Read The Meaning of Night Online
Authors: Michael Cox
Montgomery, Mr de Vere, and Mr Heraud, ? and a few others of their ilk – not, it must be
admitted, first-division talents; but Lord Tansor had been much satisfied, both by their
presence and by their expressions of encouragement when Mr Phoebus was persuaded to
bring out one or two of his own effusions for their perusal. The literary gentlemen
appeared to think that the young man had the mind and ear – indeed the vocation – of the
born bard, which gratifyingly confirmed Lord Tansor’s view that he had been right to
allow the young man his head in respect of a possible career. The author himself was also
flattered by the kind attentions of Mr Henry Drago,? the distinguished reviewer and
leading contributor to Fraser’s and the Quarterly, who gave him his card and offered to
act on his behalf to find a publisher for his poems. Two weeks later, a letter came from
this gentleman to say that Mr Moxon,? a particular friend of his, had been so impressed
by the verses the critic had placed before him that he had expressed an urgent wish to
meet the young genius as soon as may be, with a view to a publishing proposal.
Before Daunt had finished his studies at Cambridge, he had completed Ithaca; a
Lyrical Drama, which, with a few other sundry effusions, was duly published by Mr
Moxon in the autumn of 1841. So was launched the literary career of P. Rainsford Daunt.
Mrs Daunt, now established as the de facto chatelaine of Evenwood, naturally
watched these developments with a warm glow of satisfaction; it was most pleasant to
observe her plans for ingratiating her step-son with Lord Tansor succeeding so well. Her
husband, with more discernment, felt a good deal of disquiet at the palpably hollow
lionization of his son when the boy had done nothing, in his view, to deserve the plaudits
he was receiving, other than to have fallen under the capacious wing of his Lordship’s
patronage. With the end of his labours on his catalogue in sight, the Rector now felt able
to turn his full gaze on the character and future prospects of his son. But his position was
weak in respect of his patron’s growing dominion over his only child. What could be
done? Give up his comfortable living in this place of beauty and contentment and risk
removal to another Millhead? That was out of the question.
And yet he felt impelled to do his utmost to retrieve his son, and put him back on
a path more consonant with his upbringing and antecedents. It might not be possible to
bring him to ordination – the Rector’s dearest hope – but it might be possible to dilute the
effects of Lord Tansor’s increasingly prodigal attentions.
The Rector thought he might have a solution to the problem. Removing his son
from Evenwood and the influence of Lord Tansor for an extended period might have the
effect of loosening his patron’s grip somewhat on his son. He had therefore quietly
arranged through a cousin, Archdeacon Cyprian Daunt of Dublin, for the boy to spend a
further year of study at Trinity College. It now only remained for him to acquaint his son,
and Lord Tansor, of his decision.
14:
Post nubile, Phoebus?
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A week after attaining his majority, P. Rainsford Daunt, plainly agitated and with
a rather high colour, could have been seen leaving the Rectory at Evenwood, mounting
his father’s old grey cob, and making his way up towards the great house, where he was
received as a matter of urgency by a concerned Lord Tansor.
The Rector had summoned his son early in order to present him with his decision
that he should further his studies in Dublin, after taking his degree. Words were spoken –
I do not have an exact transcript – and things were said, perhaps on both sides, which
made compromise on the matter impossible. The Rector certainly told the boy, coolly and
frankly, that if he did not fall in with the arrangement he would himself go to Lord
Tansor to request that he intervene on his behalf.
Poor man. He had no conception that it was already too late; that he had lost every
chance of influence over his son’s future; and that Lord Tansor would do nothing to
support his wishes in the case.
‘I do not, of course, say that it is a bad plan,’ Lord Tansor opined when, that
afternoon, the Rector stood before him, ‘for the young man to go to Ireland – that, of
course, must be a matter for you to settle with him yourself. I only say that travel in
general is overrated, and that people – especially young people – would be better advised
to stay at home and look to their prospects there. As for Ireland, there can, I think, be few
places on earth in which an English gentleman could feel less at home, or where the
natural comforts and amenities of a gentleman’s condition are less susceptible of being
supplied.’
After more barking pronouncements of this sort, delivered in Lord Tansor’s best
baritone manner, Dr Daunt saw how things lay, and was dismayed.
The Rector’s son took his degree that summer, and so returned again to
Evenwood, on a fine warm day, to ponder his future.
A fictional fragment, part of an uncompleted prose romance entitled Marchmont;
or, The Lost Heir, undoubtedly describes that return, though transposed from summer to
autumn for dramatic effect. I append part of it it here:
Fragment from ‘Marchmont’
By P. Rainsford Daunt
Beyond the town the road dips steeply away from the eminence on which the little
town of E— is situated, to wind its tree-lined way down towards the river. Gregorius
always delighted in this road; but today the sensation of a progressive descent beneath a
vault of bare branches, through which sunlight was now slanting, was especially delicious
to him after the tedium and discomfort of the journey from Paulborough, sitting with his
trunks on the back of the carrier’s cart.
At the bottom of the hill, the road divided. Instead of crossing the river at the
bridge by the mill, he turned north to take the longer route, along a road which ran
through thick woodland, with the aim of entering the Park through its Western Gates. He
had in mind to sit a while in the Grecian Temple, which stood on a little eminence just
inside the gates, from where he would be able to see his favourite prospect of the great
house across the intervening space of rolling parkland.
The woods were chill and damp in this dying part of the year, and he was glad to
gain the wicket-gate in the wall that gave on to the Park and pass out into pale sunlight
once more. A few yards took him on to a stony path that ran off from the carriage-drive
up towards the Temple, built on a rise and surrounded on three sides by a plantation of
good-sized trees. He walked with his eyes deliberately fixed on the gravel path, wishing
to give himself the sudden rush of pleasure that he knew he would feel on seeing the
house from his intended vantage point.
But before he was half way along the path, he was aware of the sound of a vehicle
entering the Park behind him from the western entrance. He was but a little way off the
road, and so turned to see who was approaching. A carriage and pair were rattling up the
little incline from the gates. Within a moment or two the carriage had drawn level with
the spur of the path on which he was standing. As it passed, a face looked out at him and
momentarily held his gaze. The glimpse had been fleeting, but the image held steady in
his mind as he watched the carriage crest the rise and descend towards the house.
He remained staring intently after the carriage for several moments after it had
disappeared from view, puzzled, in a peculiarly keen way, that he had not immediately
resumed his way towards the Temple. That pale and lovely face still hung before his
mind’s eye, like a star in a cold dark sky.
Despite the crude attempt to disguise the location (‘Paulborough’ for
‘Peterborough’), and himself (as ‘Gregorius’), wrapped up and prettified though it all is,
the place and source of the author’s lyrical remembrance are easily explicated and dated.
On the sixth day of June, 1841, the day Phoebus Daunt came down from Cambridge for
the last time, at approximately three o’clock in the afternoon, Miss Emily Carteret, the
daughter of Lord Tansor’s secretary, returned to Evenwood after spending two years
abroad.
Miss Carteret was at that sweetest of ages – just turned seventeen. She had been
residing with her late mother’s younger sister in Paris, and had now come back to
Evenwood to settle permanently with her father at the Dower House. Their nearest
neighbours were the Daunts, just on the other side of the Park wall, and she and the
Rector’s son had each grown up with a decided view of the other’s character and
temperament.
Little Miss Carteret had been a serious young lady from an early age, with a
serious mind and serious expectations of others. Her young neighbour, though capable of
seriousness when he pleased, found her meditative disposition galling, when all he
wanted to do was tumble down a slope with her, or climb a tree, or chase the chickens;
for she would think about everything, and for so long at a time, that he would give up
coaxing her in exasperation and leave her alone, still thinking, while he attended to his
pleasures. For her part, the young lady thought him uncouth and frightful in his antics,
though she knew he could be kind to her and that he was by no means a stupid boy.
It would have been strange indeed had not the boy found her indifference towards
him only increased her fascination. Though his junior by four years, Miss Carteret
appeared to rule him with the wisdom of ages, and as they grew older her sovereignty
over him became complete. In time, of course, he asked for a kiss. She demurred. He
asked again, and she considered a little longer. But at length she capitulated. On his
eleventh birthday she knocked at the Rectory door with a present in her hand. ‘You may
kiss me now,’ she said. And so he did.
To him, she was Dulcinea and Guinevere, every aloof and unattainable heroine of
legend, every Rosalind and Celia, and every fairy-tale princess of whom he had ever read
or dreamed of; for she had a serious and haunting beauty as well as a serious mind. Her
father, Mr Paul Carteret, like Dr Daunt, saw, and was concerned by, Lord Tansor’s
indulgence of Phoebus, perceiving – what even the Rector could not as yet see – that he
was rapidly turning into an arrogant young puppy. Mr Carteret had observed only too
plainly which way the way blew in the mind of Phoebus Daunt with regard to his
daughter, even before she had left for the Continent. Now two years’ of travel and
education, as well as some exposure to the best Parisian society, had rendered her allure
irresistible.
Miss Carteret’s father, in the face of received opinion at Evenwood,
unaccountably failed to regard Phoebus Rainsford Daunt as a precocious specimen of
British manhood. He had always found the Rector’s son ingratiating, plausible, slippery,
cleverly insinuating himself into favour where he could, and ingeniously spiteful in
revenge where he could not. It may therefore be supposed that he did not relish the
prospect of his daughter’s return to Evenwood, and to the attentions of P. R. Daunt, at a
time when that young gentleman’s star was on its seemingly irresistible rise. Mr Carteret
disliked and distrusted Lord Tansor’s protégé. On more than one occasion he had come
across him in the Muniments Room, where he had no obvious business, rummaging
through the documents and deeds that were stored there; and he was sure that he had
surreptitiously perused his Lordship’s correspondence as it lay on the secretary’s desk in
the corner of the library.
But like his neighbour, the Rector, Mr Carteret’s position was also dependent on
Lord Tansor’s good opinion. It was thus perplexing to Mr Carteret as to how he ought to
proceed if and when – as seemed possible – the young man confided to his patron the
nature of his feelings for his daughter. Could he actively forbid any amorous advances,
especially if they were made with his Lordship’s approval, without the likelihood of
severe consequences to his own interests? For the moment, he had no choice but to
watch, and hope.
Of Daunt’s reunion with Emily Carteret, when she at last came home from the
Continent, little need be said. He had not seen her for two years, though they had
corresponded. Her return now, a young woman, just as he stood on the brink of manhood,
and exhilarated in his heart by his LordTansor’s blossoming indulgence, naturally excited
him greatly with its possibilities. But the reality did not quite match up to the quivering
anticipations of the hapless Gregorius, his fictional alter ego.
She received him affably enough, asked him how he had been, agreed that he had
changed a good deal since their last meeting, and accepted an early copy of Ithaca, signed
by the author. But he did not detect that pleasing warmth in her, infused with the memory
of old times together, of which he had been dreaming for so long. She seemed still the
disapproving and thoughtful little girl of their childhood, though now grown quite
beautiful in her French clothes and bonnet à la mode, with its delicately shaded pointed