Kutsche, Laura, und lassen sie von Mr. Hartright zum ersten Mal ansehen, unter den Umständen fortwährenden Rüttelns und Gestocke? If we can only confuse him all through the drive, between Nature as it is, when he looks up at the view, and Nature as it is not when he looks down again at our sketch-books, we shall drive him into the last desperate refuge of paying us compliments, and shall slip through his professional fingers with our pet feathers of vanity all unruffled.
"I hope Mr. Hartright will pay me no compliments," said Miss Fairlie, as we all left the summer-house.
"May I venture to inquire why you express that hope?" I asked.
"Because I shall believe all that you say to me," she answered simply.
In those few words she unconsciously gave me the key to her whole character: to that generous trust in others which, in her nature, grew innocently out of the sense of her own truth. Ich wusste es damals nur intuitiv. Ich weiß es jetzt aus Erfahrung.
Wir warteten nur noch darauf die gute Mrs. Vesey von ihrem Platz, den sie immer noch am verlassenen Mittagstisch besetzt hielt, aufzuscheuchen, ehe wir in die offene Kutsche für die uns versprochene Ausfahrt einstiegen. Die alte Dame und Miss Halcombe belegten den Rücksitz und Miss Failie und ich saßen zusammen vorne, mit dem offenenen Skizzenbuch zwischen uns, ziemlich zur Schau gestellt, wenigstens in meinen professionellen Augen. Jede ernsthafte Kritik der Gemälde, selbst wenn ich geneigt gewesen wäre, freiwillig etwas dazu zu sagen, war durch Miss Halcombes munteren Vorsatz, nichts als die Absurdität der schönen Künste zu sehen, wie sie, ihre Schwester, und Damen im Allgemeinen es praktizierten, unmöglich gemacht. Ich kann mich leichter an die Unterhaltung zwischen uns erinnern, als an die Skizzen, die ich mechanisch durchsah. Dieser Teil der Unterhaltung, besonders der, an dem Miss Fairlie teil hatte, ist noch immer so lebhaft in meiner Erinnerung, als ob ich es vor nur wenigen Stunden gehört hätte.
Ja! lassen Sie mich zugeben, dass ich mich an diesem ersten Tag durch ihren Zauber verleiten ließ, statt mich auf mich und meine Stellung zu besinnen. The most trifling of the questions that she put to me, on the subject of using her pencil and mixing her colours; the slightest alterations of expression in the lovely eyes that looked into mine with such an earnest desire to learn all that I could teach, and to discover all that I could show, attracted more of my attention than the finest view we passed through, or the grandest changes of light and shade, as they flowed into each other over the waving moorland and the level beach. At any time, and under any circumstances of human interest, is it not strange to see how little real hold the objects of the natural world amid which we live can gain on our hearts and minds? We go to Nature for comfort in trouble, and sympathy in joy, only in books. Admiration of those beauties of the inanimate world, which modern poetry so largely and so eloquently describes, is not, even in the best of us, one of the original instincts of our nature. As children, we none of us possess it. Kein nicht ausgebildeter Mann oder ausgebildete Frau besitzt ihn. Those whose lives are most exclusively passed amid the ever-changing wonders of sea and land are also those who are most universally insensible to every aspect of Nature not directly associated with the human interest of their calling. Our capacity of appreciating the beauties of the earth we live on is, in truth, one of the civilised accomplishments which we all learn as an Art; and, more, that very capacity is rarely practised by any of us except when our minds are most indolent and most unoccupied. How much share have the attractions of Nature ever had in the pleasurable or painful interests and emotions of ourselves or our friends? What space do they ever occupy in the thousand little narratives of personal experience which pass every day by word of mouth from one of us to the other? All that our minds can compass, all that our hearts can learn, can be accomplished with equal certainty, equal profit, and equal satisfaction to ourselves, in the poorest as in the richest prospect that the face of the earth can show. There is surely a reason for this want of inborn sympathy between the creature and the creation around it, a reason which may perhaps be found in the widely-differing destinies of man and his earthly sphere. The grandest mountain prospect that the eye can range over is appointed to annihilation. The smallest human interest that the pure heart can feel is appointed to immortality.
Wir waren fast drei Stunden fort gewesen, als die Kutsche wieder duch die Tore von Limmeridge House fuhr.
On our way back I had let the ladies settle for themselves the first point of view which they were to sketch, under my instructions, on the afternoon of the next day. When they withdrew to dress for dinner, and when I was alone again in my little sitting-room, my spirits seemed to leave me on a sudden. I felt ill at ease and dissatisfied with myself, I hardly knew why. Perhaps I was now conscious for the first time of having enjoyed our drive too much in the character of a guest, and too little in the character of a drawing-master. Perhaps that strange sense of something wanting, either in Miss Fairlie or in myself, which had perplexed me when I was first introduced to her, haunted me still. Anyhow, it was a relief to my spirits when the dinner-hour called me out of my solitude, and took me back to the society of the ladies of the house.
I was struck, on entering the drawing-room, by the curious contrast, rather in material than in colour, of the dresses which they now wore. While Mrs. Vesey and Miss Halcombe were richly clad (each in the manner most becoming to her age), the first in silver-grey, and the second in that delicate primrose-yellow colour which matches so well with a dark complexion and black hair, Miss Fairlie was unpretendingly and almost poorly dressed in plain white muslin. It was spotlessly pure: it was beautifully put on; but still it was the sort of dress which the wife or daughter of a poor man might have worn, and it made her, so far as externals went, look less affluent in circumstances than her own governess. At a later period, when I learnt to know more of Miss Fairlie's character, I discovered that this curious contrast, on the wrong side, was due to her natural delicacy of feeling and natural intensity of aversion to the slightest personal display of her own wealth. Neither Mrs. Vesey nor Miss Halcombe could ever induce her to let the advantage in dress desert the two ladies who were poor, to lean to the side of the one lady who was rich.
When the dinner was over we returned together to the drawing-room. Although Mr. Fairlie (emulating the magnificent condescension of the monarch who had picked up Titian's brush for him) had instructed his butler to consult my wishes in relation to the wine that I might prefer after dinner, I was resolute enough to resist the temptation of sitting in solitary grandeur among bottles of my own choosing, and sensible enough to ask the ladies' permission to leave the table with them habitually, on the civilised foreign plan, during the period of my residence at Limmeridge House.
The drawing-room, to which we had now withdrawn for the rest of the evening, was on the ground-floor, and was of the same shape and size as the breakfast-room. Large glass doors at the lower end opened on to a terrace, beautifully ornamented along its whole length with a profusion of flowers. The soft, hazy twilight was just shading leaf and blossom alike into harmony with its own sober hues as we entered the room, and the sweet evening scent of the flowers met us with its fragrant welcome through the open glass doors. Good Mrs. Vesey (always the first of the party to sit down) took possession of an arm-chair in a corner, and dozed off comfortably to sleep. At my request Miss Fairlie placed herself at the piano. As I followed her to a seat near the instrument, I saw Miss Halcombe retire into a recess of one of the side windows, to proceed with the search through her mother's letters by the last quiet rays of the evening light.
How vividly that peaceful home-picture of the drawing-room comes back to me while I write! From the place where I sat I could see Miss Halcombe's graceful figure, half of it in soft light, half in mysterious shadow, bending intently over the letters in her lap; while, nearer to me, the fair profile of the player at the piano was just delicately defined against the faintly-deepening background of the inner wall of the room. Outside, on the terrace, the clustering flowers and long grasses and creepers waved so gently in the light evening air, that the sound of their rustling never reached us. The sky was without a cloud, and the dawning mystery of moonlight began to tremble already in the region of the eastern heaven. The sense of peace and seclusion soothed all thought and feeling into a rapt, unearthly repose; and the balmy quiet, that deepened ever with the deepening light, seemed to hover over us with a gentler influence still, when there stole upon it from the piano the heavenly tenderness of the music of Mozart. It was an evening of sights and sounds never to forget.
We all sat silent in the places we had chosen—Mrs. Vesey still sleeping, Miss Fairlie still playing, Miss Halcombe still reading—till the light failed us. By this time the moon had stolen round to the terrace, and soft, mysterious rays of light were slanting already across the lower end of the room. The change from the twilight obscurity was so beautiful that we banished the lamps, by common consent, when the servant brought them in, and kept the large room unlighted, except by the glimmer of the two candles at the piano.
For half an hour more the music still went on. After that the beauty of the moonlight view on the terrace tempted Miss Fairlie out to look at it, and I followed her. When the candles at the piano had been lighted Miss Halcombe had changed her place, so as to continue her examination of the letters by their assistance. We left her, on a low chair, at one side of the instrument, so absorbed over her reading that she did not seem to notice when we moved.
We had been out on the terrace together, just in front of the glass doors, hardly so long as five minutes, I should think; and Miss Fairlie was, by my advice, just tying her white handkerchief over her head as a precaution against the night air—when I heard Miss Halcombe's voice—low, eager, and altered from its natural lively tone—pronounce my name.
"Mr. Hartright," she said, "will you come here for a minute? I want to speak to you.
I entered the room again immediately. The piano stood about half-way down along the inner wall. On the side of the instrument farthest from the terrace Miss Halcombe was sitting with the letters scattered on her lap, and with one in her hand selected from them, and held close to the candle. On the side nearest to the terrace there stood a low ottoman, on which I took my place. In this position I was not far from the glass doors, and I could see Miss Fairlie plainly, as she passed and repassed the opening on to the terrace, walking slowly from end to end of it in the full radiance of the moon.
"I want you to listen while I read the concluding passages in this letter," said Miss Halcombe. "Tell me if you think they throw any light upon your strange adventure on the road to London. The letter is addressed by my mother to her second husband, Mr. Fairlie, and the date refers to a period of between eleven and twelve years since. At that time Mr. and Mrs. Fairlie, and my half-sister Laura, had been living for years in this house; and I was away from them completing my education at a school in Paris.
She looked and spoke earnestly, and, as I thought, a little uneasily as well. At the moment when she raised the letter to the candle before beginning to read it, Miss Fairlie passed us on the terrace, looked in for a moment, and seeing that we were engaged, slowly walked on.
Miss Halcombe began to read as follows: "'You will be tired, my dear Philip, of hearing perpetually about my schools and my scholars. Lay the blame, pray, on the dull uniformity of life at Limmeridge, and not on me. Besides, this time I have something really interesting to tell you about a new scholar.
"'You know old Mrs. Kempe at the village shop. Well, after years of ailing, the doctor has at last given her up, and she is dying slowly day by day. Her only living relation, a sister, arrived last week to take care of her. This sister comes all the way from Hampshire—her name is Mrs. Catherick. Four days ago Mrs. Catherick came here to see me, and brought her only child with her, a sweet little girl about a year older than our darling Laura——'".

As the last sentence fell from the reader's lips, Miss Fairlie passed us on the terrace once more. She was softly singing to herself one of the melodies which she had been playing earlier in the evening. Miss Halcombe waited till she had passed out of sight again, and then went on with the letter— "'Mrs. Catherick is a decent, well-behaved, respectable woman; middle-aged, and with the remains of having been moderately, only moderately, nice-looking. There is something in her manner and in her appearance, however, which I can't make out. She is reserved about herself to the point of downright secrecy, and there is a look in her face—I can't describe it—which suggests to me that she has something on her mind. She is altogether what you would call a walking mystery. Her errand at Limmeridge House, however, was simple enough. When she left Hampshire to nurse her sister, Mrs. Kempe, through her last illness, she had been obliged to bring her daughter with her, through having no one at home to take care of the little girl. Mrs. Kempe may die in a week's time, or may linger on for months; and Mrs. Catherick's object was to ask me to let her daughter, Anne, have the benefit of attending my school, subject to the condition of her being removed from it to go home again with her mother, after Mrs. Kempe's death. I consented at once, and when Laura and I went out for our walk, we took the little girl (who is just eleven years old) to the school that very day'".

Once more Miss Fairlie's figure, bright and soft in its snowy muslin dress—her face prettily framed by the white folds of the handkerchief which she had tied under her chin—passed by us in the moonlight. Once more Miss Halcombe waited till she was out of sight, and then went on, "'I have taken a violent fancy, Philip, to my new scholar, for a reason which I mean to keep till the last for the sake of surprising you. Her mother having told me as little about the child as she told me of herself, I was left to discover (which I did on the first day when we tried her at lessons) that the poor little thing's intellect is not developed as it ought to be at her age. Seeing this I had her up to the house the next day, and privately arranged with the doctor to come and watch her and question her, and tell me what he thought. His opinion is that she will grow out of it. But he says her careful bringing-up at school is a matter of great importance just now, because her unusual slowness in acquiring ideas implies an unusual tenacity in keeping them, when they are once received into her mind. Now, my love, you must not imagine, in your off-hand way, that I have been attaching myself to an idiot. This poor little Anne Catherick is a sweet, affectionate, grateful girl, and says the quaintest, prettiest things (as you shall judge by an instance), in the most oddly sudden, surprised, half-frightened way. Although she is dressed very neatly, her clothes show a sad want of taste in colour and pattern. So I arranged, yesterday, that some of our darling Laura's old white frocks and white hats should be altered for Anne Catherick, explaining to her that little girls of her complexion looked neater and better all in white than in anything else. She hesitated and seemed puzzled for a minute, then flushed up, and appeared to understand. Her little hand clasped mine suddenly. She kissed it, Philip, and said (oh, so earnestly! ), "I will always wear white as long as I live. It will help me to remember you, ma'am, and to think that I am pleasing you still, when I go away and see you no more." This is only one specimen of the quaint things she says so prettily. Poor little soul! She shall have a stock of white frocks, made with good deep tucks, to let out for her as she grows——'".

Miss Halcombe stutzte und schaute mich über das Klavier hinweg an.
"Sah die einsame Frau, die Sie auf der Landstraße getroffen haben, jung aus?", fragte sie. Jung genug um zwei- oder dreiundzwanzig zu sein?"
"Ja Miss Halcombe, etwa so jung."
"Und sie war merkwürdig gekleidet, von Kopf bis Fuß alles in weiß?"
"Alles in weiß."
Während die Antwort meine Lippen verließ, segelte Miss Fairlie zum dritten Mal auf die Terrasse. Anstatt ihren Spaziergang fortzusetzen, hielt sie mit dem Rücken zu uns an, lehnte sich über die Balustrade der Terrasse und schaute hinunter in den Garten. Meine Augen starrten auf den weißen Schimmer ihres Musselingewandes und der Kopfbedeckung im Mondlicht und eine Empfindung, für die ich keinen Namen finden kann - eine Empfindung, die meinen Puls beschleunigte und ein Flattern meines Herzes auslöste - überkam mich ganz langsam.
"Alles in weiß?", wiederholte Miss Halcombe. Die wichtigsten Sätze in dem Brief, Mr. Hartright, sind die am Ende, die ich Ihnen sofort vorlesen werde." Aber ich kann nicht anders als ein wenig bei dieser Übereinstimmung zwischen der weißen Bekleidung der Frau, die Sie trafen, und den weißen Kleidern, die diese seltsame Antwort des kleinen Studenten meiner Mutter hervorrief, zu verweilen. Der Arzt mag sich geirrt haben, als er den Mangel an Intellekt bei dem Kind entdeckte und vorhersagte, dass es sich bei ihr "auswachsen" würde. Es mag nie bei ihr herausgewachsen sein und die alte, wohltuende Laune in weiß gekleidet zu sein, die ein ernsthaftes Wohlbefinden bei dem Mädchen auslöste, mag für die Frau immer noch ein ernsthaftes Wohlbefinden bedeuten.
Ich sagte irgendetwas als Antwort - ich weiß nicht mehr was. Meine ganze Aufmerksamkeit richtete sich auf den weißen Schimmer von Miss Fairlies Musselinkleid.
"Hören Sie sich die letzten Sätze des Briefes an", sagte Miss Halcombe. "Ich glaube, sie werden Sie überraschen.
Als sie den Bief zurm Licht der Kerze erhob, wandte sich Miss Fairlie von der Brüstung, schaute skeptisch die Terrasse hinauf und hinunter, machte einen Schritt voran in Richtung der Glastür und hielt dann, uns zugewandt, an.
Meanwhile Miss Halcombe read me the last sentences to which she had referred— "'And now, my love, seeing that I am at the end of my paper, now for the real reason, the surprising reason, for my fondness for little Anne Catherick. My dear Philip, although she is not half so pretty, she is, nevertheless, by one of those extraordinary caprices of accidental resemblance which one sometimes sees, the living likeness, in her hair, her complexion, the colour of her eyes, and the shape of her face——'".

I started up from the ottoman before Miss Halcombe could pronounce the next words. A thrill of the same feeling which ran through me when the touch was laid upon my shoulder on the lonely high-road chilled me again.
There stood Miss Fairlie, a white figure, alone in the moonlight; in her attitude, in the turn of her head, in her complexion, in the shape of her face, the living image, at that distance and under those circumstances, of the woman in white! The doubt which had troubled my mind for hours and hours past flashed into conviction in an instant. That "something wanting" was my own recognition of the ominous likeness between the fugitive from the asylum and my pupil at Limmeridge House.
"You see it!" said Miss Halcombe. She dropped the useless letter, and her eyes flashed as they met mine. "You see it now, as my mother saw it eleven years since!
"I see it—more unwillingly than I can say. To associate that forlorn, friendless, lost woman, even by an accidental likeness only, with Miss Fairlie, seems like casting a shadow on the future of the bright creature who stands looking at us now. Let me lose the impression again as soon as possible. Call her in, out of the dreary moonlight—pray call her in!
"Mr. Hartright, you surprise me. Whatever women may be, I thought that men, in the nineteenth century, were above superstition.
"Pray call her in!
"Hush, hush! She is coming of her own accord. Say nothing in her presence. Let this discovery of the likeness be kept a secret between you and me. Come in, Laura, come in, and wake Mrs. Vesey with the piano. Mr. Hartright is petitioning for some more music, and he wants it, this time, of the lightest and liveliest kind.
unit 1
Chapter VIII.
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When I entered the room, I found Miss Halcombe and an elderly lady seated at the luncheon-table.
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Mrs. Vesey looked the personification of human composure and female amiability.
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A calm enjoyment of a calm existence beamed in drowsy smiles on her plump, placid face.
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Some of us rush through life, and some of us saunter through life.
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Mrs. Vesey sat through life.
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A cutlet?
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Mrs. Vesey crossed her dimpled hands on the edge of the table, smiled placidly, and said, "Yes, dear.
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"What is that opposite Mr. Hartright?
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Boiled chicken, is it not?
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I thought you liked boiled chicken better than cutlet, Mrs. Vesey?
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"Well, but which will you have, to-day?
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Shall Mr. Hartright give you some chicken?
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or shall I give you some cutlet?
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"Mercy on me!
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it's a question for your taste, my good lady, not for mine.
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Suppose you have a little of both?
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Surely a mild, a compliant, an unutterably tranquil and harmless old lady!
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But enough, perhaps, for the present, of Mrs. Vesey.
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All this time, there were no signs of Miss Fairlie.
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We finished our luncheon; and still she never appeared.
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"I understand you, Mr. Hartright," she said; "you are wondering what has become of your other pupil.
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If you will put yourself under my charge, I think I can undertake to find her somewhere in the garden.
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As we crossed the lawn, Miss Halcombe looked at me significantly, and shook her head.
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I have been all the morning looking over my mother's letters, and I have made no discoveries yet.
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However, don't despair, Mr. Hartright.
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This is a matter of curiosity; and you have got a woman for your ally.
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Under such conditions success is certain, sooner or later.
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The letters are not exhausted.
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Here, then, was one of my anticipations of the morning still unfulfilled.
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"And how did you get on with Mr.
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Fairlie?"
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inquired Miss Halcombe, as we left the lawn and turned into a shrubbery.
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"Was he particularly nervous this morning?
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Never mind considering about your answer, Mr. Hartright.
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The mere fact of your being obliged to consider is enough for me.
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The one room of the summer-house, as we ascended the steps of the door, was occupied by a young lady.
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This was Miss Fairlie.
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How can I describe her?
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How can I separate her from my own sensations, and from all that has happened in the later time?
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Does my poor portrait of her, my fond, patient labour of long and happy days, show me these things?
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Let her voice speak the music that you once loved best, attuned as sweetly to your ear as to mine.
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"Surely you will acknowledge that your model pupil is found at last?
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Miss Halcombe cut the knot of the little embarrassment forthwith, in her resolute, downright way.
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"May I venture to inquire why you express that hope?"
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I asked.
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"Because I shall believe all that you say to me," she answered simply.
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I only knew it intuitively then.
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I know it by experience now.
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Yes!
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As children, we none of us possess it.
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No uninstructed man or woman possesses it.
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I felt ill at ease and dissatisfied with myself, I hardly knew why.
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When the dinner was over we returned together to the drawing-room.
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At my request Miss Fairlie placed herself at the piano.
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It was an evening of sights and sounds never to forget.
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We all sat silent in the places we had chosen—Mrs.
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For half an hour more the music still went on.
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"Mr. Hartright," she said, "will you come here for a minute?
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I want to speak to you.
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I entered the room again immediately.
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The piano stood about half-way down along the inner wall.
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"'You know old Mrs. Kempe at the village shop.
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She is altogether what you would call a walking mystery.
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Her errand at Limmeridge House, however, was simple enough.
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His opinion is that she will grow out of it.
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Her little hand clasped mine suddenly.
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She kissed it, Philip, and said (oh, so earnestly!
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), "I will always wear white as long as I live.
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This is only one specimen of the quaint things she says so prettily.
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Poor little soul!
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Miss Halcombe paused, and looked at me across the piano.
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"Did the forlorn woman whom you met in the high-road seem young?"
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she asked.
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"Young enough to be two- or three-and-twenty?
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"Yes, Miss Halcombe, as young as that.
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"And she was strangely dressed, from head to foot, all in white?
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"All in white.
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While the answer was passing my lips Miss Fairlie glided into view on the terrace for the third time.
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"All in white?"
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Miss Halcombe repeated.
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I said a few words in answer—I hardly know what.
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All my attention was concentrated on the white gleam of Miss Fairlie's muslin dress.
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"Listen to the last sentences of the letter," said Miss Halcombe.
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"I think they will surprise you.
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"You see it!"
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said Miss Halcombe.
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She dropped the useless letter, and her eyes flashed as they met mine.
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"You see it now, as my mother saw it eleven years since!
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"I see it—more unwillingly than I can say.
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Let me lose the impression again as soon as possible.
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Call her in, out of the dreary moonlight—pray call her in!
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"Mr. Hartright, you surprise me.
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"Pray call her in!
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"Hush, hush!
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She is coming of her own accord.
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Say nothing in her presence.
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Let this discovery of the likeness be kept a secret between you and me.
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Come in, Laura, come in, and wake Mrs. Vesey with the piano.
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Chapter VIII.
When I entered the room, I found Miss Halcombe and an elderly lady seated at the luncheon-table.
The elderly lady, when I was presented to her, proved to be Miss Fairlie's former governess, Mrs. Vesey, who had been briefly described to me by my lively companion at the breakfast-table, as possessed of "all the cardinal virtues, and counting for nothing." I can do little more than offer my humble testimony to the truthfulness of Miss Halcombe's sketch of the old lady's character. Mrs. Vesey looked the personification of human composure and female amiability. A calm enjoyment of a calm existence beamed in drowsy smiles on her plump, placid face. Some of us rush through life, and some of us saunter through life. Mrs. Vesey sat through life. Sat in the house, early and late; sat in the garden; sat in unexpected window-seats in passages; sat (on a camp-stool) when her friends tried to take her out walking; sat before she looked at anything, before she talked of anything, before she answered Yes, or No, to the commonest question—always with the same serene smile on her lips, the same vacantly-attentive turn of the head, the same snugly-comfortable position of her hands and arms, under every possible change of domestic circumstances. A mild, a compliant, an unutterably tranquil and harmless old lady, who never by any chance suggested the idea that she had been actually alive since the hour of her birth. Nature has so much to do in this world, and is engaged in generating such a vast variety of co-existent productions, that she must surely be now and then too flurried and confused to distinguish between the different processes that she is carrying on at the same time. Starting from this point of view, it will always remain my private persuasion that Nature was absorbed in making cabbages when Mrs. Vesey was born, and that the good lady suffered the consequences of a vegetable preoccupation in the mind of the Mother of us all.
"Now, Mrs. Vesey," said Miss Halcombe, looking brighter, sharper, and readier than ever, by contrast with the undemonstrative old lady at her side, "what will you have? A cutlet?
Mrs. Vesey crossed her dimpled hands on the edge of the table, smiled placidly, and said, "Yes, dear.
"What is that opposite Mr. Hartright? Boiled chicken, is it not? I thought you liked boiled chicken better than cutlet, Mrs. Vesey?
Mrs. Vesey took her dimpled hands off the edge of the table and crossed them on her lap instead; nodded contemplatively at the boiled chicken, and said, "Yes, dear.
"Well, but which will you have, to-day? Shall Mr. Hartright give you some chicken? or shall I give you some cutlet?
Mrs. Vesey put one of her dimpled hands back again on the edge of the table; hesitated drowsily, and said, "Which you please, dear.
"Mercy on me! it's a question for your taste, my good lady, not for mine. Suppose you have a little of both? and suppose you begin with the chicken, because Mr. Hartright looks devoured by anxiety to carve for you.
Mrs. Vesey put the other dimpled hand back on the edge of the table; brightened dimly one moment; went out again the next; bowed obediently, and said, "If you please, sir.
Surely a mild, a compliant, an unutterably tranquil and harmless old lady! But enough, perhaps, for the present, of Mrs. Vesey.

All this time, there were no signs of Miss Fairlie. We finished our luncheon; and still she never appeared. Miss Halcombe, whose quick eye nothing escaped, noticed the looks that I cast, from time to time, in the direction of the door.
"I understand you, Mr. Hartright," she said; "you are wondering what has become of your other pupil. She has been downstairs, and has got over her headache; but has not sufficiently recovered her appetite to join us at lunch. If you will put yourself under my charge, I think I can undertake to find her somewhere in the garden.
She took up a parasol lying on a chair near her, and led the way out, by a long window at the bottom of the room, which opened on to the lawn. It is almost unnecessary to say that we left Mrs. Vesey still seated at the table, with her dimpled hands still crossed on the edge of it; apparently settled in that position for the rest of the afternoon.
As we crossed the lawn, Miss Halcombe looked at me significantly, and shook her head.
"That mysterious adventure of yours," she said, "still remains involved in its own appropriate midnight darkness. I have been all the morning looking over my mother's letters, and I have made no discoveries yet. However, don't despair, Mr. Hartright. This is a matter of curiosity; and you have got a woman for your ally. Under such conditions success is certain, sooner or later. The letters are not exhausted. I have three packets still left, and you may confidently rely on my spending the whole evening over them.
Here, then, was one of my anticipations of the morning still unfulfilled. I began to wonder, next, whether my introduction to Miss Fairlie would disappoint the expectations that I had been forming of her since breakfast-time.
"And how did you get on with Mr. Fairlie?" inquired Miss Halcombe, as we left the lawn and turned into a shrubbery. "Was he particularly nervous this morning? Never mind considering about your answer, Mr. Hartright. The mere fact of your being obliged to consider is enough for me. I see in your face that he was particularly nervous; and, as I am amiably unwilling to throw you into the same condition, I ask no more.
We turned off into a winding path while she was speaking, and approached a pretty summer-house, built of wood, in the form of a miniature Swiss chalet. The one room of the summer-house, as we ascended the steps of the door, was occupied by a young lady. She was standing near a rustic table, looking out at the inland view of moor and hill presented by a gap in the trees, and absently turning over the leaves of a little sketch-book that lay at her side. This was Miss Fairlie.
How can I describe her? How can I separate her from my own sensations, and from all that has happened in the later time? How can I see her again as she looked when my eyes first rested on her—as she should look, now, to the eyes that are about to see her in these pages?
The water-colour drawing that I made of Laura Fairlie, at an after period, in the place and attitude in which I first saw her, lies on my desk while I write. I look at it, and there dawns upon me brightly, from the dark greenish-brown background of the summer-house, a light, youthful figure, clothed in a simple muslin dress, the pattern of it formed by broad alternate stripes of delicate blue and white. A scarf of the same material sits crisply and closely round her shoulders, and a little straw hat of the natural colour, plainly and sparingly trimmed with ribbon to match the gown, covers her head, and throws its soft pearly shadow over the upper part of her face. Her hair is of so faint and pale a brown—not flaxen, and yet almost as light; not golden, and yet almost as glossy—that it nearly melts, here and there, into the shadow of the hat. It is plainly parted and drawn back over her ears, and the line of it ripples naturally as it crosses her forehead. The eyebrows are rather darker than the hair; and the eyes are of that soft, limpid, turquoise blue, so often sung by the poets, so seldom seen in real life. Lovely eyes in colour, lovely eyes in form—large and tender and quietly thoughtful—but beautiful above all things in the clear truthfulness of look that dwells in their inmost depths, and shines through all their changes of expression with the light of a purer and a better world. The charm—most gently and yet most distinctly expressed—which they shed over the whole face, so covers and transforms its little natural human blemishes elsewhere, that it is difficult to estimate the relative merits and defects of the other features. It is hard to see that the lower part of the face is too delicately refined away towards the chin to be in full and fair proportion with the upper part; that the nose, in escaping the aquiline bend (always hard and cruel in a woman, no matter how abstractedly perfect it may be), has erred a little in the other extreme, and has missed the ideal straightness of line; and that the sweet, sensitive lips are subject to a slight nervous contraction, when she smiles, which draws them upward a little at one corner, towards the cheek. It might be possible to note these blemishes in another woman's face but it is not easy to dwell on them in hers, so subtly are they connected with all that is individual and characteristic in her expression, and so closely does the expression depend for its full play and life, in every other feature, on the moving impulse of the eyes.
Does my poor portrait of her, my fond, patient labour of long and happy days, show me these things? Ah, how few of them are in the dim mechanical drawing, and how many in the mind with which I regard it! A fair, delicate girl, in a pretty light dress, trifling with the leaves of a sketch-book, while she looks up from it with truthful, innocent blue eyes—that is all the drawing can say; all, perhaps, that even the deeper reach of thought and pen can say in their language, either. The woman who first gives life, light, and form to our shadowy conceptions of beauty, fills a void in our spiritual nature that has remained unknown to us till she appeared. Sympathies that lie too deep for words, too deep almost for thoughts, are touched, at such times, by other charms than those which the senses feel and which the resources of expression can realise. The mystery which underlies the beauty of women is never raised above the reach of all expression until it has claimed kindred with the deeper mystery in our own souls. Then, and then only, has it passed beyond the narrow region on which light falls, in this world, from the pencil and the pen.
Think of her as you thought of the first woman who quickened the pulses within you that the rest of her sex had no art to stir. Let the kind, candid blue eyes meet yours, as they met mine, with the one matchless look which we both remember so well. Let her voice speak the music that you once loved best, attuned as sweetly to your ear as to mine. Let her footstep, as she comes and goes, in these pages, be like that other footstep to whose airy fall your own heart once beat time. Take her as the visionary nursling of your own fancy; and she will grow upon you, all the more clearly, as the living woman who dwells in mine.
Among the sensations that crowded on me, when my eyes first looked upon her—familiar sensations which we all know, which spring to life in most of our hearts, die again in so many, and renew their bright existence in so few—there was one that troubled and perplexed me: one that seemed strangely inconsistent and unaccountably out of place in Miss Fairlie's presence.
Mingling with the vivid impression produced by the charm of her fair face and head, her sweet expression, and her winning simplicity of manner, was another impression, which, in a shadowy way, suggested to me the idea of something wanting. At one time it seemed like something wanting in her: at another, like something wanting in myself, which hindered me from understanding her as I ought. The impression was always strongest in the most contradictory manner, when she looked at me; or, in other words, when I was most conscious of the harmony and charm of her face, and yet, at the same time, most troubled by the sense of an incompleteness which it was impossible to discover. Something wanting, something wanting—and where it was, and what it was, I could not say.
The effect of this curious caprice of fancy (as I thought it then) was not of a nature to set me at my ease, during a first interview with Miss Fairlie. The few kind words of welcome which she spoke found me hardly self-possessed enough to thank her in the customary phrases of reply. Observing my hesitation, and no doubt attributing it, naturally enough, to some momentary shyness on my part, Miss Halcombe took the business of talking, as easily and readily as usual, into her own hands.
"Look there, Mr. Hartright," she said, pointing to the sketch-book on the table, and to the little delicate wandering hand that was still trifling with it. "Surely you will acknowledge that your model pupil is found at last? The moment she hears that you are in the house, she seizes her inestimable sketch-book, looks universal Nature straight in the face, and longs to begin!
Miss Fairlie laughed with a ready good-humour, which broke out as brightly as if it had been part of the sunshine above us, over her lovely face.
"I must not take credit to myself where no credit is due," she said, her clear, truthful blue eyes looking alternately at Miss Halcombe and at me. "Fond as I am of drawing, I am so conscious of my own ignorance that I am more afraid than anxious to begin. Now I know you are here, Mr. Hartright, I find myself looking over my sketches, as I used to look over my lessons when I was a little girl, and when I was sadly afraid that I should turn out not fit to be heard.
She made the confession very prettily and simply, and, with quaint, childish earnestness, drew the sketch-book away close to her own side of the table. Miss Halcombe cut the knot of the little embarrassment forthwith, in her resolute, downright way.
"Good, bad, or indifferent," she said, "the pupil's sketches must pass through the fiery ordeal of the master's judgment—and there's an end of it. Suppose we take them with us in the carriage, Laura, and let Mr. Hartright see them, for the first time, under circumstances of perpetual jolting and interruption? If we can only confuse him all through the drive, between Nature as it is, when he looks up at the view, and Nature as it is not when he looks down again at our sketch-books, we shall drive him into the last desperate refuge of paying us compliments, and shall slip through his professional fingers with our pet feathers of vanity all unruffled.
"I hope Mr. Hartright will pay me no compliments," said Miss Fairlie, as we all left the summer-house.
"May I venture to inquire why you express that hope?" I asked.
"Because I shall believe all that you say to me," she answered simply.
In those few words she unconsciously gave me the key to her whole character: to that generous trust in others which, in her nature, grew innocently out of the sense of her own truth. I only knew it intuitively then. I know it by experience now.
We merely waited to rouse good Mrs. Vesey from the place which she still occupied at the deserted luncheon-table, before we entered the open carriage for our promised drive. The old lady and Miss Halcombe occupied the back seat, and Miss Fairlie and I sat together in front, with the sketch-book open between us, fairly exhibited at last to my professional eyes. All serious criticism on the drawings, even if I had been disposed to volunteer it, was rendered impossible by Miss Halcombe's lively resolution to see nothing but the ridiculous side of the Fine Arts, as practised by herself, her sister, and ladies in general. I can remember the conversation that passed far more easily than the sketches that I mechanically looked over. That part of the talk, especially, in which Miss Fairlie took any share, is still as vividly impressed on my memory as if I had heard it only a few hours ago.
Yes! let me acknowledge that on this first day I let the charm of her presence lure me from the recollection of myself and my position. The most trifling of the questions that she put to me, on the subject of using her pencil and mixing her colours; the slightest alterations of expression in the lovely eyes that looked into mine with such an earnest desire to learn all that I could teach, and to discover all that I could show, attracted more of my attention than the finest view we passed through, or the grandest changes of light and shade, as they flowed into each other over the waving moorland and the level beach. At any time, and under any circumstances of human interest, is it not strange to see how little real hold the objects of the natural world amid which we live can gain on our hearts and minds? We go to Nature for comfort in trouble, and sympathy in joy, only in books. Admiration of those beauties of the inanimate world, which modern poetry so largely and so eloquently describes, is not, even in the best of us, one of the original instincts of our nature. As children, we none of us possess it. No uninstructed man or woman possesses it. Those whose lives are most exclusively passed amid the ever-changing wonders of sea and land are also those who are most universally insensible to every aspect of Nature not directly associated with the human interest of their calling. Our capacity of appreciating the beauties of the earth we live on is, in truth, one of the civilised accomplishments which we all learn as an Art; and, more, that very capacity is rarely practised by any of us except when our minds are most indolent and most unoccupied. How much share have the attractions of Nature ever had in the pleasurable or painful interests and emotions of ourselves or our friends? What space do they ever occupy in the thousand little narratives of personal experience which pass every day by word of mouth from one of us to the other? All that our minds can compass, all that our hearts can learn, can be accomplished with equal certainty, equal profit, and equal satisfaction to ourselves, in the poorest as in the richest prospect that the face of the earth can show. There is surely a reason for this want of inborn sympathy between the creature and the creation around it, a reason which may perhaps be found in the widely-differing destinies of man and his earthly sphere. The grandest mountain prospect that the eye can range over is appointed to annihilation. The smallest human interest that the pure heart can feel is appointed to immortality.
We had been out nearly three hours, when the carriage again passed through the gates of Limmeridge House.
On our way back I had let the ladies settle for themselves the first point of view which they were to sketch, under my instructions, on the afternoon of the next day. When they withdrew to dress for dinner, and when I was alone again in my little sitting-room, my spirits seemed to leave me on a sudden. I felt ill at ease and dissatisfied with myself, I hardly knew why. Perhaps I was now conscious for the first time of having enjoyed our drive too much in the character of a guest, and too little in the character of a drawing-master. Perhaps that strange sense of something wanting, either in Miss Fairlie or in myself, which had perplexed me when I was first introduced to her, haunted me still. Anyhow, it was a relief to my spirits when the dinner-hour called me out of my solitude, and took me back to the society of the ladies of the house.
I was struck, on entering the drawing-room, by the curious contrast, rather in material than in colour, of the dresses which they now wore. While Mrs. Vesey and Miss Halcombe were richly clad (each in the manner most becoming to her age), the first in silver-grey, and the second in that delicate primrose-yellow colour which matches so well with a dark complexion and black hair, Miss Fairlie was unpretendingly and almost poorly dressed in plain white muslin. It was spotlessly pure: it was beautifully put on; but still it was the sort of dress which the wife or daughter of a poor man might have worn, and it made her, so far as externals went, look less affluent in circumstances than her own governess. At a later period, when I learnt to know more of Miss Fairlie's character, I discovered that this curious contrast, on the wrong side, was due to her natural delicacy of feeling and natural intensity of aversion to the slightest personal display of her own wealth. Neither Mrs. Vesey nor Miss Halcombe could ever induce her to let the advantage in dress desert the two ladies who were poor, to lean to the side of the one lady who was rich.
When the dinner was over we returned together to the drawing-room. Although Mr. Fairlie (emulating the magnificent condescension of the monarch who had picked up Titian's brush for him) had instructed his butler to consult my wishes in relation to the wine that I might prefer after dinner, I was resolute enough to resist the temptation of sitting in solitary grandeur among bottles of my own choosing, and sensible enough to ask the ladies' permission to leave the table with them habitually, on the civilised foreign plan, during the period of my residence at Limmeridge House.
The drawing-room, to which we had now withdrawn for the rest of the evening, was on the ground-floor, and was of the same shape and size as the breakfast-room. Large glass doors at the lower end opened on to a terrace, beautifully ornamented along its whole length with a profusion of flowers. The soft, hazy twilight was just shading leaf and blossom alike into harmony with its own sober hues as we entered the room, and the sweet evening scent of the flowers met us with its fragrant welcome through the open glass doors. Good Mrs. Vesey (always the first of the party to sit down) took possession of an arm-chair in a corner, and dozed off comfortably to sleep. At my request Miss Fairlie placed herself at the piano. As I followed her to a seat near the instrument, I saw Miss Halcombe retire into a recess of one of the side windows, to proceed with the search through her mother's letters by the last quiet rays of the evening light.
How vividly that peaceful home-picture of the drawing-room comes back to me while I write! From the place where I sat I could see Miss Halcombe's graceful figure, half of it in soft light, half in mysterious shadow, bending intently over the letters in her lap; while, nearer to me, the fair profile of the player at the piano was just delicately defined against the faintly-deepening background of the inner wall of the room. Outside, on the terrace, the clustering flowers and long grasses and creepers waved so gently in the light evening air, that the sound of their rustling never reached us. The sky was without a cloud, and the dawning mystery of moonlight began to tremble already in the region of the eastern heaven. The sense of peace and seclusion soothed all thought and feeling into a rapt, unearthly repose; and the balmy quiet, that deepened ever with the deepening light, seemed to hover over us with a gentler influence still, when there stole upon it from the piano the heavenly tenderness of the music of Mozart. It was an evening of sights and sounds never to forget.
We all sat silent in the places we had chosen—Mrs. Vesey still sleeping, Miss Fairlie still playing, Miss Halcombe still reading—till the light failed us. By this time the moon had stolen round to the terrace, and soft, mysterious rays of light were slanting already across the lower end of the room. The change from the twilight obscurity was so beautiful that we banished the lamps, by common consent, when the servant brought them in, and kept the large room unlighted, except by the glimmer of the two candles at the piano.
For half an hour more the music still went on. After that the beauty of the moonlight view on the terrace tempted Miss Fairlie out to look at it, and I followed her. When the candles at the piano had been lighted Miss Halcombe had changed her place, so as to continue her examination of the letters by their assistance. We left her, on a low chair, at one side of the instrument, so absorbed over her reading that she did not seem to notice when we moved.
We had been out on the terrace together, just in front of the glass doors, hardly so long as five minutes, I should think; and Miss Fairlie was, by my advice, just tying her white handkerchief over her head as a precaution against the night air—when I heard Miss Halcombe's voice—low, eager, and altered from its natural lively tone—pronounce my name.
"Mr. Hartright," she said, "will you come here for a minute? I want to speak to you.
I entered the room again immediately. The piano stood about half-way down along the inner wall. On the side of the instrument farthest from the terrace Miss Halcombe was sitting with the letters scattered on her lap, and with one in her hand selected from them, and held close to the candle. On the side nearest to the terrace there stood a low ottoman, on which I took my place. In this position I was not far from the glass doors, and I could see Miss Fairlie plainly, as she passed and repassed the opening on to the terrace, walking slowly from end to end of it in the full radiance of the moon.
"I want you to listen while I read the concluding passages in this letter," said Miss Halcombe. "Tell me if you think they throw any light upon your strange adventure on the road to London. The letter is addressed by my mother to her second husband, Mr. Fairlie, and the date refers to a period of between eleven and twelve years since. At that time Mr. and Mrs. Fairlie, and my half-sister Laura, had been living for years in this house; and I was away from them completing my education at a school in Paris.
She looked and spoke earnestly, and, as I thought, a little uneasily as well. At the moment when she raised the letter to the candle before beginning to read it, Miss Fairlie passed us on the terrace, looked in for a moment, and seeing that we were engaged, slowly walked on.
Miss Halcombe began to read as follows:

"'You will be tired, my dear Philip, of hearing perpetually about my schools and my scholars. Lay the blame, pray, on the dull uniformity of life at Limmeridge, and not on me. Besides, this time I have something really interesting to tell you about a new scholar.
"'You know old Mrs. Kempe at the village shop. Well, after years of ailing, the doctor has at last given her up, and she is dying slowly day by day. Her only living relation, a sister, arrived last week to take care of her. This sister comes all the way from Hampshire—her name is Mrs. Catherick. Four days ago Mrs. Catherick came here to see me, and brought her only child with her, a sweet little girl about a year older than our darling Laura——'".

As the last sentence fell from the reader's lips, Miss Fairlie passed us on the terrace once more. She was softly singing to herself one of the melodies which she had been playing earlier in the evening. Miss Halcombe waited till she had passed out of sight again, and then went on with the letter—

"'Mrs. Catherick is a decent, well-behaved, respectable woman; middle-aged, and with the remains of having been moderately, only moderately, nice-looking. There is something in her manner and in her appearance, however, which I can't make out. She is reserved about herself to the point of downright secrecy, and there is a look in her face—I can't describe it—which suggests to me that she has something on her mind. She is altogether what you would call a walking mystery. Her errand at Limmeridge House, however, was simple enough. When she left Hampshire to nurse her sister, Mrs. Kempe, through her last illness, she had been obliged to bring her daughter with her, through having no one at home to take care of the little girl. Mrs. Kempe may die in a week's time, or may linger on for months; and Mrs. Catherick's object was to ask me to let her daughter, Anne, have the benefit of attending my school, subject to the condition of her being removed from it to go home again with her mother, after Mrs. Kempe's death. I consented at once, and when Laura and I went out for our walk, we took the little girl (who is just eleven years old) to the school that very day'".

Once more Miss Fairlie's figure, bright and soft in its snowy muslin dress—her face prettily framed by the white folds of the handkerchief which she had tied under her chin—passed by us in the moonlight. Once more Miss Halcombe waited till she was out of sight, and then went on,

"'I have taken a violent fancy, Philip, to my new scholar, for a reason which I mean to keep till the last for the sake of surprising you. Her mother having told me as little about the child as she told me of herself, I was left to discover (which I did on the first day when we tried her at lessons) that the poor little thing's intellect is not developed as it ought to be at her age. Seeing this I had her up to the house the next day, and privately arranged with the doctor to come and watch her and question her, and tell me what he thought. His opinion is that she will grow out of it. But he says her careful bringing-up at school is a matter of great importance just now, because her unusual slowness in acquiring ideas implies an unusual tenacity in keeping them, when they are once received into her mind. Now, my love, you must not imagine, in your off-hand way, that I have been attaching myself to an idiot. This poor little Anne Catherick is a sweet, affectionate, grateful girl, and says the quaintest, prettiest things (as you shall judge by an instance), in the most oddly sudden, surprised, half-frightened way. Although she is dressed very neatly, her clothes show a sad want of taste in colour and pattern. So I arranged, yesterday, that some of our darling Laura's old white frocks and white hats should be altered for Anne Catherick, explaining to her that little girls of her complexion looked neater and better all in white than in anything else. She hesitated and seemed puzzled for a minute, then flushed up, and appeared to understand. Her little hand clasped mine suddenly. She kissed it, Philip, and said (oh, so earnestly!), "I will always wear white as long as I live. It will help me to remember you, ma'am, and to think that I am pleasing you still, when I go away and see you no more." This is only one specimen of the quaint things she says so prettily. Poor little soul! She shall have a stock of white frocks, made with good deep tucks, to let out for her as she grows——'".

Miss Halcombe paused, and looked at me across the piano.
"Did the forlorn woman whom you met in the high-road seem young?" she asked. "Young enough to be two- or three-and-twenty?
"Yes, Miss Halcombe, as young as that.
"And she was strangely dressed, from head to foot, all in white?
"All in white.
While the answer was passing my lips Miss Fairlie glided into view on the terrace for the third time. Instead of proceeding on her walk, she stopped, with her back turned towards us, and, leaning on the balustrade of the terrace, looked down into the garden beyond. My eyes fixed upon the white gleam of her muslin gown and head-dress in the moonlight, and a sensation, for which I can find no name—a sensation that quickened my pulse, and raised a fluttering at my heart—began to steal over me.
"All in white?" Miss Halcombe repeated. "The most important sentences in the letter, Mr. Hartright, are those at the end, which I will read to you immediately. But I can't help dwelling a little upon the coincidence of the white costume of the woman you met, and the white frocks which produced that strange answer from my mother's little scholar. The doctor may have been wrong when he discovered the child's defects of intellect, and predicted that she would 'grow out of them.' She may never have grown out of them, and the old grateful fancy about dressing in white, which was a serious feeling to the girl, may be a serious feeling to the woman still.
I said a few words in answer—I hardly know what. All my attention was concentrated on the white gleam of Miss Fairlie's muslin dress.
"Listen to the last sentences of the letter," said Miss Halcombe. "I think they will surprise you.
As she raised the letter to the light of the candle, Miss Fairlie turned from the balustrade, looked doubtfully up and down the terrace, advanced a step towards the glass doors, and then stopped, facing us.
Meanwhile Miss Halcombe read me the last sentences to which she had referred—

"'And now, my love, seeing that I am at the end of my paper, now for the real reason, the surprising reason, for my fondness for little Anne Catherick. My dear Philip, although she is not half so pretty, she is, nevertheless, by one of those extraordinary caprices of accidental resemblance which one sometimes sees, the living likeness, in her hair, her complexion, the colour of her eyes, and the shape of her face——'".

I started up from the ottoman before Miss Halcombe could pronounce the next words. A thrill of the same feeling which ran through me when the touch was laid upon my shoulder on the lonely high-road chilled me again.
There stood Miss Fairlie, a white figure, alone in the moonlight; in her attitude, in the turn of her head, in her complexion, in the shape of her face, the living image, at that distance and under those circumstances, of the woman in white! The doubt which had troubled my mind for hours and hours past flashed into conviction in an instant. That "something wanting" was my own recognition of the ominous likeness between the fugitive from the asylum and my pupil at Limmeridge House.
"You see it!" said Miss Halcombe. She dropped the useless letter, and her eyes flashed as they met mine. "You see it now, as my mother saw it eleven years since!
"I see it—more unwillingly than I can say. To associate that forlorn, friendless, lost woman, even by an accidental likeness only, with Miss Fairlie, seems like casting a shadow on the future of the bright creature who stands looking at us now. Let me lose the impression again as soon as possible. Call her in, out of the dreary moonlight—pray call her in!
"Mr. Hartright, you surprise me. Whatever women may be, I thought that men, in the nineteenth century, were above superstition.
"Pray call her in!
"Hush, hush! She is coming of her own accord. Say nothing in her presence. Let this discovery of the likeness be kept a secret between you and me. Come in, Laura, come in, and wake Mrs. Vesey with the piano. Mr. Hartright is petitioning for some more music, and he wants it, this time, of the lightest and liveliest kind.