The man
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The man

Bram Stoker

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eBook - ePub

The man

Bram Stoker

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About This Book

The Man, written in 1905, is a romance novel by Bram Stoker, the renowned author of Dracula. This tale possesses the typical characteristics of Gothic fiction: horror and romance. The novel focuses on a romance between the main character, Stephen, and Harold.

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Information

Publisher
Youcanprint
Year
2018
ISBN
9788827815427

CHAPTER I - STEPHEN

Stephen Norman of Normanstand had remained a bachelor until close on middle age, when the fact took hold of him that there was no immediate heir to his great estate. Whereupon, with his wonted decision, he set about looking for a wife.
He had been a close friend of his next neighbour, Squire Rowly, ever since their college days. They had, of course, been often in each otherā€™s houses, and Rowlyā€™s young sister, almost a generation younger than himself, and the sole fruit of his fatherā€™s second marriage, had been like a little sister to him too. She had, in the twenty years which had elapsed, grown to be a sweet and beautiful young woman. In all the past years, with the constant opportunity which friendship gave of close companionship, the feeling never altered. Squire Norman would have been surprised had he been asked to describe Margaret Rowly and found himself compelled to present the picture of a woman, not a child.
Now, however, when his thoughts went womanward and wife ward, he awoke to the fact that Margaret came within the category of those he sought. His usual decision ran its course. Semi-brotherly feeling gave place to a stronger and perhaps more selfish feeling. Before he even knew it, he was head over ears in love with his pretty neighbour.
Norman was a fine man, stalwart and handsome; his forty years sat so lightly on him that his age never seemed to come into question in a womanā€™s mind. Margaret had always liked him and trusted him; he was the big brother who had no duty in the way of scolding to do. His presence had always been a gladness; and the sex of the girl, first unconsciously then consciously, answered to the manā€™s overtures, and her consent was soon obtained.
When in the fulness of time it was known that an heir was expected, Squire Norman took for granted that the child would be a boy, and held the idea so tenaciously that his wife, who loved him deeply, gave up warning and remonstrance after she had once tried to caution him against too fond a hope. She saw how bitterly he would be disappointed in case it should prove to be a girl. He was, however, so fixed on the point that she determined to say no more. After all, it might be a boy; the chances were equal. The Squire would not listen to any one else at all; so, as the time went on his idea was more firmly fixed than ever. His arrangements were made on the base that he would have a son. The name was of course decided. Stephen had been the name of all the Squires of Norman stand for ages, as far back as the records went; and Stephen the new heir of course would be.
Like all middle-aged men with young wives he was supremely anxious as the time drew near. In his anxiety for his wife his belief in the son became passive rather than active. Indeed, the idea of a son was so deeply fixed in his mind that it was not disturbed even by his anxiety for the young wife he idolised.
When instead of a son a daughter was born, the Doctor and the nurse, who knew his views on the subject, held back from the mother for a little the knowledge of the sex. Dame Norman was so weak that the Doctor feared lest anxiety as to how her husband would bear the disappointment, might militate against her. Therefore, the Doctor sought the Squire in his study, and went resolutely at his task.
ā€˜Well, Squire, I congratulate you on the birth of your child!ā€™ Norman was of course struck with the use of the word ā€˜childā€™; but the cause of his anxiety was manifested by his first question:
ā€˜How is she, Doctor? Is she safe?ā€™ The child was after all of secondary importance! The Doctor breathed more freely; the question had lightened his task. There was, therefore, more assurance in his voice as he answered:
ā€˜She is safely through the worst of her trouble, but I am greatly anxious yet. She is very weak. I fear anything that might upset her.ā€™
The Squireā€™s voice came quick and strong:
ā€˜There must be no upset! And now tell me about my son?ā€™ He spoke the last word half with pride, half bashfully.
ā€˜Your son is a daughter!ā€™ There was silence for so long that the Doctor began to be anxious. Squire Norman sat quite still; his right hand resting on the writing-table before him became clenched so hard that the knuckles looked white and the veins red. After a long slow breath, he spoke:
ā€˜She, my daughter, is well?ā€™ The Doctor answered with cheerful alacrity:
ā€˜Splendid! I never saw a finer child in my life. She will be a comfort and an honour to you!ā€™ The Squire spoke again:
ā€˜What does her mother think? I suppose sheā€™s very proud of her?ā€™
ā€˜She does not know yet that it is a girl. I thought it better not to let her know till I had told you.ā€™
ā€˜Why?ā€™
ā€˜Because - because - Norman, old friend, you know why! Because you had set your heart on a son; and I know how it would grieve that sweet young wife and mother to feel your disappointment. I want your lips to be the first to tell her; so that on may assure her of your happiness in that a daughter has been born to you.ā€™
The Squire put out his great hand and laid it on the otherā€™s shoulder. There was almost a break in his voice as he said:
ā€˜Thank you, my old friend, my true friend, for your thought. When may I see her?ā€™
ā€˜By right, not yet. But, as knowing your views, she may fret herself till she knows, I think you had better come at once.ā€™
All Normanā€™s love and strength combined for his task. As he leant over and kissed his young wife there was real fervour in his voice as he said:
ā€˜Where is my dear daughter that you may place her in my arms?ā€™ For an instant there came a chill to the motherā€™s heart that her hopes had been so far disappointed; but then came the reaction of her joy that her husband, her babyā€™s father, was pleased. There was a heavenly dawn of red on her pale face as she drew her husbandā€™s head down and kissed him.
ā€˜Oh, my dear,ā€™ she said, ā€˜I am so happy that you are pleased!ā€™ The nurse took the motherā€™s hand gently and held it to the baby as she laid it in the fatherā€™s arms.
He held the motherā€™s hand as he kissed the babyā€™s brow.
The Doctor touched him gently on the arm and beckoned him away. He went with careful footsteps, looking behind as he went.
After dinner he talked with the Doctor on various matters; but presently he asked:
ā€˜I suppose, Doctor, it is no sort of rule that the first child regulates the sex of a family?ā€™
ā€˜No, of course not. Otherwise how should we see boys and girls mixed in one family, as is nearly always the case. But, my friend,ā€™ he went on, ā€˜you must not build hopes so far away. I have to tell you that your wife is far from strong. Even now she is not so well as I could wish, and there yet may be change.ā€™ The Squire leaped impetuously to his feet as he spoke quickly:
ā€˜Then why are we waiting here? Can nothing be done? Let us have the best help, the best advice in the world.ā€™ The Doctor raised his hand.
ā€˜Nothing can be done as yet. I have only fear.ā€™
ā€˜Then let us be ready in case your fears should be justified! Who are the best men in London to help in such a case?ā€™ The Doctor mentioned two names; and within a few minutes a mounted messenger was galloping to Norcester, the nearest telegraph centre. The messenger was to arrange for a special train if necessary. Shortly afterwards the Doctor went again to see his patient. After a long absence he came back, pale and agitated. Norman felt his heart sink when he saw him; a groan broke from him as the Doctor spoke:
ā€˜She is much worse! I am in great fear that she may pass away before the morning!ā€™ The Squireā€™s strong voice was clouded, with a hoarse veil as he asked:
ā€˜May I see her?ā€™
ā€˜Not yet; at present she is sleeping. She may wake strengthened; in which case you may see her. But if notā€™
ā€˜If not?ā€™ the voice was not like his own.
ā€˜Then I shall send for you at once!ā€™ The Doctor returned to his vigil. The Squire, left alone, sank on his knees, his face in his hands; his great shoulders shook with the intensity of his grief.
An hour or more passed before he heard hurried steps. He sprang to the door:
ā€˜Well?ā€™
ā€˜You had better come now.ā€™
ā€˜Is she better?ā€™
ā€˜Alas! no. I fear her minutes are numbered. School yourself, my dear old friend! God will help you in this bitter hour. All you can do now is to make her last moments happy.ā€™
ā€˜I know! I know!ā€™ he answered in a voice so calm that his companion wondered.
When they came into the room Margaret was dozing. When her eyes opened and she found her husband beside her bed there spread over her face a glad look; which, alas! soon changed to one of pain. She motioned to him to bend down. He knelt and put his head beside her on the pillow; his arms went tenderly round her as though by his iron devotion and strength he would shield her from all harm. Her voice came very low and in broken gasps; she was summoning all her strength that she might speak:
ā€˜My dear, dear husband, I am so sad at leaving you! You have made me so happy, and I love you so! Forgive me, dear, for the pain I know you will suffer when I am gone! And oh, Stephen, I know you will cherish our little one, yours and mine, when I am gone. She will have no mother; you will have to be father and mother too.ā€™
ā€˜I will hold her in my very heartā€™s core, my darling, as I hold you!ā€™ He could hardly speak from emotion. She went on:
ā€˜And oh, my dear, you will not grieve that she is not a son to carry on your name?ā€™ And then a sudden light came into her eyes; and there was exultation in her weak voice as she said:
ā€˜She is to be our only one; let her be indeed our son! Call her the name we both love!ā€™ For answer he rose and laid his hand very, very tenderly on the babe as he said:
ā€˜This dear one, my sweet wife, who will carry your soul in her breast, will be my son; the only son I shall ever have. All my life long I shall, please Almighty God, so love her, our little Stephen, as you and I love each other!ā€™
She laid her hand on his so that it touched at once her husband and her child. Then she raised the other weak arm, and placed it round his neck, and their lips met. Her soul went out in this last kiss.

CHAPTER II - THE HEART OF A CHILD

For some weeks after his wifeā€™s death Squire Norman was overwhelmed with grief. He made a brave effort, however, to go through the routine of his life; and succeeded so far that he preserved an external appearance of bearing his loss with resignation. But within, all was desolation.
Little Stephen had winning ways which sent deep roots into her fatherā€™s heart. The little bundle of nerves which the father took into his arms must have realised with all its senses that, in all that it saw and heard and touched, there was nothing but love and help and protection. Gradually the trust was followed by expectation. If by some chance the father was late in coming to the nursery the child would grow impatient and cast persistent, longing glances at the door. When he came all was joy.
Time went quickly by, and Norman was only recalled to its passing by the growth of his child. Seedtime and harvest, the many comings of natureā€™s growth were such commonplaces to him, and had been for so many years, that they made on him no impressions of comparison. But his baby was one and one only. Any change in it was not only in itself a new experience, but brought into juxtaposition what is with what was. The changes that began to mark the divergence of sex were positive shocks to him, for they were unexpected. In the very dawn of babyhood dress had no special import; to his masculine eyes sex was lost in youth. But, little by little, came the tiny changes which convention has established. And with each change came to Squire Norman the growing realisation that his child was a woman. A tiny woman, it is true, and requiring more care and protection and devotion than a bigger one; but still a woman. The pretty little ways, the eager caresses, the graspings and holdings of the childish hands, the little roguish smiles and pantings and flirtings were all but repetitions in little of the dalliance of long ago. The father, after all, reads in the same book in which the lover found his knowledge.
At first there was through all his love for his child a certain resentment of her sex. His old hope of a son had been rooted too deeply to give way easily. But when the conviction came, and with it the habit of its acknowledgment, there came also a certain resignation, which is the halting-place for satisfaction. But he never, not then nor afterwards, quite lost the old belief that Stephen was indeed a son. Could there ever have been a doubt, the remembrance of his wifeā€™s eyes and of her faint voice, of her hope and her faith, as she placed her baby in his arms would have refused it a resting-place. This belief tinged all his after-life and moulded his policy with regard to his girlā€™s upbringing. If she was to be indeed his son as well as his daughter, she must from the first be accustomed to boyish as well as to girlish ways. This, in that she was an only child, was not a difficult matter to accomplish. Had she had brothers and sisters, matters of her sex would soon have found their own level.
There was one person who objected strongly to any deviation from the conventional rule of a girlā€™s education. This was Miss Laetitia Rowly, who took after a time, in so far as such a place could be taken, that of the childā€™s mother. Laetitia Rowly was a young aunt of Squire Rowly of Norwood; the younger sister of his father and some sixteen years his own senior. When the old Squireā€™s second wife had died, Laetitia, then a conceded spinster of thirty-six, had taken possession of the young Margaret. When Margaret had married Squire Norman, Miss Rowly was well satisfied; for she had known Stephen Norman all her life. Though she could have wished a younger bridegroom for her darling, she knew it would be hard to get a better man or one of more suitable station in life. Also, she knew that Margaret loved him, and the woman who had never found the happiness of mutual love in her own life found a pleasure in the romance of true love, even when the wooer was middle-aged. She had been travelling in the Far East when the belated news of Margaretā€™s death came to her. When she had arrived home she announced her intention of taking care of Margaretā€™s child, just as she had taken care of Margaret. For several reasons this could not be done in the same way. She was not old enough to go and live at Norman stand without exciting comment; and the Squire absolutely refused to allow that his daughter should live anywhere except in his own house. Educational supervision, exercised at such distance and so intermittently, could neither be complete nor exact.
Though Stephen was a sweet child she was a wilful one, and very early in life manifested a dominant nature. This was a secret pleasure to her father, who, never losing sight of his old idea that she was both son and daughter, took pleasure as well as pride out of each manifestation of her imperial will. The keen instinct of childhood, which reasons in feminine fashion, and is therefore doubly effective in a woman-child, early grasped the possibilities of her own will. She learned the measure of her nurseā€™s foot and then of her fatherā€™s; and so, knowing where lay the bounds of possibility of the achievement of her wishes, she at once avoided trouble and learned how to make the most of the space within the limit of her tether.
It is not those who ā€˜cry for the Moonā€™ who go furthest or get most in this limited world of ours. Stephenā€™s pretty ways and unfailing good temper were a perpetual joy to her father; and when he found that as a rule her desires were reasonable, his wish to yield to them became a habit.
Miss Rowly seldom saw any individual thing to disapprove of. She it was who selected the governesses and who interviewed them from time to time as to the childā€™s progress. Not often was there any complaint, for the little thing had such a pretty way of showing affection, and such a manifest sense of justified trust ...

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