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Sylvia’s Lovers
CHAPTER XIX - AN IMPORTANT MISSION
Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell
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       _ Philip was too late for the coach he had hoped to go by, but there
       was another that left at night, and which reached Newcastle in the
       forenoon, so that, by the loss of a night's sleep, he might overtake
       his lost time. But, restless and miserable, he could not stop in
       Hartlepool longer than to get some hasty food at the inn from which
       the coach started. He acquainted himself with the names of the towns
       through which it would pass, and the inns at which it would stop,
       and left word that the coachman was to be on the look-out for him
       and pick him up at some one of these places.
       He was thoroughly worn out before this happened--too much tired to
       gain any sleep in the coach. When he reached Newcastle, he went to
       engage his passage in the next London-bound smack, and then directed
       his steps to Robinson's, in the Side, to make all the inquiries he
       could think of respecting the plough his uncle wanted to know about.
       So it was pretty late in the afternoon, indeed almost evening,
       before he arrived at the small inn on the quay-side, where he
       intended to sleep. It was but a rough kind of place, frequented
       principally by sailors; he had been recommended to it by Daniel
       Robson, who had known it well in former days. The accommodation in
       it was, however, clean and homely, and the people keeping it were
       respectable enough in their way.
       Still Hepburn was rather repelled by the appearance of the sailors
       who sate drinking in the bar, and he asked, in a low voice, if there
       was not another room. The woman stared in surprise, and only shook
       her head. Hepburn went to a separate table, away from the roaring
       fire, which on this cold March evening was the great attraction, and
       called for food and drink. Then seeing that the other men were
       eyeing him with the sociable idea of speaking to him, he asked for
       pen and ink and paper, with the intention of defeating their purpose
       by pre-occupation on his part. But when the paper came, the new pen,
       the unused thickened ink, he hesitated long before he began to
       write; and at last he slowly put down the words,--
       'DEAR AND HONOURED UNCLE,'----
       There was a pause; his meal was brought and hastily swallowed. Even
       while he was eating it, he kept occasionally touching up the letters
       of these words. When he had drunk a glass of ale he began again to
       write: fluently this time, for he was giving an account of the
       plough. Then came another long stop; he was weighing in his own mind
       what he should say about Kinraid. Once he thought for a second of
       writing to Sylvia herself, and telling her---how much? She might
       treasure up her lover's words like grains of gold, while they were
       lighter than dust in their meaning to Philip's mind; words which
       such as the specksioneer used as counters to beguile and lead astray
       silly women. It was for him to prove his constancy by action; and
       the chances of his giving such proof were infinitesimal in Philip's
       estimation. But should the latter mention the bare fact of Kinraid's
       impressment to Robson? That would have been the natural course of
       things, remembering that the last time Philip had seen either, they
       were in each other's company. Twenty times he put his pen to the
       paper with the intention of relating briefly the event that had
       befallen Kinraid; and as often he stopped, as though the first word
       would be irrevocable. While he thus sate pen in hand, thinking
       himself wiser than conscience, and looking on beyond the next step
       which she bade him take into an indefinite future, he caught some
       fragments of the sailors' talk at the other end of the room, which
       made him listen to their words. They were speaking of that very
       Kinraid, the thought of whom filled his own mind like an actual
       presence. In a rough, careless way they spoke of the specksioneer,
       with admiration enough for his powers as a sailor and harpooner; and
       from that they passed on to jesting mention of his power amongst
       women, and one or two girls' names were spoken of in connection with
       him. Hepburn silently added Annie Coulson and Sylvia Robson to this
       list, and his cheeks turned paler as he did so. Long after they had
       done speaking about Kinraid, after they had paid their shot, and
       gone away, he sate in the same attitude, thinking bitter thoughts.
       The people of the house prepared for bed. Their silent guest took no
       heed of their mute signs. At length the landlord spoke to him, and
       he started, gathered his wits together with an effort, and prepared
       to retire with the rest. But before he did so, he signed and
       directed the letter to his uncle, leaving it still open, however, in
       case some sudden feeling should prompt him to add a postscript. The
       landlord volunteered the information that the letter his guest had
       been writing must be posted early the next morning if it was going
       south; as the mails in that direction only left Newcastle every
       other day.
       All night long Hepburn wearied himself with passionate tossings,
       prompted by stinging recollection. Towards morning he fell into a
       dead sound sleep. He was roused by a hasty knocking at the door. It
       was broad full daylight; he had overslept himself, and the smack was
       leaving by the early tide. He was even now summoned on board. He
       dressed, wafered his letter, and rushed with it to the neighbouring
       post-office; and, without caring to touch the breakfast for which he
       paid, he embarked. Once on board, he experienced the relief which it
       always is to an undecided man, and generally is at first to any one
       who has been paltering with duty, when circumstances decide for him.
       In the first case, it is pleasant to be relieved from the burden of
       decision; in the second, the responsibility seems to be shifted on
       to impersonal events.
       And so Philip sailed out of the mouth of the Tyne on to the great
       open sea. It would be a week before the smack reached London, even
       if she pursued a tolerably straight course, but she had to keep a
       sharp look-out after possible impressment of her crew; and it was
       not until after many dodges and some adventures that, at the end of
       a fortnight from the time of his leaving Monkshaven, Philip found
       himself safely housed in London, and ready to begin the delicate
       piece of work which was given him to do.
       He felt himself fully capable of unravelling each clue to
       information, and deciding on the value of the knowledge so gained.
       But during the leisure of the voyage he had wisely determined to
       communicate everything he learnt about Dickinson, in short, every
       step he took in the matter, by letter to his employers. And thus his
       mind both in and out of his lodgings might have appeared to have
       been fully occupied with the concerns of others.
       But there were times when the miserable luxury of dwelling upon his
       own affairs was his--when he lay down in his bed till he fell into
       restless sleep--when the point to which his steps tended in his
       walks was ascertained. Then he gave himself up to memory, and regret
       which often deepened into despair, and but seldom was cheered by
       hope.
       He grew so impatient of the ignorance in which he was kept--for in
       those days of heavy postage any correspondence he might have had on
       mere Monkshaven intelligence was very limited--as to the affairs at
       Haytersbank, that he cut out an advertisement respecting some new
       kind of plough, from a newspaper that lay in the chop-house where he
       usually dined, and rising early the next morning he employed the
       time thus gained in going round to the shop where these new ploughs
       were sold.
       That night he wrote another letter to Daniel Robson, with a long
       account of the merits of the implements he had that day seen. With a
       sick heart and a hesitating hand, he wound up with a message of
       regard to his aunt and to Sylvia; an expression of regard which he
       dared not make as warm as he wished, and which, consequently, fell
       below the usual mark attained by such messages, and would have
       appeared to any one who cared to think about it as cold and formal.
       When this letter was despatched, Hepburn began to wonder what he had
       hoped for in writing it. He knew that Daniel could write--or rather
       that he could make strange hieroglyphics, the meaning of which
       puzzled others and often himself; but these pen-and-ink signs were
       seldom employed by Robson, and never, so far as Philip knew, for the
       purpose of letter-writing. But still he craved so for news of
       Sylvia--even for a sight of paper which she had seen, and perhaps
       touched--that he thought all his trouble about the plough (to say
       nothing of the one-and-twopence postage which he had prepaid in
       order to make sure of his letter's reception in the frugal household
       at Haytersbank) well lost for the mere chance of his uncle's caring
       enough for the intelligence to write in reply, or even to get some
       friend to write an answer; for in such case, perhaps, Philip might
       see her name mentioned in some way, even though it was only that she
       sent her duty to him.
       But the post-office was dumb; no letter came from Daniel Robson.
       Philip heard, it is true, from his employers pretty frequently on
       business; and he felt sure they would have named it, if any ill had
       befallen his uncle's family, for they knew of the relationship and
       of his intimacy there. They generally ended their formal letters
       with as formal a summary of Monkshaven news; but there was never a
       mention of the Robsons, and that of itself was well, but it did not
       soothe Philip's impatient curiosity. He had never confided his
       attachment to his cousin to any one, it was not his way; but he
       sometimes thought that if Coulson had not taken his present
       appointment to a confidential piece of employment so ill, he would
       have written to him and asked him to go up to Haytersbank Farm, and
       let him know how they all were.
       All this time he was transacting the affair on which he had been
       sent, with great skill; and, indeed, in several ways, he was quietly
       laying the foundation for enlarging the business in Monkshaven.
       Naturally grave and quiet, and slow to speak, he impressed those who
       saw him with the idea of greater age and experience than he really
       possessed. Indeed, those who encountered him in London, thought he
       was absorbed in the business of money-making. Yet before the time
       came when he could wind up affairs and return to Monkshaven, he
       would have given all he possessed for a letter from his uncle,
       telling him something about Sylvia. For he still hoped to hear from
       Robson, although he knew that he hoped against reason. But we often
       convince ourselves by good argument that what we wish for need never
       have been expected; and then, at the end of our reasoning, find that
       we might have saved ourselves the trouble, for that our wishes are
       untouched, and are as strong enemies to our peace of mind as ever.
       Hepburn's baulked hope was the Mordecai sitting in Haman's gate; all
       his success in his errand to London, his well-doing in worldly
       affairs, was tasteless, and gave him no pleasure, because of this
       blank and void of all intelligence concerning Sylvia.
       And yet he came back with a letter from the Fosters in his pocket,
       curt, yet expressive of deep gratitude for his discreet services in
       London; and at another time--in fact, if Philip's life had been
       ordered differently to what it was--it might have given this man a
       not unworthy pleasure to remember that, without a penny of his own,
       simply by diligence, honesty, and faithful quick-sightedness as to
       the interests of his masters, he had risen to hold the promise of
       being their successor, and to be ranked by them as a trusted friend.
       As the Newcastle smack neared the shore on her voyage home, Hepburn
       looked wistfully out for the faint gray outline of Monkshaven Priory
       against the sky, and the well-known cliffs; as if the masses of
       inanimate stone could tell him any news of Sylvia.
       In the streets of Shields, just after landing, he encountered a
       neighbour of the Robsons, and an acquaintance of his own. By this
       honest man, he was welcomed as a great traveller is welcomed on his
       return from a long voyage, with many hearty good shakes of the hand,
       much repetition of kind wishes, and offers to treat him to drink.
       Yet, from some insurmountable feeling, Philip avoided all mention of
       the family who were the principal bond between the honest farmer and
       himself. He did not know why, but he could not bear the shock of
       first hearing her name in the open street, or in the rough
       public-house. And thus he shrank from the intelligence he craved to
       hear.
       Thus he knew no more about the Robsons when he returned to
       Monkshaven, than he had done on the day when he had last seen them;
       and, of course, his first task there was to give a long _viva voce_
       account of all his London proceedings to the two brothers Foster,
       who, considering that they had heard the result of everything by
       letter, seemed to take an insatiable interest in details.
       He could hardly tell why, but even when released from the Fosters'
       parlour, he was unwilling to go to Haytersbank Farm. It was late, it
       is true, but on a May evening even country people keep up till eight
       or nine o'clock. Perhaps it was because Hepburn was still in his
       travel-stained dress; having gone straight to the shop on his
       arrival in Monkshaven. Perhaps it was because, if he went this night
       for the short half-hour intervening before bed-time, he would have
       no excuse for paying a longer visit on the following evening. At any
       rate, he proceeded straight to Alice Rose's, as soon as he had
       finished his interview with his employers.
       Both Hester and Coulson had given him their welcome home in the
       shop, which they had, however, left an hour or two before him.
       Yet they gave him a fresh greeting, almost one in which surprise was
       blended, when he came to his lodgings. Even Alice seemed gratified
       by his spending this first evening with them, as if she had thought
       it might have been otherwise. Weary though he was, he exerted
       himself to talk and to relate what he had done and seen in London,
       as far as he could without breaking confidence with his employers.
       It was something to see the pleasure he gave to his auditors,
       although there were several mixed feelings in their minds to produce
       the expression of it which gratified him. Coulson was sorry for his
       former ungenerous reception of the news that Philip was going to
       London; Hester and her mother each secretly began to feel as if this
       evening was like more happy evenings of old, before the Robsons came
       to Haytersbank Farm; and who knows what faint delicious hopes this
       resemblance may not have suggested?
       While Philip, restless and excited, feeling that he could not sleep,
       was glad to pass away the waking hours that must intervene before
       to-morrow night, at times, he tried to make them talk of what had
       happened in Monkshaven during his absence, but all had gone on in an
       eventless manner, as far as he could gather; if they knew of
       anything affecting the Robsons, they avoided speaking of it to him;
       and, indeed, how little likely were they ever to have heard their
       names while he was away? _