Chapter 4â
Summary: In this chapter, the story revolves around the life of Caterina, an adopted child at Cheverel Manor. Caterina grows up under the care of Sir Christopher and Lady Cheverel, and becomes very close to Maynard Gilfil, a ward of Sir Christopher. As she grows older, Caterina becomes a companion to Anthony Wybrow, Sir Christopher's nephew and chosen heir. Despite Maynard's affection for her, Caterina falls for Anthony. However, Anthony is encouraged by Sir Christopher to court and marry Miss Assher, a wealthy heiress. The chapter ends with a painful parting scene between Anthony and Caterina, as he leaves for Bath to pursue his arranged match.
Main Characters: ['Caterina', 'Sir Christopher', 'Lady Cheverel', 'Maynard Gilfil', 'Anthony Wybrow', 'Miss Assher']
Location: Cheverel Manor
Time Period: Late 18th century
Themes: ['Adoption', 'Growing up', 'Love', 'Class differences', 'Arranged marriage']
Plot Points: ["Caterina's adoption and life at Cheverel Manor", "Caterina's relationship with Maynard Gilfil", "Caterina's growing affection for Anthony Wybrow", "Sir Christopher's plan for Anthony to marry Miss Assher", "Anthony's departure for Bath to court Miss Assher"]
Significant Quotations: ["'Caterina soon conquered all prejudices against her foreign blood; for what prejudices will hold out against helplessness and broken prattle?'", "'With Caterina for a wife, too,' Sir Christopher soon began to think; for though the good Baronet was not at all quick to suspect what was unpleasant and opposed to his views of fitness, he was quick to see what would dovetail with his own plans; and he had first guessed, and then ascertained, by direct inquiry, the state of Maynardâs feelings.", "'You wonât forget me, Tina, before I come back again? I shall leave you all the whip-cord weâve made; and donât you let Guinea die. Come, give me a kiss, and promise not to forget me.'"]
Chapter Keywords: ['Adoption', 'Love', 'Arranged marriage', 'Class differences', 'Growing up']
Chapter Notes: ["This chapter introduces the main characters and their relationships. It also sets up the conflict that will drive the rest of the story - Caterina's unrequited love for Anthony, and the arranged marriage between Anthony and Miss Assher."]
In three months from the time of Caterinaâs adoption--namely, in the late autumn of 1773--the chimneys of Cheverel Manor were sending up unwonted smoke, and the servants were awaiting in excitement the return of their master and mistress after a two yearsâ absence. Great was the astonishment of Mrs. Bellamy, the housekeeper, when Mr. Warren lifted a little black-eyed child out of the carriage, and great was Mrs. Sharpâs sense of superior information and experience, as she detailed Caterinaâs history, interspersed with copious comments, to the rest of the upper servants that evening, as they were taking a comfortable glass of grog together in the housekeeperâs room.
A pleasant room it was as any party need desire to muster in on a cold November evening. The fireplace alone was a picture: a wide and deep recess with a low brick altar in the middle, where great logs of dry wood sent myriad sparks up the dark chimney-throat; and over the front of this recess a large wooden entablature bearing this motto, finely carved in old English letters, âFear God and honour the Kingâ. And beyond the party, who formed a half-moon with their chairs and well-furnished table round this bright fireplace, what a space of chiaroscuro for the imagination to revel in! Stretching across the far end of the room, what an oak table, high enough surely for Homerâs gods, standing on four massive legs, bossed and bulging like sculptured urns! and, lining the distant wall, what vast cupboards, suggestive of inexhaustible apricot jam and promiscuous butlerâs perquisites! A stray picture or two had found their way down there, and made agreeable patches of dark brown on the buff-coloured walls. High over the loud-resounding double door hung one which, from some indications of a face looming out of blackness, might, by a great synthetic effort, be pronounced a Magdalen. Considerably lower down hung the similitude of a hat and feathers, with portions of a ruff, stated by Mrs. Bellamy to represent Sir Francis Bacon, who invented gunpowder, and, in her opinion, âmight haâ been better emplyed.â
But this evening the mind is but slightly arrested by the great Verulam, and is in the humour to think a dead philosopher less interesting than a living gardener, who sits conspicuous in the half-circle round the fireplace. Mr. Bates is habitually a guest in the housekeeperâs room of an evening, preferring the social pleasures there--the feast of gossip and the flow of grog--to a bachelorâs chair in his charming thatched cottage on a little island, where every sound is remote, but the cawing of rooks and the screaming of wild geese, poetic sounds, doubtless, but, humanly speaking, not convivial.
Mr. Bates was by no means an average person, to be passed without special notice. He was a sturdy Yorkshireman, approaching forty, whose face Nature seemed to have coloured when she was in a hurry, and had no time to attend to nuances, for every inch of him visible above his neckcloth was of one impartial redness; so that when he was at some distance your imagination was at liberty to place his lips anywhere between his nose and chin. Seen closer, his lips were discerned to be of a peculiar cut, and I fancy this had something to do with the peculiarity of his dialect, which, as we shall see, was individual rather than provincial. Mr. Bates was further distinguished from the common herd by a perpetual blinking of the eyes; and this, together with the red-rose tint of his complexion, and a way he had of hanging his head forward, and rolling it from side to side as he walked, gave him the air of a Bacchus in a blue apron, who, in the present reduced circumstances of Olympus, had taken to the management of his own vines. Yet, as gluttons are often thin, so sober men are often rubicund; and Mr. Bates was sober, with that manly, British, churchman-like sobriety which can carry a few glasses of grog without any perceptible clarification of ideas.
âDang my boottons!â observed Mr. Bates, who, at the conclusion of Mrs. Sharpâs narrative, felt himself urged to his strongest interjection, âitâs what I shouldnât haâ looked for from Sir Cristhifer anâ my ledy, to bring a furrin child into the coonthry; anâ depend onât, whether you anâ me lives to seeât or noo, itâll coom to soom harm. The first sitiation iver I held--it was a hold hancient habbey, wiâ the biggest orchard oâ apples anâ pears you ever see--there was a French valet, anâ he stool silk stoockins, anâ shirts, anâ rings, anâ iverythinâ he could ley his hands on, anâ run awey at last wiâ thâ missisâs jewl-box. Theyâre all alaike, them furriners. It roons iâ thâ blood.â
âWell,â said Mrs. Sharp, with the air of a person who held liberal views, but knew where to draw the line, âIâm not a-going to defend the furriners, for Iâve as good reason to know what they are as most folks, anâ nobodyâll ever hear me say but what theyâre next door to heathens, and the hile they eat wiâ their victuals is enough to turn any Christianâs stomach. But for all that--anâ for all as the trouble in respect oâ washinâ and managinâ has fell upoâ me through the journey--I canât say but what I think as my Lady anâ Sir Cristiferâs done a right thing by a hinnicent child as doesnât know its right hand from its left, iâ bringing it where itâll learn to speak summat better nor gibberish, and be brought up iâ the true religion. For as for them furrin churches as Sir Cristifer is so unaccountable mad after, wiâ pictures oâ men anâ women a-showing themselves just for all the world as God made âem. I think, for my part, as itâs welly a sin to go into âem.â
âYouâre likely to have more foreigners, however,â said Mr. Warren, who liked to provoke the gardener, âfor Sir Christopher has engaged some Italian workmen to help in the alterations in the house.â
âOlterations!â exclaimed Mrs. Bellamy, in alarm. âWhat olterations!â
âWhy,â answered Mr. Warren, âSir Christopher, as I understand, is going to make a new thing of the old Manor-house both inside and out. And heâs got portfolios full of plans and pictures coming. It is to be cased with stone, in the Gothic style--pretty near like the churches, you know, as far as I can make out; and the ceilings are to be beyond anything thatâs been seen in the country. Sir Christopherâs been giving a deal of study to it.â
âDear heart alive!â said Mrs. Bellamy, âwe shall be pisoned wiâ lime anâ plaster, anâ hev the house full oâ workmen colloguing wiâ the maids, anâ makinâ no end oâ mischief.â
âThat ye may ley your life on, Mrs. Bellamy,â said Mr. Bates. âHowiver, Iâll noot denay that the Goothic stayleâs prithy anoof, anâ itâs woonderful how near them stoon-carvers cuts oot the shapes oâ the pine apples, anâ shamrucks, anâ rooses. I dare sey Sir Cristhiferâll meck a naice thing oâ the Manor, anâ there woonât be many gentlemenâs houses iâ the coonthry asâll coom up toât, wiâ sich a garden anâ pleasure-groons anâ wall-fruit as King George maight be prood on.â
âWell, I canât think as the house can be better nor it is, Gothic or no Gothic,â said Mrs. Bellamy; âanâ Iâve done the picklinâ and preservinâ in it fourteen year Michaelmas was a three weeks. But what does my lady say toât?â
âMy lady knows better than cross Sir Cristifer in what heâs set his mind on,â said Mr. Bellamy, who objected to the critical tone of the conversation. âSir Cristiferâll hev his own way, that you may tek your oath. Anâ iâ the right onât too. Heâs a gentleman born, anâs got the money. But come, Mester Bates, fill your glass, anâ weâll drink health anâ happiness to his honour anâ my lady, and then you shall give us a song. Sir Cristifer doesnât come hum from Italy ivery night.â
This demonstrable position was accepted without hesitation as ground for a toast; but Mr. Bates, apparently thinking that his song was not an equally reasonable sequence, ignored the second part of Mr. Bellamyâs proposal. So Mrs. Sharp, who had been heard to say that she had no thoughts at all of marrying Mr. Bates, though he was âa sensable fresh-coloured man as many a woman âud snap at for a husband,â enforced Mr. Bellamyâs appeal.
âCome, Mr. Bates, let us hear âRoyâs Wife.â Iâd rether hear a good old song like that, nor all the fine Italian toodlin.â
Mr. Bates, urged thus flatteringly, stuck his thumbs into the armholes of his waistcoat, threw himself back in his chair with his head in that position in which he could look directly towards the zenith, and struck up a remarkably staccato rendering of âRoyâs Wife of Aldivallochâ. This melody may certainly be taxed with excessive iteration, but that was precisely its highest recommendation to the present audience, who found it all the easier to swell the chorus. Nor did it at all diminish their pleasure that the only particular concerning âRoyâs Wifeâ, which Mr. Batesâs enunciation allowed them to gather, was that she âchatedâ him,--whether in the matter of garden stuff or of some other commodity, or why her name should, in consequence, be repeatedly reiterated with exultation, remaining an agreeable mystery.
Mr. Batesâs song formed the climax of the eveningâs good-fellowship, and the party soon after dispersed--Mrs. Bellamy perhaps to dream of quicklime flying among her preserving-pans, or of love-sick housemaids reckless of unswept corners--and Mrs. Sharp to sink into pleasant visions of independent housekeeping in Mr. Batesâs cottage, with no bells to answer, and with fruit and vegetables ad libitum.
Caterina soon conquered all prejudices against her foreign blood; for what prejudices will hold out against helplessness and broken prattle? She became the pet of the household, thrusting Sir Christopherâs favourite bloodhound of that day, Mrs. Bellamyâs two canaries, and Mr. Batesâs largest Dorking hen, into a merely secondary position. The consequence was, that in the space of a summerâs day she went through a great cycle of experiences, commencing with the somewhat acidulated goodwill of Mrs. Sharpâs nursery discipline. Then came the grave luxury of her ladyshipâs sitting-room, and, perhaps, the dignity of a ride on Sir Christopherâs knee, sometimes followed by a visit with him to the stables, where Caterina soon learned to hear without crying the baying of the chained bloodhounds, and say, with ostentatious bravery, clinging to Sir Christopherâs leg all the while, âDey not hurt Tina.â Then Mrs. Bellamy would perhaps be going out to gather the rose-leaves and lavender, and Tina was made proud and happy by being allowed to carry a handful in her pinafore; happier still, when they were spread out on sheets to dry, so that she could sit down like a frog among them, and have them poured over her in fragrant showers. Another frequent pleasure was to take a journey with Mr. Bates through the kitchen-gardens and the hothouses, where the rich bunches of green and purple grapes hung from the roof, far out of reach of the tiny yellow hand that could not help stretching itself out towards them; though the hand was sure at last to be satisfied with some delicate-flavoured fruit or sweet-scented flower. Indeed, in the long monotonous leisure of that great country-house, you may be sure there was always some one who had nothing better to do than to play with Tina. So that the little southern bird had its northern nest lined with tenderness, and caresses, and pretty things. A loving sensitive nature was too likely, under such nurture, to have its susceptibility heightened into unfitness for an encounter with any harder experience; all the more, because there were gleams of fierce resistance to any discipline that had a harsh or unloving aspect. For the only thing in which Caterina showed any precocity was a certain ingenuity in vindictiveness. When she was five years old she had revenged herself for an unpleasant prohibition by pouring the ink into Mrs. Sharpâs work-basket; and once, when Lady Cheverel took her doll from her, because she was affectionately licking the paint off its face, the little minx straightway climbed on a chair and threw down a flower-vase that stood on a bracket. This was almost the only instance in which her anger overcame her awe of Lady Cheverel, who had the ascendancy always belonging to kindness that never melts into caresses, and is severely but uniformly beneficent.
By-and-by the happy monotony of Cheverel Manor was broken in upon in the way Mr. Warren had announced. The roads through the park were cut up by waggons carrying loads of stone from a neighbouring quarry, the green courtyard became dusty with lime, and the peaceful house rang with the sound of tools. For the next ten years Sir Christopher was occupied with the architectural metamorphosis of his old family mansion; thus anticipating, through the prompting of his individual taste, that general reaction from the insipid imitation of the Palladian style, towards a restoration of the Gothic, which marked the close of the eighteenth century. This was the object he had set his heart on, with a singleness of determination which was regarded with not a little contempt by his fox-hunting neighbours, who wondered greatly that a man with some of the best blood in England in his veins, should be mean enough to economize in his cellar, and reduce his stud to two old coach-horses and a hack, for the sake of riding a hobby, and playing the architect. Their wives did not see so much to blame in the matter of the cellar and stables, but they were eloquent in pity for poor Lady Cheverel, who had to live in no more than three rooms at once, and who must be distracted with noises, and have her constitution undermined by unhealthy smells. It was as bad as having a husband with an asthma. Why did not Sir Christopher take a house for her at Bath, or, at least, if he must spend his time in overlooking workmen, somewhere in the neighbourhood of the Manor? This pity was quite gratuitous, as the most plentiful pity always is; for though Lady Cheverel did not share her husbandâs architectural enthusiasm, she had too rigorous a view of a wifeâs duties, and too profound a deference for Sir Christopher, to regard submission as a grievance. As for Sir Christopher, he was perfectly indifferent to criticism. âAn obstinate, crotchety man,â said his neighbours. But I, who have seen Cheverel Manor, as he bequeathed it to his heirs, rather attribute that unswerving architectural purpose of his, conceived and carried out through long years of systematic personal exertion, to something of the fervour of genius, as well as inflexibility of will; and in walking through those rooms, with their splendid ceilings and their meagre furniture, which tell how all the spare money had been absorbed before personal comfort was thought of, I have felt that there dwelt in this old English baronet some of that sublime spirit which distinguishes art from luxury, and worships beauty apart from self-indulgence.
While Cheverel Manor was growing from ugliness into beauty, Caterina too was growing from a little yellow bantling into a whiter maiden, with no positive beauty indeed, but with a certain light airy grace, which, with her large appealing dark eyes, and a voice that, in its low-toned tenderness, recalled the love-notes of the stock-dove, gave her a more than usual charm. Unlike the building, however, Caterinaâs development was the result of no systematic or careful appliances. She grew up very much like the primroses, which the gardener is not sorry to see within his enclosure, but takes no pains to cultivate. Lady Cheverel taught her to read and write, and say her catechism; Mr. Warren, being a good accountant, gave her lessons in arithmetic, by her ladyshipâs desire; and Mrs. Sharp initiated her in all the mysteries of the needle. But, for a long time, there was no thought of giving her any more elaborate education. It is very likely that to her dying day Caterina thought the earth stood still, and that the sun and stars moved round it; but so, for the matter of that, did Helen, and Dido, and Desdemona, and Juliet; whence I hope you will not think my Caterina less worthy to be a heroine on that account. The truth is, that, with one exception, her only talent lay in loving; and there, it is probable, the most astronomical of women could not have surpassed her. Orphan and protegĂ©e though she was, this supreme talent of hers found plenty of exercise at Cheverel Manor, and Caterina had more people to love than many a small lady and gentleman affluent in silver mugs and blood relations. I think the first place in her childish heart was given to Sir Christopher, for little girls are apt to attach themselves to the finest-looking gentleman at hand, especially as he seldom has anything to do with discipline. Next to the Baronet came Dorcas, the merry rosy-cheeked damsel who was Mrs. Sharpâs lieutenant in the nursery, and thus played the part of the raisins in a dose of senna. It was a black day for Caterina when Dorcas married the coachman, and went, with a great sense of elevation in the world, to preside over a âpublicâ in the noisy town of Sloppeter. A little china-box, bearing the motto âThough lost to sight, to memory dearâ, which Dorcas sent her as a remembrance, was among Caterinaâs treasures ten years after.
The one other exceptional talent, you already guess, was music. When the fact that Caterina had a remarkable ear for music, and a still more remarkable voice, attracted Lady Cheverelâs notice, the discovery was very welcome both to her and Sir Christopher. Her musical education became at once an object of interest. Lady Cheverel devoted much time to it; and the rapidity of Tinaâs progress surpassing all hopes, an Italian singing-master was engaged, for several years, to spend some months together at Cheverel Manor. This unexpected gift made a great alteration in Caterinaâs position. After those first years in which little girls are petted like puppies and kittens, there comes a time when it seems less obvious what they can be good for, especially when, like Caterina, they give no particular promise of cleverness or beauty; and it is not surprising that in that uninteresting period there was no particular plan formed as to her future position. She could always help Mrs. Sharp, supposing she were fit for nothing else, as she grew up; but now, this rare gift of song endeared her to Lady Cheverel, who loved music above all things, and it associated her at once with the pleasures of the drawing-room. Insensibly she came to be regarded as one of the family, and the servants began to understand that Miss Sarti was to be a lady after all.
âAnd the raight onât too,â said Mr. Bates, âfor she hasnât the cut of a gell as must work for her bread; sheâs as nesh anâ dilicate as a paich-blossom--welly laike a linnet, wiâ onây joost body anoof to hold her voice.â
But long before Tina had reached this stage of her history, a new era had begun for her, in the arrival of a younger companion than any she had hitherto known. When she was no more than seven, a ward of Sir Christopherâs--a lad of fifteen, Maynard Gilfil by name--began to spend his vacations at Cheverel Manor, and found there no playfellow so much to his mind as Caterina. Maynard was an affectionate lad, who retained a propensity to white rabbits, pet squirrels, and guinea-pigs, perhaps a little beyond the age at which young gentlemen usually look down on such pleasures as puerile. He was also much given to fishing, and to carpentry, considered as a fine art, without any base view to utility. And in all these pleasures it was his delight to have Caterina as his companion, to call her little pet names, answer her wondering questions, and have her toddling after him as you may have seen a Blenheim spaniel trotting after a large setter. Whenever Maynard went back to school, there was a little scene of parting.
âYou wonât forget me, Tina, before I come back again? I shall leave you all the whip-cord weâve made; and donât you let Guinea die. Come, give me a kiss, and promise not to forget me.â
As the years wore on, and Maynard passed from school to college, and from a slim lad to a stalwart young man, their companionship in the vacations necessarily took a different form, but it retained a brotherly and sisterly familiarity. With Maynard the boyish affection had insensibly grown into ardent love. Among all the many kinds of first love, that which begins in childish companionship is the strongest and most enduring: when passion comes to unite its force to long affection, love is at its spring-tide. And Maynard Gilfilâs love was of a kind to make him prefer being tormented by Caterina to any pleasure, apart from her, which the most benevolent magician could have devised for him. It is the way with those tall large-limbed men, from Samson downwards. As for Tina, the little minx was perfectly well aware that Maynard was her slave; he was the one person in the world whom she did as she pleased with; and I need not tell you that this was a symptom of her being perfectly heart-whole so far as he was concerned: for a passionate womanâs love is always overshadowed by fear.
Maynard Gilfil did not deceive himself in his interpretation of Caterinaâs feelings, but he nursed the hope that some time or other she would at least care enough for him to accept his love. So he waited patiently for the day when he might venture to say, âCaterina, I love you!â You see, he would have been content with very little, being one of those men who pass through life without making the least clamour about themselves; thinking neither the cut of his coat, nor the flavour of his soup, nor the precise depth of a servantâs bow, at all momentous. He thought--foolishly enough, as lovers will think--that it was a good augury for him when he came to be domesticated at Cheverel Manor in the quality of chaplain there, and curate of a neighbouring parish; judging falsely, from his own case, that habit and affection were the likeliest avenues to love. Sir Christopher satisfied several feelings in installing Maynard as chaplain in his house. He liked the old-fashioned dignity of that domestic appendage; he liked his wardâs companionship; and, as Maynard had some private fortune, he might take life easily in that agreeable home, keeping his hunter, and observing a mild regimen of clerical duty, until the Cumbermoor living should fall in, when he might be settled for life in the neighbourhood of the manor. âWith Caterina for a wife, too,â Sir Christopher soon began to think; for though the good Baronet was not at all quick to suspect what was unpleasant and opposed to his views of fitness, he was quick to see what would dovetail with his own plans; and he had first guessed, and then ascertained, by direct inquiry, the state of Maynardâs feelings. He at once leaped to the conclusion that Caterina was of the same mind, or at least would be, when she was old enough. But these were too early days for anything definite to be said or done.
Meanwhile, new circumstances were arising, which, though they made no change in Sir Christopherâs plans and prospects, converted Mr. Gilfilâs hopes into anxieties, and made it clear to him not only that Caterinaâs heart was never likely to be his, but that it was given entirely to another.
Once or twice in Caterinaâs childhood, there had been another boy-visitor at the manor, younger than Maynard Gilfil--a beautiful boy with brown curls and splendid clothes, on whom Caterina had looked with shy admiration. This was Anthony Wybrow, the son of Sir Christopherâs youngest sister, and chosen heir of Cheverel Manor. The Baronet had sacrificed a large sum, and even straitened the resources by which he was to carry out his architectural schemes, for the sake of removing the entail from his estate, and making this boy his heir--moved to the step, I am sorry to say, by an implacable quarrel with his elder sister; for a power of forgiveness was not among Sir Christopherâs virtues. At length, on the death of Anthonyâs mother, when he was no longer a curly-headed boy, but a tall young man, with a captainâs commission, Cheverel Manor became his home too, whenever he was absent from his regiment. Caterina was then a little woman, between sixteen and seventeen, and I need not spend many words in explaining what you perceive to be the most natural thing in the world.
There was little company kept at the Manor, and Captain Wybrow would have been much duller if Caterina had not been there. It was pleasant to pay her attentions--to speak to her in gentle tones, to see her little flutter of pleasure, the blush that just lit up her pale cheek, and the momentary timid glance of her dark eyes, when he praised her singing, leaning at her side over the piano. Pleasant, too, to cut out that chaplain with his large calves! What idle man can withstand the temptation of a woman to fascinate, and another man to eclipse?--especially when it is quite clear to himself that he means no mischief, and shall leave everything to come right again by-and-by? At the end of eighteen months, however, during which Captain Wybrow had spent much of his time at the Manor, he found that matters had reached a point which he had not at all contemplated. Gentle tones had led to tender words, and tender words had called forth a response of looks which made it impossible not to carry on the crescendo of love-making. To find oneâs self adored by a little, graceful, dark-eyed, sweet-singing woman, whom no one need despise, is an agreeable sensation, comparable to smoking the finest Latakia, and also imposes some return of tenderness as a duty.
Perhaps you think that Captain Wybrow, who knew that it would be ridiculous to dream of his marrying Caterina, must have been a reckless libertine to win her affections in this manner! Not at all. He was a young man of calm passions, who was rarely led into any conduct of which he could not give a plausible account to himself; and the tiny fragile Caterina was a woman who touched the imagination and the affections rather than the senses. He really felt very kindly towards her, and would very likely have loved her--if he had been able to love any one. But nature had not endowed him with that capability. She had given him an admirable figure, the whitest of hands, the most delicate of nostrils, and a large amount of serene self-satisfaction; but, as if to save such a delicate piece of work from any risk of being shattered, she had guarded him from the liability to a strong emotion. There was no list of youthful misdemeanours on record against him, and Sir Christopher and Lady Cheverel thought him the best of nephews, the most satisfactory of heirs, full of grateful deference to themselves, and, above all things, guided by a sense of duty. Captain Wybrow always did the thing easiest and most agreeable to him from a sense of duty: he dressed expensively, because it was a duty he owed to his position; from a sense of duty he adapted himself to Sir Christopherâs inflexible will, which it would have been troublesome as well as useless to resist; and, being of a delicate constitution, he took care of his health from a sense of duty. His health was the only point on which he gave anxiety to his friends; and it was owing to this that Sir Christopher wished to see his nephew early married, the more so as a match after the Baronetâs own heart appeared immediately attainable. Anthony had seen and admired Miss Assher, the only child of a lady who had been Sir Christopherâs earliest love, but who, as things will happen in this world, had married another baronet instead of him. Miss Assherâs father was now dead, and she was in possession of a pretty estate. If, as was probable, she should prove susceptible to the merits of Anthonyâs person and character, nothing could make Sir Christopher so happy as to see a marriage which might be expected to secure the inheritance of Cheverel Manor from getting into the wrong hands. Anthony had already been kindly received by Lady Assher as the nephew of her early friend; why should he not go to Bath, where she and her daughter were then residing, follow up the acquaintance, and win a handsome, well-born, and sufficiently wealthy bride?
Sir Christopherâs wishes were communicated to his nephew, who at once intimated his willingness to comply with them--from a sense of duty. Caterina was tenderly informed by her lover of the sacrifice demanded from them both; and three days afterwards occurred the parting scene you have witnessed in the gallery, on the eve of Captain Wybrowâs departure for Bath.