I think, moreover, that Nature was not to him that treasury of

delight it was to his sisters. He expressed once, and but once in

my hearing, a strong sense of the rugged charm of the hills, and an

inborn affection for the dark roof and hoary walls he called his

home; but there was more of gloom than pleasure in the tone and

words in which the sentiment was manifested; and never did he seem

to roam the moors for the sake of their soothing silence--never seek

out or dwell upon the thousand peaceful delights they could yield.

Incommunicative as he was, some time elapsed before I had an

opportunity of gauging his mind. I first got an idea of its calibre

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when I heard him preach in his own church at Morton. I wish I could

describe that sermon: but it is past my power. I cannot even

render faithfully the effect it produced on me.

It began calm--and indeed, as far as delivery and pitch of voice

went, it was calm to the end: an earnestly felt, yet strictly

restrained zeal breathed soon in the distinct accents, and prompted

the nervous language. This grew to force--compressed, condensed,

controlled. The heart was thrilled, the mind astonished, by the

power of the preacher: neither were softened. Throughout there was

a strange bitterness; an absence of consolatory gentleness; stern

allusions to Calvinistic doctrines--election, predestination,

reprobation--were frequent; and each reference to these points

sounded like a sentence pronounced for doom. When he had done,

instead of feeling better, calmer, more enlightened by his

discourse, I experienced an inexpressible sadness; for it seemed to

me--I know not whether equally so to others--that the eloquence to

which I had been listening had sprung from a depth where lay turbid

dregs of disappointment--where moved troubling impulses of insatiate

yearnings and disquieting aspirations. I was sure St. John Rivers--

pure-lived, conscientious, zealous as he was--had not yet found that

peace of God which passeth all understanding: he had no more found

it, I thought, than had I with my concealed and racking regrets for

my broken idol and lost elysium--regrets to which I have latterly

avoided referring, but which possessed me and tyrannised over me

ruthlessly.

Meantime a month was gone. Diana and Mary were soon to leave Moor

House, and return to the far different life and scene which awaited

them, as governesses in a large, fashionable, south-of-England city,

where each held a situation in families by whose wealthy and haughty

members they were regarded only as humble dependants, and who

neither knew nor sought out their innate excellences, and

appreciated only their acquired accomplishments as they appreciated

the skill of their cook or the taste of their waiting-woman. Mr.

St. John had said nothing to me yet about the employment he had

promised to obtain for me; yet it became urgent that I should have a

vocation of some kind. One morning, being left alone with him a few

minutes in the parlour, I ventured to approach the window-recess--

which his table, chair, and desk consecrated as a kind of study--and

I was going to speak, though not very well knowing in what words to

frame my inquiry--for it is at all times difficult to break the ice

of reserve glassing over such natures as his--when he saved me the

trouble by being the first to commence a dialogue.




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