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Tod answered with a torrent of words. The chief burden of them was--that if he chose to walk into the brimstone, it was not Mr. Brandon who should keep him out of it.
"Is it not?" retorted Mr. Brandon--and though he was very firm and hard, he gave no sign of losing his temper. "We'll see that. I am in this town to strive to save you, Joseph Todhetley; and if I can't do it by easy means, I'll do it by hard ones. I got you out of one sc.r.a.pe, thanks to Johnny here, and now I'm going to get you out of another."
Tod held his peace. That past obligation was often on his conscience.
"You ought to take shame to yourself, sir," continued old Brandon. "You were placed at Oxford to study, to learn to be a man and a gentleman, to prepare yourself to fight well the battle of life, not to waste the talents G.o.d has given you, and fritter away your best days in sin."
"In sin?" retorted Tod, jerking his head fiercely.
"Yes, sir, in sin. What else do you call it--this idleness that you are indulging in? The short s.p.a.ce of time that young men spend at the University must be used, not abused. Once it has pa.s.sed, it can never again be laid hold of. What sort of example are you setting my ward here, who is as your younger brother? Stay where you are, Johnny Ludlow.
I choose that you shall be present at this."
"Johnny need not fret himself that he'll catch much harm from my iniquities," said Tod with a sneer.
"Now listen to me, young man," spoke Mr. Brandon. "If you persist in this insane conduct and refuse to hear reason, I'll keep you out of danger by putting you in prison."
Tod stared.
"You owe me a hundred pounds."
"I am quite conscious of that, sir: and of my inability hitherto to repay it."
"For that debt I will shut you up in prison. Headstrong young idiots like you must be saved from themselves."
Tod laughed slightly in his insolence. A defiant, mocking laugh.
"I should like to see you try to shut me up in prison! You have no power to do it, Mr. Brandon: you have never proved the debt."
Mr. Brandon rose, and took a step towards him. "You dare to tell _me_ I cannot do a thing that I say I will do, Joseph Todhetley! I shall make an affidavit before a judge in chambers that you are about to leave the country, and obtain the warrant that will lock you up. And I say to you that I believe you are going to leave it, sooner or later; and that Chalk woman with you!"
"What an awful lie," cried Tod, his face all ablaze.
"Lie or no lie, I believe it. I believe it is what she will bring you to, unless you are speedily separated from her. And if there be no other way of saving you, why, I'll save you by force."
Tod ran his hands through his damp hair: what with wrath and emotion he was in a fine heat. Knowing nothing of the law himself, he supposed old Brandon could do as he said, and it sobered him.
"I am your father's friend, Joseph Todhetley, and I'll take care of you for his sake if I can. I have stayed on here, putting myself, as it were, into his place to save him pain. As his subst.i.tute, I have a right to be heard; ay, and to act. Do you know that your dead mother was very dear to me? I will tell you what perhaps I never should have told you but for this crisis in your life, that her sister was to me the dearest friend a man can have in this life; she would have been my wife but that death claimed her. Your mother was nearly equally dear, and loved me to the last. She took my hand in dying, and spoke of you; of you, her only child. 'Should it ever be in your power to shield him from harm or evil, do so, John,' she said, 'do it for my sake.' And with Heaven's help, I will do it now."
Tod was moved. The mention of his mother softened him at all times. Mr.
Brandon sat down again.
"Don't let us play at this pitched battle, Joe. Hear a bit of truth from me, of common sense: can't you see that I have your interest at heart?
There are two roads that lie before a young man on his setting out in life, either of which he can take: you can take either, even yet. The one leads to honour, to prosperity, to a clear conscience, to a useful career, to a hale and happy old age--and, let us hope, to heaven. The other leads to vice, to discomfort, to miserable self-torment, to a waste of talent and energies; in short, to altogether a lost life. Lost, at any rate, for this world: and--we'll not speculate upon what it may be in the other. Are you attending?"
Tod just lifted his eyes in answer. I sat at the table by my books, silently turning some of their leaves, ready to drop through the floor with annoyance. Mr. Brandon resumed.
"You have come to the Oxford University to perfect your education; to acquire self-reliance, experience, and a tone of good manners; to keep upright ways, to eschew bad company, and to train yourself to be a Christian gentleman. Do this, and you will go home with satisfaction and a sound conscience. In time you will marry, and rear your children to good, and be respected of all men. This is the career expected of you; this is the road you ought to take."
He paused slightly, and then went on.
"I will put the other road before you; the one you seem so eager to rush upon. Ah, boy! how many a one, with as hopeful a future before him as you have, has gone sliding, sliding down unconsciously, never meaning, poor fellow, to slide too far, and been lost in the vortex of sin and shame! You are starting on well for it. Wine, and cards, and betting, and debt; and a singing mermaid to lure you on! That woman, with the hard light eyes, and the seductive airs, has cast her spell upon you.
You think her an angel, no doubt; I say she's more of an angel's opposite----"
"Mr. Brandon!"
"There are women in the world who will conjure a man's coat off his back, and his pockets after it," persisted Mr. Brandon, drowning the interruption. "She is one of them. They are bad to the core. They are; and they draw a man into all kinds of irretrievable entanglements. She will draw you: and the end may be that you'd find her saddled on you for good. Who will care to take your hand in friendship then? Will you dare to clasp that of honest people, or hold up your face in the light of day? No: not for very shame. That's what gambling and evil courses will bring a man to: and, his self-respect once gone, it's gone for ever.
You will feel that you have raised a barrier between you and your kind: remembrance will be a sting, and your days will be spent in one long cry of too late repentance, 'Oh, that I had been wise in time!'"
"You are altogether mistaken in her," burst out Tod. "There's no harm in her. She is as particular as--as any lady need be."
"No harm in her!" retorted Mr. Brandon. "Is there any good in her? Put it at its best: she induces you to waste your time and your substance.
How much money has the card-playing and the present-giving taken out of you, pray? What amount of debt has it involved you in? More than you know how to pay."
Tod winced.
"Be wise in time, lad, now, without further delay, and break off this dangerous connection. I know that in your better moments you must see how fatal it may become. It is a crisis in your life; it may be its turning-point; and, as you choose the evil or the good, so may you be lost or saved in this world and in eternity."
Tod muttered something about his not deserving to be judged so harshly.
"I judge you not harshly yet: I say that evil will come unless you flee from it," said Mr. Brandon. "Don't you care for yourself?--for your good name? Is it nothing to you whether you turn out a scamp or a gentleman?"
To look at Tod just then, it was a great deal.
"Have you any reverence for your father?--for the memory of your mother?
Then you will do a little violence to your own inclinations, even though it be hard and difficult--more difficult than to get a double first; harder than having the best tooth in your head drawn--and take your leave of that lady for ever. For your own sake, Joe; for your own sake!"
Tod was pulling gently at his whiskers.
"Send all folly to the wind, Joseph Todhetley! Say to yourself, for G.o.d and myself will I strive henceforth! It only needs a little steady resolution; and you can call it up if you choose. You shall always find a friend in me. Write down on a bit of paper the sums you owe, and I'll give you a cheque to cover them. Come, shake hands upon it."
"You are very kind, sir," gasped Tod, letting his hand meet old Brandon's.
"I hope you will let me be kind. Why, lad, you should have had more spirit than to renew an acquaintanceship with a false girl; an adventurer, who has gone about the country stealing jewels."
"Stealing jewels!" echoed Tod.
"Stealing jewels, lad. Did you never know it? She took Miss Deveen's emeralds at Whitney Hall."
"Oh, that was a mistake," said Tod, cheerfully. "She explained it to me."
"A mistake, was it! Explained it to you, did she! When?"
"At Oxford: before she had been here above a day or two. She introduced the subject herself, sir, saying she supposed I had heard something about it, and what an absurd piece of business the suspecting her was; altogether a mistake."
"Ah, she's a wily one, Joe," said Mr. Brandon. "Johnny Ludlow could have told you whether it was a mistake or not. Why, boy, she stole the stones out of Miss Deveen's own dressing-room, and went up to London the next day, or the next but one, and pledged them the same night at a p.a.w.nbroker's, in a false name, and gave a false account of herself.
Moreover, when it was brought home to her, she confessed all upon her knees to Miss Deveen, and sued for mercy."
Tod looked from Mr. Brandon to me. At the time of the discovery, he had had a hint given him of the fact, with a view of more effectually weaning him from Sophie Chalk, but not the particulars.