have fallen upon troubles, and we don’t understand each other, Frank. That’s all very natural; she does not see things from my point of view: I could not expect she should. If I could see from hers, it might be easier for us all; but that is still less to be expected; and it is hard upon her, Frank⁠—very hard,” said Gerald, turning round in his old ingenuous way, with that faculty for seeing other people’s difficulties which was so strong a point in his character. “She is called upon to make, after all, perhaps, the greater sacrifice of the two; and she does not see any duty in it⁠—the reverse, indeed. She thinks it a sin. It is a strange view of life, to look at it from Louisa’s point. Here will be an unwilling, unintentional martyrdom; and it is hard to think I should take all the merit, and leave my poor little wife the suffering without any compensation!” He began to walk up and down the room with uneasy steps, as if the thought was painful, and had to be got rid of by some sudden movement. “It must be that God reckons with women for what they have endured, as with men for what they have done,” said Gerald. He spoke with a kind of grieved certainty, which made his brother feel, to start with, the hopelessness of all argument.

“But must this be? Is it necessary to take such a final, such a terrible step?” said the Perpetual Curate.

“I think so.” Gerald went to the window, to resume his contemplation of the cedar, and stood there with his back turned to Frank, and his eyes going slowly over all the long processes of his self-argument, laid up as they were upon those solemn levels of shadow. “Yes⁠—you have gone so far with me; but I don’t want to take you any farther, Frank. Perhaps, when I have reached the perfect peace to which I am looking forward, I may try to induce you to share it, but at present there are so many pricks of the flesh. You did not come to argue with me, did you?” and again the half-humorous gleam of old came over Gerald’s face as he looked round. “Louisa believes in arguing,” he said, as he came back to the table and took his seat again; “not that she has ever gained much by it, so far as I am aware. Poor girl! she talks and talks, and fancies she is persuading me; and all the time my heart is bleeding for her. There it is!” he exclaimed, suddenly hiding his face in his hands. “This is what crushes one to think of. The rest is hard enough, Heaven knows⁠—separation from my friends, giving up my own people, wounding and grieving, as I know I shall, everybody who loves me. I could bear that; but Louisa and her children⁠—God help me, there’s the sting!”

They were both men, and strong men, not likely to fall into any sentimental weakness; but something between a groan and a sob, wrung out of the heart of the elder brother at the thought of the terrible sacrifice before him, echoed with a hard sound of anguish into the quiet. It was very different from his wife’s trembling, weeping, hoping agony; but it reduced the Curate more than ever to that position of spectator which he felt was so very far from the active part which his poor sister expected of him.

“I don’t know by what steps you have reached this conclusion,” said Frank Wentworth; “but even if you feel it your duty to give up the Anglican Church (in which, of course, I think you totally wrong,” added the High Churchman in a parenthesis), “I cannot see why you are bound to abandon all duties whatever. I have not come to argue with you; I daresay poor Louisa may expect it of me, but I can’t, and you know very well I can’t. I should like to know how it has come about all the same; but one thing only, Gerald⁠—a man may be a Christian without being a priest. Louisa⁠—”

“Hush, I am a priest, or nothing. I can’t relinquish my life!” cried the elder brother, lifting his hands suddenly, as if to thrust away something which threatened him. Then he rose up again and went towards the window and his cedar, which stood dark in the sunshine, slightly fluttered at its extremities by the light summer-wind, but throwing glorious level lines of shadow, which the wind could not disturb, upon the grass. The limes near, and that one delicate feathery birch which was Mrs. Wentworth’s pride, had all some interest of their own on hand, and went on waving, rustling, coquetting with the breezes and the sunshine in a way which precluded any arbitrary line of shade. But the cedar stood immovable, like a verdant monument, sweeping its long level branches over the lawn, passive under the light, and indifferent, except at its very tops and edges, to the breeze. If there had been any human sentiment in that spectator of the ways of man, how it must have groaned and trembled under the pitiless weight of thoughts, the sad lines of discussion and argument and doubt, which were entangled in its branches! Gerald Wentworth went to his window to refer to it, as if it were a book in which all his contests had been recorded. The thrill of the air in it tingled through him as he stood looking out; and there, without looking at Frank, except now and then for a moment when he got excited with his subject, he went into the history of his struggle⁠—a history not unprecedented or unparalleled, such as has been told to the world before now by men who have gone through it, in various shapes, with various amounts of sophistry and simplicity. But it is a different thing reading of such a conflict in a book,

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