Ernest Maltravers — Volume 08
96 pages
English

Ernest Maltravers — Volume 08

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96 pages
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The Project Gutenberg EBook Ernest Maltravers, by Bulwer-Lytton, Book 8 #75 in our series by Edward Bulwer-LyttonCopyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the copyright laws for your country before downloadingor redistributing this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do notchange or edit the header without written permission.Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of thisfile. Included is important information about your specific rights and restrictions in how the file may be used. You can alsofind out about how to make a donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved.**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts****EBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971*******These EBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers*****Title: Ernest Maltravers, Book 8Author: Edward Bulwer-LyttonRelease Date: March 2005 [EBook #7647] [Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] [This file was firstposted on March 11, 2004]Edition: 10Language: English*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ERNEST MALTRAVERS, LYTTON, V8 ***This eBook was produced by Dagny, dagnypg@yahoo.com and David Widger, widger@cecomet.netBOOK VIII. Whither come Wisdom's queen And the snare-weaving Love? EURIP. /Iphig. in Aul./ I. 1310 ...

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The Project Gutenberg EBook Ernest Maltravers,by Bulwer-Lytton, Book 8 #75 in our series byEdward Bulwer-LyttonCopyright laws are changing all over the world. Besure to check the copyright laws for your countrybefore downloading or redistributing this or anyother Project Gutenberg eBook.This header should be the first thing seen whenviewing this Project Gutenberg file. Please do notremove it. Do not change or edit the headerwithout written permission.Please read the "legal small print," and otherinformation about the eBook and ProjectGutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included isimportant information about your specific rights andrestrictions in how the file may be used. You canalso find out about how to make a donation toProject Gutenberg, and how to get involved.**Welcome To The World of Free Plain VanillaElectronic Texts****EBooks Readable By Both Humans and ByComputers, Since 1971*******These EBooks Were Prepared By Thousandsof Volunteers*****Title: Ernest Maltravers, Book 8
Author: Edward Bulwer-LyttonRelease Date: March 2005 [EBook #7647] [Yes,we are more than one year ahead of schedule][This file was first posted on March 11, 2004]Edition: 10Language: English*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERGEBOOK ERNEST MALTRAVERS, LYTTON, V8 ***This eBook was produced by Dagny,dagnypg@yahoo.com and David Widger,widger@cecomet.netBOOK VIII.  Whither come Wisdom's queen  And the snare-weaving Love?          EURIP. /Iphig. in Aul./ I. 1310.
CHAPTER I."Notitiam primosque gradus vicinia fecit."*—OVID.* Neighbourhood caused the acquaintance and firstintroduction.CLEVELAND'S villa /was/ full, and of personsusually called agreeable. Amongst the rest wasLady Florence Lascelles. The wise old man hadever counselled Maltravers not to marry too young;but neither did he wish him to put off thatmomentous epoch of life till all the bloom of heartand emotion was passed away. He thought, withthe old lawgivers, that thirty was the happy age forforming a connection, in the choice of which, withthe reason of manhood, ought, perhaps, to beblended the passion of youth. And he saw that fewmen were more capable than Maltravers of thetrue enjoyments of domestic life. He had longthought, also, that none were more calculated tosympathise with Ernest's views, and appreciate hispeculiar character, than the gifted and brilliantFlorence Lascelles. Cleveland looked withtoleration on her many eccentricities of thought andconduct,—eccentricities which he imagined wouldrapidly melt away beneath the influence of thatattachment which usually operates so great achange in women; and, where it is strongly andintensely felt, moulds even those of the mostobstinate character into compliance or similitudewith the sentiments or habits of its object.
The stately self-control of Maltravers was, heconceived, precisely that quality that gives to menan unconscious command over the very thoughtsof the woman whose affection they win: while, onthe other hand, he hoped that the fancy andenthusiasm of Florence would tend to rendersharper and more practical an ambition, whichseemed to the sober man of the world too apt torefine upon the means, and to /cui bono/ theobjects of worldly distinction. Besides, Clevelandwas one who thoroughly appreciated theadvantages of wealth and station; and the rank andthe dower of Florence were such as would forceMaltravers into a position in social life, which couldnot fail to make new exactions upon talents whichCleveland fancied were precisely those adaptedrather to command than to serve. In Ferrers herecognised a man to /get/ into power—inMaltravers one by whom power, if ever attained,would be wielded with dignity, and exerted for greatuses. Something, therefore, higher than merecovetousness for the vulgar interests of Maltraversmade Cleveland desire to secure to him the heartand hand of the great heiress; and he fancied that,whatever might be the obstacle, it would not be inthe will of Lady Florence herself. He prudentlyresolved, however, to leave matters to their naturalcourse. He hinted nothing to one party or theother. No place for falling in love like a largecountry house, and no time for it, amongst theindolent well-born, like the close of a Londonseason, when, jaded by small cares, and sickenedof hollow intimacies, even the coldest may wellyearn for the tones of affection—the excitement of
an honest emotion.Somehow or other it happened that Florence andErnest, after the first day or two, were constantlythrown together. She rode on horseback, andMaltravers was by her side—they made excursionson the river, and they sat on the same bench in thegliding pleasure-boat. In the evenings, the youngerguests, with the assistance of the neighbouringfamilies, often got up a dance in a temporarypavilion built out of the dining-room. Ernest neverdanced. Florence did at first. But once, as she wasconversing with Maltravers, when a gayguardsman came to claim her promised hand inthe waltz, she seemed struck by a grave change inErnest's face."Do you never waltz?" she asked, while theguardsman was searching for a corner whereinsafely to deposit his hat."No," said he; "yet there is no impropriety in /my/waltzing.""And you mean that there is in mine?""Pardon me—I did not say so.""But you think it.""Nay, on consideration, I am glad, perhaps, thatyou do waltz.""You are mysterious."
"Well then, I mean, that you are precisely thewoman I would never fall in love with. And I feel thedanger is lessened, when I see you destroy anyone of my illusions, or, I ought to say, attack anyone of my prejudices."Lady Florence coloured; but the guardsman andthe music left her no time for reply. However, afterthat night she waltzed no more. She was unwell—she declared she was ordered not to dance, andso quadrilles were relinquished as well as the waltz.Maltravers could not but be touched and flatteredby this regard for his opinion; but Florencecontrived to testify it so as to forbidacknowledgment, since another motive had beenfound for it. The second evening after thatcommemorated by Ernest's candid rudeness, theychanced to meet in the conservatory, which wasconnected with the ball-room; and Ernest, pausingto inquire after her health, was struck by thelistless and dejected sadness which spoke in hertone and countenance as she replied to him."Dear Lady Florence," said he, "I fear you areworse than you will confess. You should shunthese draughts. You owe it to your friends to bemore careful of yourself.""Friends!" said Lady Florence, bitterly—"I have nofriends!—even my poor father would not absenthimself from a cabinet dinner a week after I wasdead. But that is the condition of public life—its hotand searing blaze puts out the lights of all lesser
but not unholier affections.—Friends! Fate, thatmade Florence Lascelles the envied heiress,denied her brothers, sisters; and the hour of herbirth lost her even the love of a mother! Friends!where shall I find them?"As she ceased, she turned to the open casement,and stepped out into the verandah, and by thetrembling of her voice Ernest felt that she had doneso to hide or to suppress her tears."Yet," said he, following her, "there is one class ofmore distant friends, whose interest Lady FlorenceLascelles cannot fail to secure, however she maydisdain it. Among the humblest of that class, sufferme to rank myself. Come, I assume the privilege ofadvice—the night air is a luxury you must notindulge.""No, no, it refreshes me—it soothes. Youmisunderstand me, I have no illness that still skiesand sleeping flowers can increase."Maltravers, as is evident, was not in love withFlorence, but he could not fail, brought, as he hadlately been, under the direct influence of her rareand prodigal gifts, mental and personal, to feel forher a strong and even affectionate interest—thevery frankness with which he was accustomed tospeak to her, and the many links of communionthere necessarily were between himself and a mindso naturally powerful and so richly cultivated, hadalready established their acquaintance upon anintimate footing.
"I cannot restrain you, Lady Florence," said he, halfsmiling, "but my conscience will not let me be anaccomplice. I will turn king's evidence, and hunt outLord Saxingham to send him to you."Lady Florence, whose face was averted from his,did not appear to hear him."And you, Mr. Maltravers," turning quickly round—"you—have you friends? Do you feel that thereare, I do not say public, but private affections andduties, for which life is made less a possessionthan a trust?""Lady Florence—no!—I have friends, it is true, andCleveland is of the nearest; but the life within life—the second self, in whom we vest the right andmastery over our own being—I know it not. But isit," he added, after a pause, "a rare privation?Perhaps it is a happy one. I have learned to leanon my own soul, and not look elsewhere for thereeds that a wind can break.""Ah, it is a cold philosophy—you may reconcileyourself to its wisdom in the world, in the hum andshock of men; but in solitude, with Nature—ah, no!While the mind alone is occupied, you may becontented with the pride of stoicism; but there aremoments when the /heart/ wakens as from a sleep—wakens like a frightened child—to feel itself aloneand in the dark."Ernest was silent, and Florence continued, in analtered voice: "This is a strange conversation—and
you must think me indeed a wild, romance-readingperson, as the world is apt to call me. But if I live—I—pshaw!—life denies ambition to women.""If a woman like you, Lady Florence, should everlove, it will be one in whose career you mayperhaps find that noblest of all ambitions—theambition women only feel—the ambition foranother!""Ah! but I shall never love," said Lady Florence,and her cheek grew pale as the starlight shone onit; "still, perhaps," she added quickly, "I may atleast know the blessing of friendship. Why now",and here, approaching Maltravers, she laid herhand with a winning frankness on his arm—" whynow, should not we be to each other as if love, asyou call it, were not a thing for earth—andfriendship supplied its place?—there is no dangerof our falling in love with each other! You are notvain enough to expect it in me, and I, you know,am a coquette; let us be friends, confidants—atleast till you marry, or I give another the right tocontrol my friendships and monopolise my.secrets"Maltravers was startled—the sentiment Florenceaddressed to him, he, in words not dissimilar, hadonce addressed to Valerie."The world," said he, kissing the hand that yet layon his arm, "the world will—""Oh, you men!—the world, the world!—Everythinggentle, everything pure, everything noble, high-
gentle, everything pure, everything noble, high-wrought and holy—is to be squared, and cribbed,and maimed to the rule and measure of the world!The world—are you, too, its slave? Do you notdespise its hollow cant—its methodical hypocrisy?""Heartily!" said Ernest Maltravers, almost withfierceness. "No man ever so scorned its false godsand its miserable creeds—its war upon the weak—its fawning upon the great—its ingratitude tobenefactors—its sordid league with mediocrityagainst excellence. Yes, in proportion as I lovemankind, I despise and detest that worse thanVenetian oligarchy which mankind set over themand call 'THE WORLD.'"And then it was, warmed by the excitement ofreleased feelings, long and carefully shrouded, thatthis man, ordinarily so calm and self-possessed,poured burningly and passionately forth all thosetumultuous and almost tremendous thoughts,which, however much we may regulate, control, ordisguise them, lurk deep within the souls of all ofus, the seeds of the eternal war between thenatural man and the artificial; between our wildergenius and our social conventionalities;—thoughtsthat from time to time break forth into theharbingers of vain and fruitless revolutions,impotent struggles against destiny;—thoughts thatgood and wise men would be slow to promulge andpropagate, for they are of a fire which burns aswell as brightens, and which spreads from heart toheart—as a spark spreads amidst flax;—thoughtswhich are rifest where natures are most high, butbelong to truths that virtue dare not tell aloud. And
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