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North and South
CHAPTER XXII - A BLOW AND ITS CONSEQUENCES
Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell
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       _ CHAPTER XXII - A BLOW AND ITS CONSEQUENCES
       'But work grew scarce, while bread grew dear,
       And wages lessened, too;
       For Irish hordes were bidders here,
       Our half-paid work to do.'
       CORN LAW RHYMES.
       Margaret was shown into the drawing-room. It had returned into
       its normal state of bag and covering. The windows were half open
       because of the heat, and the Venetian blinds covered the
       glass,--so that a gray grim light, reflected from the pavement
       below, threw all the shadows wrong, and combined with the
       green-tinged upper light to make even Margaret's own face, as she
       caught it in the mirrors, look ghastly and wan. She sat and
       waited; no one came. Every now and then, the wind seemed to bear
       the distant multitudinous sound nearer; and yet there was no
       wind! It died away into profound stillness between whiles.
       Fanny came in at last.
       'Mamma will come directly, Miss Hale. She desired me to apologise
       to you as it is. Perhaps you know my brother has imported hands
       from Ireland, and it has irritated the Milton people
       excessively--as if he hadn't a right to get labour where he
       could; and the stupid wretches here wouldn't work for him; and
       now they've frightened these poor Irish starvelings so with their
       threats, that we daren't let them out. You may see them huddled
       in that top room in the mill,--and they're to sleep there, to
       keep them safe from those brutes, who will neither work nor let
       them work. And mamma is seeing about their food, and John is
       speaking to them, for some of the women are crying to go back.
       Ah! here's mamma!'
       Mrs. Thornton came in with a look of black sternness on her face,
       which made Margaret feel she had arrived at a bad time to trouble
       her with her request. However, it was only in compliance with
       Mrs. Thornton's expressed desire, that she would ask for whatever
       they might want in the progress of her mother's illness. Mrs.
       Thornton's brow contracted, and her mouth grew set, while
       Margaret spoke with gentle modesty of her mother's restlessness,
       and Dr. Donaldson's wish that she should have the relief of a
       water-bed. She ceased. Mrs. Thornton did not reply immediately.
       Then she started up and exclaimed--
       'They're at the gates! Call John, Fanny,--call him in from the
       mill! They're at the gates! They'll batter them in! Call John, I
       say!'
       And simultaneously, the gathering tramp--to which she had been
       listening, instead of heeding Margaret's words--was heard just
       right outside the wall, and an increasing din of angry voices
       raged behind the wooden barrier, which shook as if the unseen
       maddened crowd made battering-rams of their bodies, and retreated
       a short space only to come with more united steady impetus
       against it, till their great beats made the strong gates quiver,
       like reeds before the wind. The women gathered round the windows,
       fascinated to look on the scene which terrified them. Mrs.
       Thornton, the women-servants, Margaret,--all were there. Fanny
       had returned, screaming up-stairs as if pursued at every step,
       and had thrown herself in hysterical sobbing on the sofa. Mrs.
       Thornton watched for her son, who was still in the mill. He came
       out, looked up at them--the pale cluster of faces--and smiled
       good courage to them, before he locked the factory-door. Then he
       called to one of the women to come down and undo his own door,
       which Fanny had fastened behind her in her mad flight. Mrs.
       Thornton herself went. And the sound of his well-known and
       commanding voice, seemed to have been like the taste of blood to
       the infuriated multitude outside. Hitherto they had been
       voiceless, wordless, needing all their breath for their
       hard-labouring efforts to break down the gates. But now, hearing
       him speak inside, they set up such a fierce unearthly groan, that
       even Mrs. Thornton was white with fear as she preceded him into
       the room. He came in a little flushed, but his eyes gleaming, as
       in answer to the trumpet-call of danger, and with a proud look of
       defiance on his face, that made him a noble, if not a handsome
       man. Margaret had always dreaded lest her courage should fail her
       in any emergency, and she should be proved to be, what she
       dreaded lest she was--a coward. But now, in this real great time
       of reasonable fear and nearness of terror, she forgot herself,
       and felt only an intense sympathy--intense to painfulness--in the
       interests of the moment.
       Mr. Thornton came frankly forwards:
       'I'm sorry, Miss Hale, you have visited us at this unfortunate
       moment, when, I fear, you may be involved in whatever risk we
       have to bear. Mother! hadn't you better go into the back rooms?
       I'm not sure whether they may not have made their way from
       Pinner's Lane into the stable-yard; but if not, you will be safer
       there than here. Go Jane!' continued he, addressing the
       upper-servant. And she went, followed by the others.
       'I stop here!' said his mother. 'Where you are, there I stay.'
       And indeed, retreat into the back rooms was of no avail; the
       crowd had surrounded the outbuildings at the rear, and were
       sending forth their: awful threatening roar behind. The servants
       retreated into the garrets, with many a cry and shriek. Mr.
       Thornton smiled scornfully as he heard them. He glanced at
       Margaret, standing all by herself at the window nearest the
       factory. Her eyes glittered, her colour was deepened on cheek and
       lip. As if she felt his look, she turned to him and asked a
       question that had been for some time in her mind:
       'Where are the poor imported work-people? In the factory there?'
       'Yes! I left them cowered up in a small room, at the head of a
       back flight of stairs; bidding them run all risks, and escape
       down there, if they heard any attack made on the mill-doors. But
       it is not them--it is me they want.'
       'When can the soldiers be here?' asked his mother, in a low but
       not unsteady voice.
       He took out his watch with the same measured composure with which
       he did everything. He made some little calculation:
       'Supposing Williams got straight off when I told him, and hadn't
       to dodge about amongst them--it must be twenty minutes yet.'
       'Twenty minutes!' said his mother, for the first time showing her
       terror in the tones of her voice.
       'Shut down the windows instantly, mother,' exclaimed he: 'the
       gates won't bear such another shock. Shut down that window, Miss
       Hale.'
       Margaret shut down her window, and then went to assist Mrs.
       Thornton's trembling fingers.
       From some cause or other, there was a pause of several minutes in
       the unseen street. Mrs. Thornton looked with wild anxiety at her
       son's countenance, as if to gain the interpretation of the sudden
       stillness from him. His face was set into rigid lines of
       contemptuous defiance; neither hope nor fear could be read there.
       Fanny raised herself up:
       'Are they gone?' asked she, in a whisper.
       'Gone!' replied he. 'Listen!'
       She did listen; they all could hear the one great straining
       breath; the creak of wood slowly yielding; the wrench of iron;
       the mighty fall of the ponderous gates. Fanny stood up
       tottering--made a step or two towards her mother, and fell
       forwards into her arms in a fainting fit. Mrs. Thornton lifted
       her up with a strength that was as much that of the will as of
       the body, and carried her away.
       'Thank God!' said Mr. Thornton, as he watched her out. 'Had you
       not better go upstairs, Miss Hale?'
       Margaret's lips formed a 'No!'--but he could not hear her speak,
       for the tramp of innumerable steps right under the very wall of
       the house, and the fierce growl of low deep angry voices that had
       a ferocious murmur of satisfaction in them, more dreadful than
       their baffled cries not many minutes before.
       'Never mind!' said he, thinking to encourage her. 'I am very
       sorry you should have been entrapped into all this alarm; but it
       cannot last long now; a few minutes more, and the soldiers will
       be here.'
       'Oh, God!' cried Margaret, suddenly; 'there is Boucher. I know
       his face, though he is livid with rage,--he is fighting to get to
       the front--look! look!'
       'Who is Boucher?' asked Mr. Thornton, coolly, and coming close to
       the window to discover the man in whom Margaret took such an
       interest. As soon as they saw Mr. Thornton, they set up a
       yell,--to call it not human is nothing,--it was as the demoniac
       desire of some terrible wild beast for the food that is withheld
       from his ravening. Even he drew hack for a moment, dismayed at
       the intensity of hatred he had provoked.
       'Let them yell!' said he. 'In five minutes more--. I only hope my
       poor Irishmen are not terrified out of their wits by such a
       fiendlike noise. Keep up your courage for five minutes, Miss
       Hale.'
       'Don't be afraid for me,' she said hastily. 'But what in five
       minutes? Can you do nothing to soothe these poor creatures? It is
       awful to see them.'
       'The soldiers will be here directly, and that will bring them to
       reason.'
       'To reason!' said Margaret, quickly. 'What kind of reason?'
       'The only reason that does with men that make themselves into
       wild beasts. By heaven! they've turned to the mill-door!'
       'Mr. Thornton,' said Margaret, shaking all over with her passion,
       'go down this instant, if you are not a coward. Go down and face
       them like a man. Save these poor strangers, whom you have decoyed
       here. Speak to your workmen as if they were human beings. Speak
       to them kindly. Don't let the soldiers come in and cut down
       poor-creatures who are driven mad. I see one there who is. If you
       have any courage or noble quality in you, go out and speak to
       them, man to man.'
       He turned and looked at her while she spoke. A dark cloud came
       over his face while he listened. He set his teeth as he heard her
       words.
       'I will go. Perhaps I may ask you to accompany me downstairs, and
       bar the door behind me; my mother and sister will need that
       protection.'
       'Oh! Mr. Thornton! I do not know--I may be wrong--only--'
       But he was gone; he was downstairs in the hall; he had unbarred
       the front door; all she could do, was to follow him quickly, and
       fasten it behind him, and clamber up the stairs again with a sick
       heart and a dizzy head. Again she took her place by the farthest
       window. He was on the steps below; she saw that by the direction
       of a thousand angry eyes; but she could neither see nor hear
       any-thing save the savage satisfaction of the rolling angry
       murmur. She threw the window wide open. Many in the crowd were
       mere boys; cruel and thoughtless,--cruel because they were
       thoughtless; some were men, gaunt as wolves, and mad for prey.
       She knew how it was; they were like Boucher, with starving
       children at home--relying on ultimate success in their efforts to
       get higher wages, and enraged beyond measure at discovering that
       Irishmen were to be brought in to rob their little ones of bread.
       Margaret knew it all; she read it in Boucher's face, forlornly
       desperate and livid with rage. If Mr. Thornton would but say
       something to them--let them hear his voice only--it seemed as if
       it would be better than this wild beating and raging against the
       stony silence that vouchsafed them. no word, even of anger or
       reproach. But perhaps he was speaking now; there was a momentary
       hush of their noise, inarticulate as that of a troop of animals.
       She tore her bonnet off; and bent forwards to hear. She could
       only see; for if Mr. Thornton had indeed made the attempt to
       speak, the momentary instinct to listen to him was past and gone,
       and the people were raging worse than ever. He stood with his
       arms folded; still as a statue; his face pale with repressed
       excitement. They were trying to intimidate him--to make him
       flinch; each was urging the other on to some immediate act of
       personal violence. Margaret felt intuitively, that in an instant
       all would be uproar; the first touch would cause an explosion, in
       which, among such hundreds of infuriated men and reckless boys,
       even Mr. Thornton's life would be unsafe,--that in another
       instant the stormy passions would have passed their bounds, and
       swept away all barriers of reason, or apprehension of
       consequence. Even while she looked, she saw lads in the
       back-ground stooping to take off their heavy wooden clogs--the
       readiest missile they could find; she saw it was the spark to the
       gunpowder, and, with a cry, which no one heard, she rushed out of
       the room, down stairs,--she had lifted the great iron bar of the
       door with an imperious force--had thrown the door open wide--and
       was there, in face of that angry sea of men, her eyes smiting
       them with flaming arrows of reproach. The clogs were arrested in
       the hands that held them--the countenances, so fell not a moment
       before, now looked irresolute, and as if asking what this meant.
       For she stood between them and their enemy. She could not speak,
       but held out her arms towards them till she could recover breath.
       'Oh, do not use violence! He is one man, and you are many; but
       her words died away, for there was no tone in her voice; it was
       but a hoarse whisper. Mr. Thornton stood a little on one side; he
       had moved away from behind her, as if jealous of anything that
       should come between him and danger.
       'Go!' said she, once more (and now her voice was like a cry).
       'The soldiers are sent for--are coming. Go peaceably. Go away.
       You shall have relief from your complaints, whatever they are.'
       'Shall them Irish blackguards be packed back again?' asked one
       from out the crowd, with fierce threatening in his voice.
       'Never, for your bidding!' exclaimed Mr. Thornton. And instantly
       the storm broke. The hootings rose and filled the air,--but
       Margaret did not hear them. Her eye was on the group of lads who
       had armed themselves with their clogs some time before. She saw
       their gesture--she knew its meaning,--she read their aim. Another
       moment, and Mr. Thornton might be smitten down,--he whom she had
       urged and goaded to come to this perilous place. She only thought
       how she could save him. She threw her arms around him; she made
       her body into a shield from the fierce people beyond. Still, with
       his arms folded, he shook her off.
       'Go away,' said he, in his deep voice. 'This is no place for
       you.'
       'It is!' said she. 'You did not see what I saw.' If she thought
       her sex would be a protection,--if, with shrinking eyes she had
       turned away from the terrible anger of these men, in any hope
       that ere she looked again they would have paused and reflected,
       and slunk away, and vanished,--she was wrong. Their reckless
       passion had carried them too far to stop--at least had carried
       some of them too far; for it is always the savage lads, with
       their love of cruel excitement, who head the riot--reckless to
       what bloodshed it may lead. A clog whizzed through the air.
       Margaret's fascinated eyes watched its progress; it missed its
       aim, and she turned sick with affright, but changed not her
       position, only hid her face on Mr. Thornton s arm. Then she
       turned and spoke again:'
       'For God's sake! do not damage your cause by this violence. You
       do not know what you are doing.' She strove to make her words
       distinct.
       A sharp pebble flew by her, grazing forehead and cheek, and
       drawing a blinding sheet of light before her eyes. She lay like
       one dead on Mr. Thornton's shoulder. Then he unfolded his arms,
       and held her encircled in one for an instant:
       'You do well!' said he. 'You come to oust the innocent stranger
       You fall--you hundreds--on one man; and when a woman comes before
       you, to ask you for your own sakes to be reasonable creatures,
       your cowardly wrath falls upon her! You do well!' They were
       silent while he spoke. They were watching, open-eyed and
       open-mouthed, the thread of dark-red blood which wakened them up
       from their trance of passion. Those nearest the gate stole out
       ashamed; there was a movement through all the crowd--a retreating
       movement. Only one voice cried out:
       'Th' stone were meant for thee; but thou wert sheltered behind a
       woman!'
       Mr. Thornton quivered with rage. The blood-flowing had made
       Margaret conscious--dimly, vaguely conscious. He placed her
       gently on the door-step, her head leaning against the frame.
       'Can you rest there?' he asked. But without waiting for her
       answer, he went slowly down the steps right into the middle of
       the crowd. 'Now kill me, if it is your brutal will. There is no
       woman to shield me here. You may beat me to death--you will never
       move me from what I have determined upon--not you!' He stood
       amongst them, with his arms folded, in precisely the same
       attitude as he had been in on the steps.
       But the retrograde movement towards the gate had begun--as
       unreasoningly, perhaps as blindly, as the simultaneous anger. Or,
       perhaps, the idea of the approach of the soldiers, and the sight
       of that pale, upturned face, with closed eyes, still and sad as
       marble, though the tears welled out of the long entanglement of
       eyelashes and dropped down; and, heavier, slower plash than even
       tears, came the drip of blood from her wound. Even the most
       desperate--Boucher himself--drew back, faltered away, scowled,
       and finally went off, muttering curses on the master, who stood
       in his unchanging attitude, looking after their retreat with
       defiant eyes. The moment that retreat had changed into a flight
       (as it was sure from its very character to do), he darted up the
       steps to Margaret. She tried to rise without his help.
       'It is nothing,' she said, with a sickly smile. 'The skin is
       grazed, and I was stunned at the moment. Oh, I am so thankful
       they are gone!' And she cried without restraint.
       He could not sympathise with her. His anger had not abated; it
       was rather rising the more as his sense of immediate danger was
       passing away. The distant clank of the soldiers was heard just
       five minutes too late to make this vanished mob feel the power of
       authority and order. He hoped they would see the troops, and be
       quelled by the thought of their narrow escape. While these
       thoughts crossed his mind, Margaret clung to the doorpost to
       steady herself: but a film came over her eyes--he was only just
       in time to catch her. 'Mother--mother!' cried he; 'Come
       down--they are gone, and Miss Hale is hurt!' He bore her into the
       dining-room, and laid her on the sofa there; laid her down
       softly, and looking on her pure white face, the sense of what she
       was to him came upon him so keenly that he spoke it out in his
       pain:
       'Oh, my Margaret--my Margaret! no one can tell what you are to
       me! Dead--cold as you lie there, you are the only woman I ever
       loved! Oh, Margaret--Margaret!' Inarticulately as he spoke,
       kneeling by her, and rather moaning than saying the words, he
       started up, ashamed of himself, as his mother came in. She saw
       nothing, but her son a little paler, a little sterner than usual.
       'Miss Hale is hurt, mother. A stone has grazed her temple. She
       has lost a good deal of blood, I'm afraid.'
       'She looks very seriously hurt,--I could almost fancy her dead,'
       said Mrs. Thornton, a good deal alarmed.
       'It is only a fainting-fit. She has spoken to me since.' But all
       the blood in his body seemed to rush inwards to his heart as he
       spoke, and he absolutely trembled.
       'Go and call Jane,--she can find me the things I want; and do you
       go to your Irish people, who are crying and shouting as if they
       were mad with fright.' He went. He went away as if weights were
       tied to every limb that bore him from her. He called Jane; he
       called his sister. She should have all womanly care, all gentle
       tendance. But every pulse beat in him as he remembered how she
       had come down and placed herself in foremost danger,--could it be
       to save him? At the time, he had pushed her aside, and spoken
       gruffly; he had seen nothing but the unnecessary danger she had
       placed herself in. He went to his Irish people, with every nerve
       in his body thrilling at the thought of her, and found it
       difficult to understand enough of what they were saying to soothe
       and comfort away their fears. There, they declared, they would
       not stop; they claimed to be sent back. And so he had to think,
       and talk, and reason.
       Mrs. Thornton bathed Margaret's temples with eau de Cologne. As
       the spirit touched the wound, which till then neither Mrs.
       Thornton nor Jane had perceived, Margaret opened her eyes; but it
       was evident she did not know where she was, nor who they were.
       The dark circles deepened, the lips quivered and contracted, and
       she became insensible once more.
       'She has had a terrible blow,' said Mrs. Thornton. 'Is there any
       one who will go for a doctor?'
       'Not me, ma'am, if you please,' said Jane, shrinking back. 'Them
       rabble may be all about; I don't think the cut is so deep, ma'am,
       as it looks.'
       'I will not run the chance. She was hurt in our house. If you are
       a coward, Jane, I am not. I will go.'
       'Pray, ma'am, let me send one of the police. There's ever so many
       come up, and soldiers too.'
       'And yet you're afraid to go! I will not have their time taken up
       with our errands. They'll have enough to do to catch some of the
       mob. You will not be afraid to stop in this house,' she asked
       contemptuously, 'and go on bathing Miss Hale's forehead, shall
       you? I shall not be ten minutes away.'
       'Couldn't Hannah go, ma'am?'
       'Why Hannah? Why any but you? No, Jane, if you don't go, I do.'
       Mrs. Thornton went first to the room in which she had left Fanny
       stretched on the bed. She started up as her mother entered.
       'Oh, mamma, how you terrified me! I thought you were a man that
       had got into the house.'
       'Nonsense! The men are all gone away. There are soldiers all
       round the place, seeking for their work now it is too late. Miss
       Hale is lying on the dining-room sofa badly hurt. I am going for
       the doctor.'
       'Oh! don't, mamma! they'll murder you.' She clung to her mother's
       gown. Mrs. Thornton wrenched it away with no gentle hand.
       'Find me some one else to go but that girl must not bleed to
       death.'
       'Bleed! oh, how horrid! How has she got hurt?'
       'I don't know,--I have no time to ask. Go down to her, Fanny, and
       do try to make yourself of use. Jane is with her; and I trust it
       looks worse than it is. Jane has refused to leave the house,
       cowardly woman! And I won't put myself in the way of any more
       refusals from my servants, so I am going myself.'
       'Oh, dear, dear!' said Fanny, crying, and preparing to go down
       rather than be left alone, with the thought of wounds and
       bloodshed in the very house.
       'Oh, Jane!' said she, creeping into the dining-room, 'what is the
       matter? How white she looks! How did she get hurt? Did they throw
       stones into the drawing-room?'
       Margaret did indeed look white and wan, although her senses were
       beginning to return to her. But the sickly daze of the swoon made
       her still miserably faint. She was conscious of movement around
       her, and of refreshment from the eau de Cologne, and a craving
       for the bathing to go on without intermission; but when they
       stopped to talk, she could no more have opened her eyes, or
       spoken to ask for more bathing, than the people who lie in
       death-like trance can move, or utter sound, to arrest the awful
       preparations for their burial, while they are yet fully aware,
       not merely of the actions of those around them, but of the idea
       that is the motive for such actions.
       Jane paused in her bathing, to reply to Miss Thornton's question.
       'She'd have been safe enough, miss, if she'd stayed in the
       drawing-room, or come up to us; we were in the front garret, and
       could see it all, out of harm's way.'
       'Where was she, then?' said Fanny, drawing nearer by slow
       degrees, as she became accustomed to the sight of Margaret's pale
       face.
       'Just before the front door--with master!' said Jane,
       significantly.
       'With John! with my brother! How did she get there?'
       'Nay, miss, that's not for me to say,' answered Jane, with a
       slight toss of her head. 'Sarah did'----
       'Sarah what?' said Fanny, with impatient curiosity.
       Jane resumed her bathing, as if what Sarah did or said was not
       exactly the thing she liked to repeat.
       'Sarah what?' asked Fanny, sharply. 'Don't speak in these half
       sentences, or I can't understand you.'
       'Well, miss, since you will have it--Sarah, you see, was in the
       best place for seeing, being at the right-hand window; and she
       says, and said at the very time too, that she saw Miss Hale with
       her arms about master's neck, hugging him before all the people.'
       'I don't believe it,' said Fanny. 'I know she cares for my
       brother; any one can see that; and I dare say, she'd give her
       eyes if he'd marry her,--which he never will, I can tell her. But
       I don't believe she'd be so bold and forward as to put her arms
       round his neck.'
       'Poor young lady! she's paid for it dearly if she did. It's my
       belief, that the blow has given her such an ascendency of blood
       to the head as she'll never get the better from. She looks like a
       corpse now.'
       'Oh, I wish mamma would come!' said Fanny, wringing her hands. 'I
       never was in the room with a dead person before.'
       'Stay, miss! She's not dead: her eye-lids are quivering, and
       here's wet tears a-coming down her cheeks. Speak to her, Miss
       Fanny!'
       'Are you better now?' asked Fanny, in a quavering voice.
       No answer; no sign of recognition; but a faint pink colour
       returned to her lips, although the rest of her face was ashen
       pale.
       Mrs. Thornton came hurriedly in, with the nearest surgeon she
       could find. 'How is she? Are you better, my dear?' as Margaret
       opened her filmy eyes, and gazed dreamily at her. 'Here is Mr.
       Lowe come to see you.'
       Mrs. Thornton spoke loudly and distinctly, as to a deaf person.
       Margaret tried to rise, and drew her ruffled, luxuriant hair
       instinctly over the cut. 'I am better now,' said she, in a very
       low, faint voice. I was a little sick.' She let him take her hand
       and feel her pulse. The bright colour came for a moment into her
       face, when he asked to examine the wound in her forehead; and she
       glanced up at Jane, as if shrinking from her inspection more than
       from the doctor's.
       'It is not much, I think. I am better now. I must go home.'
       'Not until I have applied some strips of plaster; and you have
       rested a little.'
       She sat down hastily, without another word, and allowed it to be
       bound up.
       'Now, if you please,' said she, 'I must go. Mamma will not see
       it, I think. It is under the hair, is it not?'
       'Quite; no one could tell.'
       'But you must not go,' said Mrs. Thornton, impatiently. 'You are
       not fit to go.
       'I must,' said Margaret, decidedly. 'Think of mamma. If they
       should hear----Besides, I must go,' said she, vehemently. 'I
       cannot stay here. May I ask for a cab?'
       'You are quite flushed and feverish,' observed Mr. Lowe.
       'It is only with being here, when I do so want to go. The
       air--getting away, would do me more good than anything,' pleaded
       she.
       'I really believe it is as she says,' Mr. Lowe replied. 'If her
       mother is so ill as you told me on the way here, it may be very
       serious if she hears of this riot, and does not see her daughter
       back at the time she expects. The injury is not deep. I will
       fetch a cab, if your servants are still afraid to go out.'
       'Oh, thank you!' said Margaret. 'It will do me more good than
       anything. It is the air of this room that makes me feel so
       miserable.'
       She leant back on the sofa, and closed her eyes. Fanny beckoned
       her mother out of the room, and told her something that made her
       equally anxious with Margaret for the departure of the latter.
       Not that she fully believed Fanny's statement; but she credited
       enough to make her manner to Margaret appear very much
       constrained, at wishing her good-bye.
       Mr. Lowe returned in the cab.
       'If you will allow me, I will see you home, Miss Hale. The
       streets are not very quiet yet.'
       Margaret's thoughts were quite alive enough to the present to
       make her desirous of getting rid of both Mr. Lowe and the cab
       before she reached Crampton Crescent, for fear of alarming her
       father and mother. Beyond that one aim she would not look. That
       ugly dream of insolent words spoken about herself, could never be
       forgotten--but could be put aside till she was stronger--for, oh!
       she was very weak; and her mind sought for some present fact to
       steady itself upon, and keep it from utterly losing consciousness
       in another hideous, sickly swoon. _
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Introduction
CHAPTER I - 'HASTE TO THE WEDDING'
CHAPTER II - ROSES AND THORNS
CHAPTER III - 'THE MORE HASTE THE WORSE SPEED'
CHAPTER IV - DOUBTS AND DIFFICULTIES
CHAPTER V - DECISION
CHAPTER VI - FAREWELL
CHAPTER VII - NEW SCENES AND FACES
CHAPTER VIII - HOME SICKNESS
CHAPTER IX - DRESSING FOR TEA
CHAPTER X - WROUGHT IRON AND GOLD
CHAPTER XI - FIRST IMPRESSIONS
CHAPTER XII - MORNING CALLS
CHAPTER XIII - A SOFT BREEZE IN A SULTRY PLACE
CHAPTER XIV - THE MUTINY
CHAPTER XV - MASTERS AND MEN
CHAPTER XVI - THE SHADOW OF DEATH
CHAPTER XVII - WHAT IS A STRIKE?
CHAPTER XVIII - LIKES AND DISLIKES
CHAPTER XIX - ANGEL VISITS
CHAPTER XX - MEN AND GENTLEMEN
CHAPTER XXI - THE DARK NIGHT
CHAPTER XXII - A BLOW AND ITS CONSEQUENCES
CHAPTER XXIII - MISTAKES
CHAPTER XXIV - MISTAKES CLEARED UP
CHAPTER XXV - FREDERICK
CHAPTER XXVI - MOTHER AND SON
CHAPTER XXVII - FRUIT-PIECE
CHAPTER XXVIII - COMFORT IN SORROW
CHAPTER XXIX - A RAY OF SUNSHINE
CHAPTER XXX - HOME AT LAST
CHAPTER XXXI - 'SHOULD AULD ACQUAINTANCE BE FORGOT?'
CHAPTER XXXII - MISCHANCES
CHAPTER XXXIII - PEACE
CHAPTER XXXIV - FALSE AND TRUE
CHAPTER XXXV - EXPIATION
CHAPTER XXXVI - UNION NOT ALWAYS STRENGTH
CHAPTER XXXVII - LOOKING SOUTH
CHAPTER XXXVIII - PROMISES FULFILLED
CHAPTER XXXIX - MAKING FRIENDS
CHAPTER XL - OUT OF TUNE
CHAPTER XLI - THE JOURNEY'S END
CHAPTER XLII - ALONE! ALONE!
CHAPTER XLIII - MARGARET'S FLITTIN'
CHAPTER XLIV - EASE NOT PEACE
CHAPTER XLV - NOT ALL A DREAM
CHAPTER XLVI - ONCE AND NOW
CHAPTER XLVII - SOMETHING WANTING
CHAPTER XLVIII - 'NE'ER TO BE FOUND AGAIN'
CHAPTER XLIX - BREATHING TRANQUILLITY
CHAPTER L - CHANGES AT MILTON
CHAPTER LI - MEETING AGAIN
CHAPTER LII - 'PACK CLOUDS AWAY'