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+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" />
+<title>More Bywords</title>
+</head>
+<body>
+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">More Bywords, by Charlotte M. Yonge</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, More Bywords, by Charlotte M. Yonge
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: More Bywords
+
+Author: Charlotte M. Yonge
+
+Release Date: April 20, 2004 [eBook #12095]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MORE BYWORDS***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines3"><br /><br /><br /></div>
+<h1>MORE BYWORDS</h1>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines3"><br /><br /><br /></div>
+<p>Contents:</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Price of Blood<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Cat
+of Cat Copse<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;De Facto and De Jure<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sigbert&rsquo;s
+Guerdon<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Beggar&rsquo;s Legacy<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+Review of the Nieces<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Come to Her Kingdom<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Mrs.
+Batseyes<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Chops</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>THE PRICE OF BLOOD</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>Ab ir&acirc; et odio, et omni mal&acirc; voluntate,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Libera
+nos, Domine.<br />A fulgure et tempestate,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Libera
+nos, Domine.<br />A morte perpetu&acirc;,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Libera
+nos, Domine.</p>
+<p>So rang forth the supplication, echoing from rock and fell, as the
+people of Claudiodunum streamed forth in the May sunshine to invoke
+a blessing on the cornlands, olives, and vineyards that won vantage-ground
+on the terraces carefully kept up on the slopes of the wonderful needle-shaped
+hills of Auvergne.</p>
+<p>Very recently had the Church of Gaul commenced the custom of going
+forth, on the days preceding the Ascension feast, to chant Litanies,
+calling down the Divine protection on field and fold, corn and wine,
+basket and store.&nbsp; It had been begun in a time of deadly peril
+from famine and earthquake, wild beast and wilder foes, and it had been
+adopted in the neighbouring dioceses as a regular habit, as indeed it
+continued throughout the Western Church during the fourteen subsequent
+centuries.</p>
+<p>One great procession was formed by different bands.&nbsp; The children
+were in two troops, a motley collection of all shades; the deep olive
+and the rolling black eye betraying Ethiopian or Moorish slave ancestry,
+the soft dark complexion and deep brown eye showing the Roman, and the
+rufous hair and freckled skin the lower grade of Cymric Kelt, while
+a few had the more stately pose, violet eye, and black hair of the Gael.&nbsp;
+The boys were marshalled with extreme difficulty by two or three young
+monks; their sisters walked far more orderly, under the care of some
+consecrated virgin of mature age.&nbsp; The men formed another troop,
+the hardy mountaineers still wearing the Gallic trousers and plaid,
+though the artisans and mechanics from the town were clad in the tunic
+and cloak that were the later Roman dress, and such as could claim the
+right folded over them the white, purple-edged scarf to which the toga
+had dwindled.</p>
+<p>Among the women there was the same scale of decreasing nationality
+of costume according to rank, though the culmination was in resemblance
+to the graceful classic robe of Rome instead of the last Parisian mode.&nbsp;
+The poorer women wore bright, dark crimson, or blue in gown or wrapping
+veil; the ladies were mostly in white or black, as were also the clergy,
+excepting such as had officiated at the previous Eucharist, and who
+wore their brilliant priestly vestments, heavy with gold and embroidery.</p>
+<p>Beautiful alike to eye and ear was the procession, above all from
+a distance, now filing round a delicate young green wheatfield, now
+lost behind a rising hill, now glancing through a vineyard, or contrasting
+with the gray tints of the olive, all that was incongruous or disorderly
+unseen, and all that was discordant unheard, as only the harmonious
+cadence of the united response was wafted fitfully on the breeze to
+the two elderly men who, unable to scale the wild mountain paths in
+the procession, had, after the previous service in the basilica and
+the blessing of the nearer lands, returned to the villa, where they
+sat watching its progress.</p>
+<p>It was as entirely a Roman villa as the form of the ground and the
+need of security would permit.&nbsp; Lying on the slope of a steep hill,
+which ran up above into a fantastic column or needle piercing the sky,
+the courts of the villa were necessarily a succession of terraces, levelled
+and paved with steps of stone or marble leading from one to the other.&nbsp;
+A strong stone wall enclosed the whole, cloistered, as a protection
+from sun and storm.&nbsp; The lowest court had a gateway strongly protected,
+and thence a broad walk with box-trees on either side, trimmed into
+fantastic shapes, led through a lawn laid out in regular flower-beds
+to the second court, which was paved with polished marble, and had a
+fountain in the midst, with vases of flowers, and seats around.&nbsp;
+Above was another broad flight of stone steps, leading to a portico
+running along the whole front of the house, with the principal chambers
+opening into it.&nbsp; Behind lay another court, serving as stables
+for the horses and mules, as farmyard, and with the quarters of the
+slaves around it, and higher up there stretched a dense pine forest
+protecting the whole establishment from avalanches and torrents of stones
+from the mountain peak above.</p>
+<p>Under the portico, whose pillars were cut from the richly-coloured
+native marbles, reposed the two friends on low couches.</p>
+<p>One was a fine-looking man, with a grand bald forehead, encircled
+with a wreath of oak, showing that in his time he had rescued a Roman&rsquo;s
+life.&nbsp; He also wore a richly-embroidered purple toga, the token
+of high civic rank, for he had put on his full insignia as a senator
+and of consular rank to do honour to the ceremonial.&nbsp; Indeed he
+would not have abstained from accompanying the procession, but that
+his guest, though no more aged than himself, was manifestly unequal
+to the rugged expedition, begun fasting in the morning chill and concluded,
+likewise fasting, in the noonday heat.&nbsp; Still, it would scarcely
+have distressed those sturdy limbs, well developed and preserved by
+Roman training, never permitted by him to degenerate into effeminacy.&nbsp;
+And as his fine countenance and well-knit frame testified, Marcus &AElig;milius
+Victorinus inherited no small share of genuine Roman blood.&nbsp; His
+noble name might be derived through clientela, and his lineage had a
+Gallic intermixture; but the true Quirite predominated in his character
+and temperament.&nbsp; The citizenship of his family dated back beyond
+the first establishment of the colony, and rank, property, and personal
+qualities alike rendered him the first man in the district, its chief
+magistrate, and protector from the Visigoths, who claimed it as part
+of their kingdom of Aquitania.</p>
+<p>So much of the spirit of Vercingetorix survived among the remnant
+of his tribe that Arvernia had never been overrun and conquered, but
+had held out until actually ceded by one of the degenerate Augusti at
+Ravenna, and then favourable terms had been negotiated, partly by &AElig;milius
+the Senator, as he was commonly called, and partly by the honoured friend
+who sat beside him, another relic of the good old times when Southern
+Gaul enjoyed perfect peace as a favoured province of the Empire.&nbsp;
+This guest was a man of less personal beauty than the Senator, and more
+bowed and aged, but with care and ill-health more than years, for the
+two had been comrades in school, fellow-soldiers and magistrates, working
+simultaneously, and with firm, mutual trust all their days.</p>
+<p>The dress of the visitor was shaped like that of the senator, but
+of somewhat richer and finer texture.&nbsp; He too wore the <i>toga
+pr&aelig;textata</i>, but he had a large gold cross hanging on his breast
+and an episcopal ring on his finger; and instead of the wreath of bay
+he might have worn, and which encircled his bust in the Capitol, the
+scanty hair on his finely-moulded head showed the marks of the tonsure.&nbsp;
+His brow was a grand and expansive one; his gray eyes were full of varied
+expression, keen humour, and sagacity; a lofty devotion sometimes changing
+his countenance in a wonderful manner, even in the present wreck of
+his former self, when the cheeks showed furrows worn by care and suffering,
+and the once flexible and resolute mouth had fallen in from loss of
+teeth.&nbsp; For this was the scholar, soldier, poet, gentleman, letter-writer,
+statesman, Sidonius Apollinaris, who had stood on the steps of the Imperial
+throne of the West, had been crowned as an orator in the Capitol, and
+then had been called by the exigences of his country to give up his
+learned ease and become the protector of the Arvernii as a patriot Bishop,
+where he had well and nobly served his God and his country, and had
+won the respect, not only of the Catholic Gauls but of the Arian Goths.&nbsp;
+Jealousy and evil tongues had, however, prevailed to cause his banishment
+from his beloved hills, and when he repaired to the court of King Euric
+to solicit permission to return, he was long detained there, and had
+only just obtained license to go back to his See.&nbsp; He had arrived
+only a day or two previously at the villa, exhausted by his journey,
+and though declaring that his dear mountain breezes must needs restore
+him, and that it was a joy to inhale them, yet, as he heard of the oppressions
+that were coming on his people, the mountain gales could only &lsquo;a
+momentary bliss bestow,&rsquo; and &AElig;milius justly feared that
+the decay of his health had gone too far for even the breezes and baths
+of Arvernia to reinvigorate him.</p>
+<p>His own mountain estate, where dwelt his son, was of difficult access
+early in the year, and &AElig;milius hoped to persuade him to rest in
+the villa till after Pentecost, and then to bless the nuptials of Columba
+&AElig;milia, the last unwedded daughter of the house, with Titus Julius
+Verronax, a young Arvernian chief of the lineage of Vercingetorix, highly
+educated in all Latin and Greek culture, and a Roman citizen much as
+a Highland chieftain is an Englishman.&nbsp; His home was on an almost
+inaccessible peak, or <i>puy</i>, which the Senator pointed out to the
+Bishop, saying&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I would fain secure such a refuge for my family in case the
+tyranny of the barbarians should increase.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are there any within the city?&rdquo; asked the Bishop.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I rejoice to see that thou art free from the indignity of having
+any quartered upon thee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For which I thank Heaven,&rdquo; responded the Senator.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;The nearest are on the farm of Deodatus, in the valley.&nbsp;
+There is a stout old warrior named Meinhard who calls himself of the
+King&rsquo;s Trust; not a bad old fellow in himself to deal with, but
+with endless sons, followers, and guests, whom poor Deodatus and Julitta
+have to keep supplied with whatever they choose to call for, being forced
+to witness their riotous orgies night after night.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Even so, we are far better off than our countrymen who have
+the heathen Franks for their lords.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That Heaven forbid!&rdquo; said &AElig;milius.&nbsp; &ldquo;These
+Goths are at least Christians, though heretics, yet I shall be heartily
+glad when the circuit of Deodatus&rsquo;s fields is over.&nbsp; The
+good man would not have them left unblest, but the heretical barbarians
+make it a point of honour not to hear the Blessed Name invoked without
+mockery, such as our youths may hardly brook.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are unarmed,&rdquo; said the Bishop.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;True; but, as none knows better than thou dost, dear father
+and friend, the Arvernian blood has not cooled since the days of Caius
+Julius Caesar, and offences are frequent among the young men.&nbsp;
+So often has our community had to pay &lsquo;wehrgeld,&rsquo; as the
+barbarians call the price they lay upon blood, that I swore at last
+that I would never pay it again, were my own son the culprit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Such oaths are perilous,&rdquo; said Sidonius.&nbsp; &ldquo;Hast
+thou never had cause to regret this?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My father, thou wouldst have thought it time to take strong
+measures to check the swaggering of our young men and the foolish provocations
+that cost more than one life.&nbsp; One would stick a peacock&rsquo;s
+feather in his cap and go strutting along with folded arms and swelling
+breast, and when the Goths scowled at him and called him by well-deserved
+names, a challenge would lead to a deadly combat.&nbsp; Another such
+fight was caused by no greater offence than the treading on a dog&rsquo;s
+tail; but in that it was the Roman, or more truly the Gaul, who was
+slain, and I must say the &lsquo;wehrgeld&rsquo; was honourably paid.&nbsp;
+It is time, however, that such groundless conflicts should cease; and,
+in truth, only a barbarian could be satisfied to let gold atone for
+life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is certainly neither Divine law nor human equity,&rdquo;
+said the Bishop.&nbsp; &ldquo;Yet where no distinction can be made between
+the deliberate murder and the hasty blow, I have seen cause to be thankful
+for the means of escaping the utmost penalty.&nbsp; Has this oath had
+the desired effect?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There has been only one case since it was taken,&rdquo; replied
+&AElig;milius.&nbsp; &ldquo;That was a veritable murder.&nbsp; A vicious,
+dissolute lad stabbed a wounded Goth in a lonely place, out of vengeful
+spite.&nbsp; I readily delivered him up to the kinsfolk for justice,
+and as this proved me to be in earnest, these wanton outrages have become
+much more rare.&nbsp; Unfortunately, however, the fellow was son to
+one of the widows of the Church&mdash;a holy woman, and a favourite
+of my little Columba, who daily feeds and tends the poor thing, and
+thinks her old father very cruel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas! from the beginning the doom of the guilty has struck
+the innocent,&rdquo; said the Bishop.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In due retribution, as even the heathen knew.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+ Perfect familiarity with the great Greek tragedians was still the mark
+of a gentleman, and then Sidonius quoted from Sophocles&mdash;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Compass&rsquo;d with dazzling light,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Throned
+on Olympus&rsquo;s height,<br />His front the Eternal God uprears<br />By
+toils unwearied, and unaged by years;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Far back,
+through ages past,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Far on,
+through time to come,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Hath been, and still must
+last,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sin&rsquo;s never-changing
+doom.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&AElig;milius capped it from &AElig;schylus&mdash;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>But Justice holds her equal scales<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With ever-waking
+eye;<br />O&rsquo;er some her vengeful might prevails<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When
+their life&rsquo;s sun is high;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On some her vigorous
+judgments light<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In that dread pause &rsquo;twixt
+day and night,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Life&rsquo;s
+closing, twilight hour.<br />But soon as once the genial plain<br />Has
+drunk the life-blood of the slain,<br />Indelible the spots remain,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+aye for vengeance call.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Yea,&rdquo; said the Bishop, &ldquo;such was the universal
+law given to Noah ere the parting of the nations&mdash;blood for blood!&nbsp;
+And yet, where should we be did not Mercy rejoice against Justice, and
+the Blood of Sprinkling speak better things than the blood of Abel?&nbsp;
+Nay, think not that I blame thee, my dear brother.&nbsp; Thou art the
+judge of thy people, and well do I know that one act of stern justice
+often, as in this instance, prevents innumerable deeds of senseless
+violence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Moreover,&rdquo; returned the Senator, &ldquo;it was by the
+relaxing of the ancient Roman sternness of discipline and resolution
+that the horrors of the Triumvirate began, and that, later on, spirit
+decayed and brought us to our present fallen state.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>By this time the procession, which had long since passed from their
+sight, was beginning to break up and disperse.&nbsp; A flock of little
+children first appeared, all of whom went aside to the slaves&rsquo;
+quarters except one, who came running up the path between the box-trees.&nbsp;
+He was the eldest grandson and namesake of the Senator, a dark-eyed,
+brown-haired boy of seven, with the golden bulla hanging round his neck.&nbsp;
+Up he came to the old man&rsquo;s knee, proud to tell how he had scaled
+every rock, and never needed any help from the pedagogue slave who had
+watched over him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sawest thou any barbarians, my Victorinus?&rdquo; asked his
+grandfather.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They stood thickly about Deodatus&rsquo;s door, and Publius
+said they were going to mock; but we looked so bold and sang so loud
+that they durst not.&nbsp; And Verronax is come down, papa, with Celer;
+and Celer wanted to sing too, but they would not let him, and he was
+so good that he was silent the moment his master showed him the leash.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then is Celer a hound?&rdquo; asked the Bishop, amused.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A hound of the old stock that used to fight battles for Bituitus,&rdquo;
+returned the child.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh, papa, I am so hungry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He really did say &lsquo;papa,&rsquo; the fond domestic name which
+passed from the patriarch of the household to the Father of the Roman
+Church.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thy mother is watching for thee.&nbsp; Run to her, and she
+will give thee a cake&mdash;aye, and a bath before thy dinner.&nbsp;
+So Verronax is come.&nbsp; I am glad thou wilt see him, my father.&nbsp;
+The youth has grown up with my own children, and is as dear to me as
+my own son.&nbsp; Ah, here comes my Columba!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For the maidens were by this time returning, and Columba, robed in
+white, with a black veil, worn mantilla fashion over her raven hair,
+so as to shade her soft, liquid, dark eyes, came up the steps, and with
+a graceful obeisance to her father and the Bishop, took the seat to
+which the former drew her beside them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Has all gone well, my little dove?&rdquo; asked her father.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perfectly well so far, my father,&rdquo; she replied; but
+there was anxiety in her eyes until the gate again opened and admitted
+the male contingent of the procession.&nbsp; No sooner had she seen
+them safely advancing up the box avenue than she murmured something
+about preparing for the meal, and, desiring a dismissal from her father,
+disappeared into the women&rsquo;s apartments, while the old man smiled
+at her pretty maidenly modesty.</p>
+<p>Of the three men who were advancing, one, Marcus &AElig;milius, about
+seven or eight and twenty years of age, was much what the Senator must
+have been at his age&mdash;sturdy, resolute, with keen eyes, and crisp,
+curled, short black hair.&nbsp; His younger brother, Lucius, was taller,
+slighter, more delicately made, with the same pensive Italian eyes as
+his sister, and a gentle, thoughtful countenance.&nbsp; The tonsure
+had not yet touched his soft, dark brown locks; but it was the last
+time he would march among the laity, for, both by his own desire and
+that of his dead mother, he was destined to the priesthood.&nbsp; Beside
+these two brothers came a much taller figure.&nbsp; The Arvernii seem
+to have been Gael rather than Cymri, and the mountain chief, Titus Julius
+Verronax, as the Romans rendered his name of Fearnagh, was of the purest
+descent.&nbsp; He had thick, wavy chestnut hair, not cut so short as
+that of the Romans, though kept with the same care.&nbsp; His eyebrows
+were dark, his eyes, both in hue and brightness, like a hawk&rsquo;s,
+his features nobly moulded, and his tall form, though large and stately,
+was in perfect symmetry, and had the free bearing and light springiness
+befitting a mountaineer.&nbsp; He wore the toga as an official scarf,
+but was in his national garb of the loose trousers and short coat, and
+the gold torq round his neck had come to him from prehistoric ages.&nbsp;
+He had the short Roman sword in his belt, and carried in his hand a
+long hunting-spear, without which he seldom stirred abroad, as it served
+him both as alpenstock and as defence against the wolves and bears of
+the mountains.&nbsp; Behind him stalked a magnificent dog, of a kind
+approaching the Irish wolfhound, a perfect picture of graceful outline
+and of strength, swiftness, and dignity, slightly shaggy, and of tawny
+colouring&mdash;in all respects curiously like his master.</p>
+<p>In language, learning, and manners Verronax the Arvernian was, however,
+a highly cultivated Roman, as Sidonius perceived in the first word of
+respectful welcome that he spoke when presented to the Bishop.</p>
+<p>All had gone off well.&nbsp; Old Meinhard had been on the watch,
+and had restrained any insult, if such had been intended, by the other
+Goths, who had stood watching in silence the blessing of the fields
+and vineyards of Deodatus.</p>
+<p>The peril over, the &AElig;milian household partook cheerfully of
+the social meal.&nbsp; Marina, the wife of Marcus, and Columba sat on
+carved chairs, the men of the family reclining on the couches constructed
+to hold three.&nbsp; The bright wit of Sidonius, an eminent conversationalist,
+shone the more brightly for his rejoicing at his return to his beloved
+country and flock, and to the friend of his youth.&nbsp; There were
+such gleams in the storms that were overwhelming the tottering Empire,
+to which indeed these men belonged only in heart and in name.</p>
+<p>The meal was for a fast day, and consisted of preparations of eggs,
+milk, flour, and fish from the mountain streams, but daintily cooked,
+for the traditions of the old Roman gastronomy survived, and Marina,
+though half a Gaul, was anxious that her housekeeping should shine in
+the eyes of the Bishop, who in his secular days had been known to have
+a full appreciation of the refinements of the table.</p>
+<p>When the family rose and the benediction had been pronounced, Columba
+was seen collecting some of the remnants in a basket.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou surely dost not intend going to that widow of thine to-day,&rdquo;
+exclaimed her sister-in-law, Marina, &ldquo;after such a walk on the
+mountain?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed I must, sister,&rdquo; replied Columba; &ldquo;she
+was in much pain and weakness yesterday, and needs me more than usual.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And it is close to the farm of Deodatus,&rdquo; Marina continued
+to object, &ldquo;where, the slaves tell me, there are I know not how
+many fresh barbarian guests!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall of course take Stentor and Athenais,&rdquo; said Columba.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A pair of slaves can be of no use.&nbsp; Marcus, dost thou
+hear?&nbsp; Forbid thy sister&rsquo;s folly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will guard my sister,&rdquo; said Lucius, becoming aware
+of what was passing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who should escort her save myself?&rdquo; said the graceful
+Verronax, turning at the same moment from replying to some inquiries
+from the Bishop.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I doubt whether his escort be not the most perilous thing
+of all,&rdquo; sighed Marina.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, Marina,&rdquo; said her husband good-humouredly, &ldquo;be
+not always a boder of ill.&nbsp; Thou deemest a Goth worse than a gorgon
+or hydra, whereas, I assure you, they are very good fellows after all,
+if you stand up to them like a man, and trust their word.&nbsp; Old
+Meinhard is a capital hunting comrade.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Wherewith the worthy Marcus went off with his little son at his heels
+to inspect the doings of the slaves in the farm-court in the rear, having
+no taste for the occupation of his father and the Bishop, who composed
+themselves to listen to a MS. of the letters of S. Gregory Nazianzen,
+which Sidonius had lately acquired, and which was read aloud to them
+by a secretary slave.</p>
+<p>Some time had thus passed when a confused sound made the Senator
+start up.&nbsp; He beheld his daughter and her escort within the lower
+court, but the slaves were hastily barring the gates behind them, and
+loud cries of &ldquo;Justice!&nbsp; Vengeance!&rdquo; in the Gothic
+tongue, struck his only too well-accustomed ears.</p>
+<p>Columba flung herself before him, crying&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O father, have pity!&nbsp; It was for our holy faith.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He blasphemed,&rdquo; was all that was uttered by Verronax,
+on whose dress there was blood.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Open the gates,&rdquo; called out the Senator, as the cry
+outside waxed louder.&nbsp; &ldquo;None shall cry for justice in vain
+at the gate of an &AElig;milius.&nbsp; Go, Marcus, admit such as have
+a right to enter and be heard.&nbsp; Rise, my daughter, show thyself
+a true Roman and Christian maiden before these barbarians.&nbsp; And
+thou, my son, alas, what hast thou done?&rdquo; he added, turning to
+Verronax, and taking his arm while walking towards the tribunal, where
+he did justice as chief magistrate of the Roman settlement.</p>
+<p>A few words told all.&nbsp; While Columba was engaged with her sick
+widow, a young stranger Goth strolled up, one who had stood combing
+his long fair hair, and making contemptuous gestures as the Rogation
+procession passed in the morning.&nbsp; He and his comrades began offensively
+to scoff at the two young men for having taken part in the procession,
+uttering the blasphemies which the invocation of our Blessed Lord was
+wont to call forth.</p>
+<p>Verronax turned wrathfully round, a hasty challenge passed, a rapid
+exchange of blows; and while the Arvernian received only a slight scratch,
+the Goth fell slain before the hovel.&nbsp; His comrades were unarmed
+and intimidated.&nbsp; They rushed back to fetch weapons from the house
+of Deodatus, and there had been full time to take Columba safely home,
+Verronax and his dog stalking statelily in the rear as her guardians.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou shouldst have sought thine impregnable crag, my son,&rdquo;
+said the Senator sadly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To bring the barbarian vengeance upon this house?&rdquo; responded
+Verronax.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas, my son, thou know&rsquo;st mine oath.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know it, my father.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It forbids not thy ransoming thyself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Verronax smiled slightly, and touched the collar at his throat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is all the gold that I possess.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Senator rapidly appraised it with his eye.&nbsp; There was a
+regular tariff on the lives of free Romans, free Goths, guests, and
+trusted men of the King; and if the deceased were merely a <i>lite</i>,
+or freeman of the lowest rank, it was just possible that the gold collar
+might purchase its master&rsquo;s life, provided he were not too proud
+to part with the ancestral badge.</p>
+<p>By this time the tribunal had been reached&mdash;a special portion
+of the peristyle, with a curule chair, inlaid with ivory, placed on
+a tesselated pavement, as in the old days of the Republic, and a servant
+on each side held the lictor&rsquo;s axe and bundle of rods, which betokened
+stern Roman justice, wellnigh a mockery now.&nbsp; The forum of the
+city would have been the regular place, but since an earthquake had
+done much damage there, and some tumults had taken place among the citizens,
+the seat of judgment had by general consent been placed in the &AElig;milian
+household as the place of chief security, and as he was the accredited
+magistrate with their Gothic masters, as Sidonius had been before his
+banishment.</p>
+<p>As Sidonius looked at the grave face of the Senator, set like a rock,
+but deadly pale, he thought it was no unworthy representative of Brutus
+or Manlius of old who sat on that seat.</p>
+<p>Alas! would he not be bound by his fatal oath to be only too true
+a representative of their relentless justice?</p>
+<p>On one side of the judgment-seat stood Verronax, towering above all
+around; behind him Marina and Columba, clinging together, trembling
+and tearful, but their weeping restrained by the looks of the Senator,
+and by a certain remnant of hope.</p>
+<p>To the other side advanced the Goths, all much larger and taller
+men than any one except the young Gaulish chieftain.&nbsp; The foremost
+was a rugged-looking veteran, with grizzled locks and beard, and a sunburnt
+face.&nbsp; This was Meinhard, the head of the garrison on Deodatus&rsquo;s
+farm, a man well known to &AElig;milius, and able to speak Latin enough
+to hold communication with the Romans.&nbsp; Several younger men pressed
+rudely behind him, but they were evidently impressed by the dignity
+of the tribunal, though it was with a loud and fierce shout that they
+recognised Verronax standing so still and unmoved.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Silence!&rdquo; exclaimed the Senator, lifting his ivory staff.</p>
+<p>Meinhard likewise made gestures to hush them, and they ceased, while
+the Senator, greeting Meinhard and inviting him to share his seat of
+authority, demanded what they asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Right!&rdquo; was their cry.&nbsp; &ldquo;Right on the slayer
+of Odorik, the son of Odo, of the lineage of Odin, our guest, and of
+the King&rsquo;s trust.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Right shall ye have, O Goths,&rdquo; returned &AElig;milius.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;A Roman never flinches from justice.&nbsp; Who are witnesses
+to the deed?&nbsp; Didst thou behold it, O Meinhard, son of Thorulf?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, noble &AElig;milius.&nbsp; It had not been wrought had
+I been present; but here are those who can avouch it.&nbsp; Stand forth,
+Egilulf, son of Amalrik.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It needs not,&rdquo; said Verronax.&nbsp; &ldquo;I acknowledge
+the deed.&nbsp; The Goth scoffed at us for invoking a created Man.&nbsp;
+I could not stand by to hear my Master insulted, and I smote him, but
+in open fight, whereof I bear the token.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is true,&rdquo; said Meinhard.&nbsp; &ldquo;I know that
+Verronax, the Arvernian, would strike no coward blow.&nbsp; Therefore
+did I withhold these comrades of Odorik from rushing on thee in their
+fury; but none the less art thou in feud with Odo, the father of Odorik,
+who will require of thee either thy blood or the wehrgeld.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wehrgeld I have none to pay,&rdquo; returned Verronax, in
+the same calm voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have sworn!&rdquo; said &AElig;milius in a clear low voice,
+steady but full of suppressed anguish.&nbsp; A shriek was heard among
+the women, and Sidonius stepped forth and demanded the amount of wehrgeld.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That must be for King Euric to decide,&rdquo; returned Meinhard.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;He will fix the amount, and it will be for Odo to choose whether
+he will accept it.&nbsp; The mulct will be high, for the youth was of
+high Baltic blood, and had but lately arrived with his father from the
+north!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Enough,&rdquo; said Verronax.&nbsp; &ldquo;Listen, Meinhard.&nbsp;
+Thou knowest me, and the Arvernian faith.&nbsp; Leave me this night
+to make my peace with Heaven and my parting with man.&nbsp; At the hour
+of six to-morrow morning, I swear that I will surrender myself into
+thine hands to be dealt with as it may please the father of this young
+man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So let it be, Meinhard,&rdquo; said &AElig;milius, in a stifled
+voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know &AElig;milius, and I know Verronax,&rdquo; returned
+the Goth.</p>
+<p>They grasped hands, and then Meinhard drew off his followers, leaving
+two, at the request of Marcus, to act as sentinels at the gate.</p>
+<p>The Senator sat with his hands clasped over his face in unutterable
+grief, Columba threw herself into the arms of her betrothed, Marina
+tore her hair, and shrieked out&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will not hold my peace!&nbsp; It is cruel!&nbsp; It is wicked!&nbsp;
+It is barbarous!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Silence, Marina,&rdquo; said Verronax.&nbsp; &ldquo;It is
+just!&nbsp; I am no ignorant child.&nbsp; I knew the penalty when I
+incurred it!&nbsp; My Columba, remember, though it was a hasty blow,
+it was in defence of our Master&rsquo;s Name.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The thought might comfort her by and by; as yet it could not.</p>
+<p>The Senator rose and took his hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou dost forgive me, my son?&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should find it hard to forgive one who lessened my respect
+for the &AElig;milian constancy,&rdquo; returned Verronax.</p>
+<p>Then he led Marcus aside to make arrangements with him respecting
+his small mountain estate and the remnant of his tribe, since Marina
+was his nearest relative, and her little son would, if he were cut off,
+be the sole heir to the ancestral glories of Vercingetorix.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I cannot stir to save such a youth as that!&rdquo; cried
+the Senator in a tone of agony as he wrung the hand of Sidonius.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I have bound mine own hands, when I would sell all I have to
+save him.&nbsp; O my friend and father, well mightest thou blame my
+rashness, and doubt the justice that could be stern where the heart
+was not touched.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I am not bound by thine oath, my friend,&rdquo; said Sidonius.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;True it is that the Master would not be served by the temporal
+sword, yet such zeal as that of this youth merits that we should strive
+to deliver him.&nbsp; Utmost justice would here be utmost wrong.&nbsp;
+May I send one of your slaves as a messenger to my son to see what he
+can raise?&nbsp; Though I fear me gold and silver is more scarce than
+it was in our younger days.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was done, and young Lucius also took a summons from the Bishop
+to the deacons of the Church in the town, authorising the use of the
+sacred vessels to raise the ransom, but almost all of these had been
+already parted with in the time of a terrible famine which had ravaged
+Arvernia a few years previously, and had denuded all the wealthy and
+charitable families of their plate and jewels.&nbsp; Indeed Verronax
+shrank from the treasure of the Church being thus applied.&nbsp; Columba
+might indeed weep for him exultingly as a martyr, but, as he well knew,
+martyrs do not begin as murderers, and passion, pugnacity, and national
+hatred had been uppermost with him.&nbsp; It was the hap of war, and
+he was ready to take it patiently, and prepare himself for death as
+a brave Christian man, but not a hero or a martyr; and there was little
+hope either that a ransom so considerable as the rank of the parties
+would require could be raised without the aid of the &AElig;milii, or
+that, even if it were, the fierce old father would accept it.&nbsp;
+The more civilised Goths, whose families had ranged Italy, Spain, and
+Aquitaine for two or three generations, made murder the matter of bargain
+that had shocked &AElig;milius; but this was an old man from the mountain
+cradle of the race, unsophisticated, and but lately converted.</p>
+<p>In the dawn of the summer morning Bishop Sidonius celebrated the
+Holy Eucharist for the mournful family in the oratory, a vaulted chamber
+underground, which had served the same purpose in the days of persecution,
+and had the ashes of two tortured martyrs of the &AElig;milian household,
+mistress and slave, enshrined together beneath the altar, which had
+since been richly inlaid with coloured marble.</p>
+<p>Afterwards a morning meal was served for Verronax and for the elder
+&AElig;milius, who intended to accompany him on his sad journey to Bordigala,
+where the King and the father of Odorik were known to be at the time.&nbsp;
+Sidonius, who knew himself to have some interest with Euric, would fain
+have gone with them, but his broken health rendered a rapid journey
+impossible, and he hoped to serve the friends better by remaining to
+console the two women, and to endeavour to collect the wehrgeld in case
+it should be accepted.</p>
+<p>The farewells, owing to the Roman dignity of &AElig;milius and the
+proud self-respect of the Arvernian, were more calm than had been feared.&nbsp;
+Even thus, thought Sidonius, must Vercingetorix have looked when he
+mounted his horse and rode from his lines at Alesia to save his people,
+by swelling C&aelig;sar&rsquo;s triumph and dying beneath the Capitol.&nbsp;
+Oh, <i>absit omen</i>!&nbsp; Columba was borne up by hopes which Verronax
+would not dash to the ground, and she received his embrace with steadfast,
+though brimming eyes, and an assurance that she would pray without ceasing.</p>
+<p>Lucius was not to be found, having no doubt gone forward, intending
+to direct his friend on his journey, and there part with him; but the
+saddest part of the whole was the passionate wailings and bemoanings
+of the remnants of his clan.&nbsp; One of his attendants had carried
+the tidings; wild Keltic men and women had come down for one last sight
+of their Fearnagh MacFearccadorigh, as they called him by his true Gaulish
+name&mdash;passionately kissing his hands and the hem of his mantle,
+beating their breasts amid howls of lamentation, and throwing themselves
+in his path, as, with the high spirit which could not brook to be fetched
+as a criminal, he made his way to the gate.</p>
+<p>Mounted on two strong mules, the only animals serviceable in the
+mountain paths, the Senator and Verronax passed the gate, Marcus walking
+beside them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We are beforehand with the Goth,&rdquo; said Verronax, as
+he came out.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lazy hounds!&rdquo; said Marcus.&nbsp; &ldquo;Their sentinels
+have vanished.&nbsp; It would serve them right if thou didst speed over
+the border to the Burgundians!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall have a laugh at old Meinhard,&rdquo; said Verronax.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Little he knows of discipline.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No doubt they have had a great lyke wake, as they barbarously
+call their obsequies,&rdquo; said the Senator, &ldquo;and are sleeping
+off their liquor.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We will rouse them,&rdquo; said the Arvernian; &ldquo;it will
+be better than startling poor Columba.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So on they moved, the wildly-clad, barefooted Gauls, with locks streaming
+in the wind, still keeping in the rear.&nbsp; They reached the long,
+low farm-buildings belonging to Deodatus, a half-bred Roman Gaul, with
+a large vineyard and numerous herds of cattle.&nbsp; The place was wonderfully
+quiet.&nbsp; The Goths seemed to be indulging in very sound slumbers
+after their carouse, for nothing was to be seen but the slaves coming
+in with bowls of milk from the cattle.&nbsp; Some of them must have
+given notice of the approach of the Senator, for Deodatus came to his
+door with the salutation, &ldquo;<i>Ave clarissime</i>!&rdquo; and then
+stood staring at Verronax, apparently petrified with wonder; and as
+the young chief demanded where was Meinhard, he broke forth&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Does his nobility ask me?&nbsp; It is two hours since every
+Goth quitted the place, except the dead man in the house of the widow
+Dubhina, and we are breathing freely for once in our lives.&nbsp; Up
+they went towards the &AElig;milian villa with clamour and threats enough
+to make one&rsquo;s blood run cold, and they must be far on their way
+to Bordigala Gergovia by this time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;His nobility must have passed through their midst unseen and
+unheard!&rdquo; cried old Julitta, a hardworking, dried-up woman, clasping
+her sinewy, wrinkled hands; &ldquo;a miracle, and no wonder, since our
+holy Bishop has returned.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The excitable household was on the point of breaking out into acclamation,
+but Verronax exclaimed: &ldquo;Silence, children!&nbsp; Miracles are
+not for the bloodguilty.&nbsp; If it be, as I fear, they have met Lucius
+and seized him in my stead, we must push on at once to save him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Meinhard could not mistake your persons,&rdquo; returned &AElig;milius;
+but while he was speaking, a messenger came up and put into his hand
+one of the waxen tablets on which notes were written&mdash;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>L. &AElig;M.&nbsp; VIC. TO M. &AElig;M. VIC.&nbsp; S. Q.,&mdash;Pardon
+and bless thy son.&nbsp; Meinhard assures me that I shall be accepted
+as equal in birth and accessory to the deed.&nbsp; Remember Columba
+and the value of Verronax&rsquo;s life, and let me save him.&nbsp; Consent
+and hold him back.&nbsp; Greet all the dear ones.&mdash;<i>Vale.</i></p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The little tablet could hold no more than this&mdash;almost every
+word curtailed.&nbsp; The Senator&rsquo;s firm lip quivered at last
+as he exclaimed, &ldquo;My brave son.&nbsp; Thus does he redeem his
+father&rsquo;s rash oath!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Verronax, whose Roman breeding had held his impulsive Keltic nature
+in check as long as it was only himself that was in danger, now broke
+into loud weeping&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My Lucius! my brother beloved! and didst thou deem Arvernian
+honour fallen so low that I could brook such a sacrifice?&nbsp; Let
+us hasten on instantly, my father, while yet it is time!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It would have been impossible to withhold him, and Marcus returned
+with the strange tidings, while his father and Verronax set forth with
+a few servants, mounted like themselves on mules, to reach the broad
+Roman road that led from Gergovia to Bordigala.&nbsp; Three wild, barefooted
+Gauls of Verronax&rsquo;s clan shook their heads at all his attempts
+to send them home, and went running along after him with the same fidelity
+as poor Celer, whom he had left tied up at the villa as his parting
+gift to little Victorinus, but who had broken loose, and came bounding
+to his master, caressing him with nose and tongue at their first halt.</p>
+<p>There had been, as in all Roman roads, regular posting stations at
+intervals along the way, where horses and mules could be hired, but
+the troubles of the Empire, invasion, and scarcity had greatly disturbed
+the system.&nbsp; Many of the stations were deserted, and at others
+either the whole of the animals, or all the fleeter ones, had been taken
+up by Meinhard and his convoy.&nbsp; Indeed it almost seemed that not
+only Lucius was anxious not to be overtaken, but that Meinhard was forwarding
+his endeavours to consummate his sacrifice before the Arvernian could
+prevent it.</p>
+<p>Hotly did Verronax chafe at each hindrance.&nbsp; He would have dashed
+onwards with feverish head-long speed, using his own fleet limbs when
+he could not obtain a horse, but &AElig;milius feared to trust him alone,
+lest, coming too late to rescue Lucius, he should bring on himself the
+fury of the Goths, strike perhaps in revenge, and not only lose his
+own life and render the sacrifice vain, but imperil many more.</p>
+<p>So, while making all possible speed, he bound the young Arvernian,
+by all the ties of paternal guardianship and authority, to give his
+word not to use his lighter weight and youthful vigour to outstrip the
+rest of the party.</p>
+<p>The Senator himself hardly knew what was his own wish, for if his
+fatherly affection yearned over his gentle, dutiful, studious Lucius,
+yet Columba&rsquo;s desolation, and the importance of Verronax as a
+protector for his family, so weighed down the other scale, that he could
+only take refuge in &lsquo;committing his way unto the Lord.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The last halting-place was at a villa belonging to a Roman, where
+they heard that an assembly was being held in the fields near Bordigala
+for judgment on the slaughter of a young Goth of high rank.&nbsp; On
+learning how deeply they were concerned, their host lent them two horses,
+and rode with them himself, as they hastened on in speechless anxiety.</p>
+<p>These early Teutonic nations all had their solemn assemblies in the
+open air, and the Goths had not yet abandoned the custom, so that as
+the Senator and the chieftain turned the summit of the last low hill
+they could see the plain beneath swarming like an ant-hill with people,
+and as they pressed onward they could see a glittering tent, woven with
+cloth of gold, a throne erected in front, and around it a space cleared
+and guarded by a huge circle of warriors (<i>lites</i>), whose shields
+joined so as to form a wall.</p>
+<p>Near the throne stood the men of higher degree, all alike to join
+the King in his judgment, like the Homeric warriors of old, as indeed
+Sidonius had often said that there was no better comment on the <i>Iliad</i>
+than the meetings of the barbarians.</p>
+<p>By the time &AElig;milius and Verronax had reached the spot, and
+gained an entrance in virtue of their rank and concern in the matter,
+Euric sat enthroned in the midst of the assembly.&nbsp; He was far removed
+from being a savage, though he had won his crown by the murder of his
+brother.&nbsp; He and the counts (comrades) around him wore the Roman
+garb, and used by preference the Latin speech, learning, arms, and habits,
+just as European civilisation is adopted by the Egyptian or Japanese
+of the present day.&nbsp; He understood Roman jurisprudence, and was
+the author of a code for the Goths, but in a case like this he was obliged
+to conform to national customs.</p>
+<p>There he sat, a small, light-complexioned man, of slighter make than
+those around him, holding in his hand a scroll.&nbsp; It was a letter
+from Sidonius, sent beforehand by a swift-footed mountaineer, and containing
+a guarantee for 1200 soldi, twice the price for a Goth of ordinary rank.&nbsp;
+On the one side stood, unbound and unguarded, the slender form of Lucius;
+on the other a gigantic old Visigoth, blind, and with long streaming
+snowy hair and beard, his face stern with grief and passion, and both
+his knotted hands crossed upon the handle of a mighty battle-axe.</p>
+<p>The King had evidently been explaining to him the terms of the Bishop&rsquo;s
+letter, for the first words that met the ear of &AElig;milius were&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, I say nay, King Euric.&nbsp; Were I to receive treble
+the weight of gold, how should that enable me to face my son in the
+halls of Odin, with his blood unavenged?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was a murmur, and the King exclaimed&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, now, Odo, we know no more of Odin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Odin knows us no more,&rdquo; retorted the old man, &ldquo;since
+we have washed ourselves in the Name of another than the mighty Thor,
+and taken up the weakly worship of the conquered.&nbsp; So my son would
+have it!&nbsp; He talked of a new Valhal of the Christian; but let him
+meet me where he will, he shall not reproach me that he only of all
+his brethren died unavenged.&nbsp; Where is the slayer?&nbsp; Set him
+before me that I may strike him dead with one blow!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Lucius crossed himself, looked upwards, and was stepping forwards,
+when Verronax with a shout of &lsquo;Hold!&rsquo; leapt into the midst,
+full before the avenger&rsquo;s uplifted weapon, crying&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Slay me, old man!&nbsp; It was I who killed thy son, I, Fearnagh
+the Arvernian!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ho!&rdquo; said Odo.&nbsp; &ldquo;Give me thine hand.&nbsp;
+Let me feel thee.&nbsp; Yea, these be sinews!&nbsp; It is well.&nbsp;
+I marvelled how my Odorik should have fallen by the soft Roman hand
+of yonder stripling; but thou art a worthy foe.&nbsp; What made the
+priestling thrust himself between me and my prey?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;His generous love,&rdquo; returned Verronax, as Lucius flung
+himself on his neck, crying&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O my Verronax, why hast thou come?&nbsp; The bitterness of
+death was past!&nbsp; The gates were opening.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Meanwhile &AElig;milius had reached Euric, and had made him understand
+the substitution.&nbsp; Old Odo knew no Latin, and it was the King,
+an able orator in both tongues, who expounded all in Gothic, showing
+how Lucius &AElig;milius had offered his life in the stead of his friend,
+and how Verronax had hurried to prevent the sacrifice, reiterating,
+almost in a tone of command, the alternative of the wehrgeld.</p>
+<p>The lites all burst into acclamations at the nobility of the two
+young men, and some muttered that they had not thought these Romans
+had so much spirit.</p>
+<p>Euric made no decision.&nbsp; He did full justice to the courage
+and friendship of the youths, and likewise to the fact that Odorik had
+provoked the quarrel, and had been slain in fair fight; but the choice
+lay with the father, and perhaps in his heart the politic Visigoth could
+not regret that Arvernia should lose a champion sure to stand up for
+Roman or national claims.</p>
+<p>Odo listened in silence, leaning on his axe.&nbsp; Then he turned
+his face to the bystanders, and demanded of them&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Which of them is the bolder?&nbsp; Which of them flinched
+at my axe?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The spectators were unanimous that neither had blenched.&nbsp; The
+slender lad had presented himself as resolutely as the stately warrior.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is well,&rdquo; said Odo.&nbsp; &ldquo;Either way my son
+will be worthily avenged.&nbsp; I leave the choice to you, young men.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A brief debate ended in an appeal to the Senator, who, in spite of
+all his fortitude, could not restrain himself from groaning aloud, hiding
+his face in his hands, and hoarsely saying, &ldquo;Draw lots.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Euric; &ldquo;commit the judgment to Heaven.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was hailed as a relief; but Lucius stipulated that the lots should
+be blessed by a Catholic priest, and Verronax muttered impatiently&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What matters it?&nbsp; Let us make an end as quickly as may
+be!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He had scarcely spoken when shouts were heard, the throng made way,
+the circle of lites opened, as, waving an olive branch, a wearied, exhausted
+rider and horse appeared, and staggering to the foot of the throne,
+there went down entirely spent, the words being just audible, &ldquo;He
+lives!&nbsp; Odorik lives!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was Marcus &AElig;milius, covered with dust, and at first unable
+to utter another word, as he sat on the ground, supported by his brother,
+while his father made haste to administer the wine handed to him by
+an attendant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Am I in time?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In time, my son,&rdquo; replied his father, repeating his
+announcement in Gothic.&nbsp; &ldquo;Odorik lives!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He lives, he will live,&rdquo; repeated Marcus, reviving.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I came not away till his life was secure.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it truth?&rdquo; demanded the old Goth.&nbsp; &ldquo;Romans
+have slippery ways.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Meinhard was quick to bear testimony that no man in Arvernia doubted
+the word of an &AElig;milius; but Marcus, taking a small dagger from
+his belt, held it out, saying&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;His son said that he would know this token.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Odo felt it.&nbsp; &ldquo;It is my son&rsquo;s knife,&rdquo; he said,
+still cautiously; &ldquo;but it cannot speak to say how it was taken
+from him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The old barbarian heathen,&rdquo; quoth Verronax, under his
+breath; &ldquo;he would rather lose his son than his vengeance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Marcus had gathered breath and memory to add, &ldquo;Tell him Odorik
+said he would know the token of the red-breast that nested in the winged
+helm of Helgund.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I own the token,&rdquo; said Odo.&nbsp; &ldquo;My son lives.&nbsp;
+He needs no vengeance.&rdquo;&nbsp; He turned the handle of his axe
+downwards, passed it to his left hand, and stretched the right to Verronax,
+saying, &ldquo;Young man, thou art brave.&nbsp; There is no blood feud
+between us.&nbsp; Odo, son of Helgund, would swear friendship with you,
+though ye be Romans.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Compensation is still due according to the amount of the injury,&rdquo;
+said the Senator scrupulously.&nbsp; &ldquo;Is it not so, O King?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Euric assented, but Odo exclaimed&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No gold for me!&nbsp; When Odo, son of Helgund, forgives,
+he forgives outright.&nbsp; Where is my son?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Food had by this time been brought by the King&rsquo;s order, and
+after swallowing a few mouthfuls Marcus could stand and speak.</p>
+<p>Odorik, apparently dead, had been dragged by the Goths into the hut
+of the widow Dubhina to await his father&rsquo;s decision as to the
+burial, and the poor woman had been sheltered by her neighbour, Julitta,
+leaving the hovel deserted.</p>
+<p>Columba, not allowing her grief and suspense to interfere with her
+visits of mercy to the poor woman, had come down as usual on the evening
+of the day on which her father and her betrothed had started on their
+sad journey.&nbsp; Groans, not likely to be emitted by her regular patient,
+had startled her, and she had found the floor occupied by the huge figure
+of a young Goth, his face and hair covered with blood from a deep wound
+on his head, insensible, but his moans and the motion of his limbs betraying
+life.</p>
+<p>Knowing the bitter hatred in Claudiodunum for everything Gothic,
+the brave girl would not seek for aid nearer than the villa.&nbsp; Thither
+she despatched her male slave, while with her old nurse she did all
+in her power for the relief of the wounded man, with no inconsiderable
+skill.&nbsp; Marcus had brought the Greek physician of the place, but
+he had done nothing but declare the patient a dead man by all the laws
+of Galen and Hippocrates.&nbsp; However, the skull and constitution
+of a vigorous young Goth, fresh from the mountains, were tougher than
+could be imagined by a member of one of the exhausted races of the Levant.&nbsp;
+Bishop Sidonius had brought his science and sagacity to the rescue,
+and under his treatment Odorik had been restored to his senses, and
+was on the fair way to recovery.</p>
+<p>On the first gleam of hope, Marcus had sent off a messenger, but
+so many of his household and dependents were absent that he had no great
+choice; so that as soon as hope had become security, he had set forth
+himself; and it was well he had done so, for he had overtaken the messenger
+at what was reckoned as three days&rsquo; journey from Bordigala.&nbsp;
+He had ridden ever since without rest, only dismounting to change his
+steed, scarcely snatching even then a morsel of food, and that morning
+neither he nor the horse he rode had relaxed for a moment the desperate
+speed with which he rode against time; so that he had no cause for the
+shame and vexation that he felt at his utter collapse before the barbarians.&nbsp;
+King Euric himself declared that he wished he had a Goth who could perform
+such a feat of endurance.</p>
+<p>While Marcus slept, &AElig;milius and the two young men offered their
+heartfelt thanks in the Catholic church of Bordigala, and then Euric
+would not be refused their presence at a great feast of reconciliation
+on the following day, two of Verronax&rsquo;s speedy-footed followers
+having been sent off at once to bear home tidings that his intelligence
+had been in time.</p>
+<p>The feast was served in the old proconsular house, with the Roman
+paraphernalia, arranged with the amount of correct imitation that is
+to be found at an English dinner-party in the abode of an Indian Rajah.&nbsp;
+It began with Roman etiquette, but ended in a Gothic revel, which the
+sober and refined &AElig;milii could hardly endure.</p>
+<p>They were to set off on their return early on the morrow, Meinhard
+and Odo with them; but when they at length escaped from the barbarian
+orgies, they had little expectation that their companions would join
+them in the morning.</p>
+<p>However, the two Goths and their followers were on the alert as soon
+as they, and as cool-headed as if they had touched no drop of wine.</p>
+<p>Old Odo disdained a mule, and would let no hand save his own guide
+his horse.&nbsp; Verronax and Lucius constituted themselves his guides,
+and whenever he permitted the slightest assistance, it was always from
+the Arvernian, whom he seemed to regard as a sort of adopted son.</p>
+<p>He felt over his weapons, and told him long stories, of which Verronax
+understood only a word or two here and there, though the old man seemed
+little concerned thereat.&nbsp; Now and then he rode along chanting
+to himself an extemporary song, which ran somewhat thus&mdash;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Maids who choose the slain,<br />Disappointed now.<br />The Hawk
+of the Mountain,<br />The Wolf of the West,<br />Meet in fierce combat.<br />Sinks
+the bold Wolf-cub,<br />Folds his wing the Falcon!<br />Shall the soft
+priestling<br />Step before him to Valhal,<br />Cheating Lok&rsquo;s
+daughter<br />Of weak-hearted prey?<br />Lo! the Wolf wakens.<br />Valkyr
+relaxes,<br />Waits for a battlefield,<br />Wolf-cub to claim.<br />Friendly
+the Falcon,<br />Friendly the Gray-Wolf.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>So it ran on, to the great scandal of Lucius, who longed for better
+knowledge of the Gothic tongue to convince the old man of the folly
+of his heathen dreams.&nbsp; Meinhard, who was likewise rather shocked,
+explained that the father and son had been recent arrivals, who had
+been baptized because Euric required his followers to embrace his faith,
+but with little real knowledge or acceptance on the part of the father.&nbsp;
+Young Odorik had been a far more ardent convert; and, after the fashion
+of many a believer, had taken up the distinctions of sect rather than
+of religion, and, zealous in the faith he knew, had thought it incumbent
+on him to insult the Catholics where they seemed to him idolatrous.</p>
+<p>A message on the road informed the travellers that they would find
+Odorik at the villa.&nbsp; Thither then they went, and soon saw the
+whole household on the steps in eager anticipation.&nbsp; A tall young
+figure, with a bandage still round his fair flowing locks, came down
+the steps as Verronax helped the blind man to dismount; and Odo, with
+a cry of &lsquo;My son!&rsquo; with a ring of ecstasy in the sound,
+held the youth to his breast and felt him all over.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are we friends?&rdquo; said Odorik, turning to Verronax, when
+his father released him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is as thou wiliest,&rdquo; returned the Arvernian gravely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Know then,&rdquo; said Odorik, &ldquo;that I know that I erred.&nbsp;
+I knew not thy Lord when I mocked thine honour to Him.&nbsp; Father,
+we had but half learnt the Christian&rsquo;s God.&nbsp; I have seen
+it now.&nbsp; It was not thy blow, O Arvernian! that taught me; but
+the Master who inspired yonder youth to offer his life, and who sent
+the maiden there to wait upon her foe.&nbsp; He is more than man.&nbsp;
+I own in him the Eternal Creator, Redeemer, and Lord!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yea,&rdquo; said Sidonius to his friend &AElig;milius, &ldquo;a
+great work hath been wrought out.&nbsp; Thus hath the parable of actual
+life led this zealous but half-taught youth to enter into the higher
+truth.&nbsp; Lucius will be none the worse priest for having trodden
+in the steps of Him who was High-priest and Victim.&nbsp; Who may abide
+strict Divine Justice, had not One stood between the sinner and the
+Judge?&nbsp; Thus &lsquo;Mercy and Truth have met together; Righteousness
+and Peace have kissed each other.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>THE CAT OF CAT COPSE</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>A HAMPSHIRE TRADITION</p>
+<p>I</p>
+<p>The Dane! the Dane!&nbsp; The heathen Dane<br />Is wasting Hampshire&rsquo;s
+coast again&mdash;<br />From ravaged church and plundered farm<br />Flash
+the dread beacons of alarm&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fly, helpless
+peasants, fly!<br />Ytene&rsquo;s green banks and forest shades,<br />Her
+heathery slopes and gorse-clad glades<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Re-echo
+to the cry&mdash;<br />Where is the King, whose strong right hand<br />Hath
+oft from danger freed the land?<br />Nor fleet nor covenant avails<br />To
+drive aloof those pirate sails,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In vain is Alfred&rsquo;s
+sword;<br />Vain seems in every sacred fane<br />The chant&mdash;&lsquo;From
+fury of the Dane,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Deliver us, good Lord.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>II</p>
+<p>The long keels have the Needles past,<br />Wight&rsquo;s fairest
+bowers are flaming fast;<br />From Solent&rsquo;s waves rise many a
+mast,<br />With swelling sails of gold and red,<br />Dragon and serpent
+at each head,<br />Havoc and slaughter breathing forth,<br />Steer on
+these locusts of the north.<br />Each vessel bears a deadly freight;<br />Each
+Viking, fired with greed and hate,<br />His axe is whetting for the
+strife,<br />And counting how each Christian life<br />Shall win him
+fame in Skaldic lays,<br />And in Valhalla endless praise.<br />For
+Hamble&rsquo;s river straight they steer;<br />Prayer is in vain, no
+aid is near&mdash;<br />Hopeless and helpless all must die.<br />Oh,
+fainting heart and failing eye,<br />Look forth upon the foe once more!<br />Why
+leap they not upon the shore?<br />Why pause their keels upon the strand,<br />As
+checked by some resistless hand?<br />The sail they spread, the oars
+they ply,<br />Yet neither may advance nor fly.</p>
+<p>III</p>
+<p>Who is it holds them helpless there?<br />&rsquo;Tis He Who hears
+the anguished prayer;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&rsquo;Tis He Who to the
+wave<br />Hath fixed the bound&mdash;mud, rock, or sand&mdash;<br />To
+mark how far upon the strand<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Its foaming sweep
+may rave.<br />What is it, but the ebbing tide,<br />That leaves them
+here, by Hamble&rsquo;s side,<br />So firm embedded in the mud<br />No
+force of stream, nor storm, nor flood,<br />Shall ever these five ships
+bear forth<br />To fiords and islets of the north;<br />A thousand years
+shall pass away,<br />And leave those keels in Hamble&rsquo;s bay.</p>
+<p>IV</p>
+<p>Ill were it in my rhyme to tell<br />The work of slaughter that befell;<br />In
+sooth it was a savage time&mdash;<br />Crime ever will engender crime.<br />Each
+Viking, as he swam to land,<br />Fell by a Saxon&rsquo;s vengeful hand;<br />Turn
+we from all that vengeance wild&mdash;<br />Where on the deck there
+cowered a child,<br />And, closely to his bosom prest,<br />A snow-white
+kitten found a nest.<br />That tender boy, with tresses fair,<br />Was
+Edric, Egbert&rsquo;s cherished heir;<br />The plaything of the homestead
+he,<br />Now fondled on his grandame&rsquo;s knee;<br />Or as beside
+the hearth he sat,<br />Oft sporting with his snow-white cat;<br />Now
+by the chaplain taught to read,<br />And lisp his Pater and his Creed;<br />Well
+nurtured at his mother&rsquo;s side,<br />And by his father trained
+to ride,<br />To speak the truth, to draw the bow,<br />And all an English
+Thane should know,<br />His days had been as one bright dream&mdash;<br />As
+smooth as his own river&rsquo;s stream!<br />Until, at good King Alfred&rsquo;s
+call,<br />Thane Egbert left his native hall.</p>
+<p>V</p>
+<p>Then, five days later, shout and yell,<br />And shrieks and howls
+of slaughter fell,<br />Upon the peaceful homestead came.<br />&rsquo;Mid
+flashing sword, and axe, and flame,<br />Snatched by a Viking&rsquo;s
+iron grasp,<br />From his slain mother&rsquo;s dying clasp,<br />Saved
+from the household&rsquo;s flaming grave,<br />Edric was dragged, a
+destined slave,<br />Some northern dame to serve, or heed<br />The flocks
+that on the S&aelig;ter feed.<br />Still, with scarce conscious hold
+he clung<br />To the white cat, that closely hung<br />Seeking her refuge
+in his arm,<br />Her shelter in the wild alarm&mdash;<br />And who can
+tell how oft his moan<br />Was soothed by her soft purring tone?<br />Time
+keeping with retracted claw,<br />Or patting with her velvet paw;<br />Although
+of home and friends bereft,<br />Still this one comforter was left,<br />So
+lithe, so swift, so soft, so white,<br />She might have seemed his guardian
+sprite.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The rude Danes deemed her such;<br />And
+whispered tales of &lsquo;disir&rsquo; bound<br />To human lords, as
+bird or hound.<br />Nor one &rsquo;mid all the fleet was found<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To
+hurt one tender paw.<br />And when the captive knelt to pray<br />None
+would his orisons gainsay;<br />For as they marked him day by day,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Increased
+their wondering awe.</p>
+<p>VI</p>
+<p>Crouched by the mast, the child and cat,<br />Through the dire time
+of slaughter sat,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By terror both spellbound;<br />But
+when night came, a silence drear<br />Fell on the coast; and far or
+near,<br />No voice caught Edric&rsquo;s wakeful ear,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Save
+water&rsquo;s lapping sound.<br />He wandered from the stern to prow,<br />Ate
+of the stores, and marvelled how<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;He yet might
+reach the ground;<br />Till low and lower sank the tide,<br />Dark banks
+of mud spread far and wide<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Around that fast-bound
+wreck.<br />Then the lone boy climbed down the ship,<br />To cross the
+mud by bound and skip,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;His cat upon his neck.<br />Light
+was his weight and swift his leap,<br />Now would he softly tread, now
+creep,<br />For treacherous was the mud, and deep<br />From stone to
+weed, from weed to plank,<br />Leaving a hole where&rsquo;er he sank;<br />With
+panting breath and sore taxed strength<br />The solid earth he felt
+at length.<br />Sheltered within the copse he lay,<br />When dawn had
+brightened into day,<br />For when one moment there was seen,<br />His
+red cap glancing &rsquo;mid the green,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A fearful
+cry arose&mdash;<br />&ldquo;Here lurks a Dane!&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;The
+Dane seek out&rdquo;<br />With knife and axe, the rabble rout<br />Made
+the copse ring with yell and shout<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To find their
+dreaded foes.<br />And Edric feared to meet a stroke,<br />Before they
+knew the tongue he spoke.<br />Hid &rsquo;mid the branches of an oak,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;He
+heard their calls and blows.<br />Of food he had a simple store,<br />And
+when the churls the chase gave o&rsquo;er,<br />And evening sunk upon
+the vale,<br />With rubbing head and upright tail,<br />Pacing before
+him to and fro,<br />Puss lured him on the way to go&mdash;<br />Coaxing
+him on, with tender wile,<br />O&rsquo;er heath and down for many a
+mile.<br />Ask me not how her course she knows.<br />He from Whom every
+instinct flows<br />Hath breathed into His creatures power,<br />Giving
+to each its needful dower;<br />And strive and question as we will,<br />We
+cannot trace the inborn skill,<br />Nor fathom how, where&rsquo;er she
+roam,<br />The cat ne&rsquo;er fails to find her home.</p>
+<p>VII</p>
+<p>What pen may dare to paint the woe,<br />When Egbert saw his home
+laid low?<br />Where, by the desolated hearth,<br />The mother lay who
+gave him birth,<br />And, close beside, his fair young wife,<br />And
+servants, slain in bootless strife&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Mournful
+the King stood near.<br />Alfred, who came to be his guest,<br />And
+deeply rued that his behest<br />Had all unguarded left that nest,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To
+meet such ruin drear.<br />With hand, and heart, and lip, he gave<br />All
+king or friend, both true and brave,<br />Could give, one pang of grief
+to save,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To comfort, or to cheer&mdash;<br />As
+from the blackened walls they drew<br />Each corpse, and laid with reverence
+due;<br />And then it was that Egbert knew<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;All
+save the child were here.<br />King Alfred&rsquo;s noble head was bent,<br />A
+monarch&rsquo;s pain his bosom rent;<br />Kindly he wrung Thane Egbert&rsquo;s
+hand&mdash;<br />&ldquo;Lo! these have won the blissful land,<br />Where
+foeman&rsquo;s shout is heard no more,<br />Nor wild waves beat upon
+the shore;<br />Brief was the pang, the strife is o&rsquo;er&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;They
+are at peace, my friend!<br />Safe, where the weary are at rest;<br />Safe,
+where the banish&rsquo;d and opprest<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Find joys
+that never end.&rdquo;<br />Thane Egbert groaned, and scarce might speak<br />For
+tears that ploughed his hardy cheek,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As his dread
+task was done.<br />And for the slain, from monk and priest<br />Rose
+requiems that never ceased,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;While still he sought
+his son.<br />&ldquo;Oh, would to Heaven!&rdquo; that father said,<br />&ldquo;There
+lay my darling calmly dead,<br />Rather than as a thrall be bred&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;His
+Christian faith undone.&rdquo;<br />&ldquo;Nay, life is hope!&rdquo;
+bespake the King,<br />&ldquo;God o&rsquo;er the child can spread His
+wing<br />And shield him in the Northman&rsquo;s power<br />Safe as
+in Alswyth&rsquo;s guarded bower;<br />Treaty and ransom may be found<br />To
+win him back to English ground.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>VIII</p>
+<p>The funeral obsequies were o&rsquo;er,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But
+lingered still the Thane,<br />Hanging around his home once more,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Feeding
+his bitter pain.<br />The King would fain with friendly force<br />Urge
+him anew to mount his horse,<br />Turn from the piteous sight away,<br />And
+fresh begin life&rsquo;s saddened day,<br />His loved ones looking yet
+to greet,<br />Where ne&rsquo;er shall part the blest who meet.<br />Just
+then a voice that well he knew,<br />A sound that mixed the purr and
+mew,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Went to the father&rsquo;s heart.<br />On
+a large stone King Alfred sat<br />Against his buskin rubbed a cat,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Snow-white
+in every part,<br />Though drenched and soiled from head to tail.<br />The
+poor Thane&rsquo;s tears poured down like hail&mdash;<br />&ldquo;Poor
+puss, in vain thy loving wail,&rdquo;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Then came
+a joyful start!<br />A little hand was on his cloak&mdash;<br />&ldquo;Father!&rdquo;
+a voice beside him spoke,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Emerging from the wood.<br />All
+travel-stained, and marked with mire,<br />With trace of blood, and
+toil, and fire,<br />Yet safe and sound beside his sire,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Edric
+before them stood.<br />And as his father wept for joy,<br />King Alfred
+blessed the rescued boy,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And thanked his Maker
+good!<br />Who doth the captive&rsquo;s prayer fulfil,<br />Making His
+creatures work His will<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By means not understood.</p>
+<p>NOTE.&mdash;The remains of the five Danish vessels still lie embedded
+in the mud of the Hamble River near Southampton, though parts have been
+carried off and used as wood for furniture in the farm-houses.&nbsp;
+The neighbouring wood is known as Cat Copse, and a tradition has been
+handed down that a cat, and a boy in a red cap, escaped from the Danish
+ships, took refuge there.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>DE FACTO AND DE JURE</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>I.&nbsp; DE FACTO</p>
+<p>The later summer sunbeams lay on an expanse of slightly broken ground
+where purple and crimson heather were relieved by the golden blossoms
+of the dwarf gorse, interspersed with white stars of stitch-wort.&nbsp;
+Here and there, on the slopes, grew stunted oaks and hollies, whose
+polished leaves gleamed white with the reflection of the light; but
+there was not a trace of human habitation save a track, as if trodden
+by horses&rsquo; feet, clear of the furze and heath, and bordered by
+soft bent grass, beginning to grow brown.</p>
+<p>Near this track&mdash;for path it could hardly be called&mdash;stood
+a slender lad waiting and watching, a little round cap covering his
+short-cut brown hair, a crimson tunic reaching to his knee, leggings
+and shoes of deerhide, and a sword at his side, fastened by a belt of
+the like skin, guarded and clasped with silver.&nbsp; His features were
+delicate, though sunburnt, and his eyes were riveted on the distance,
+where the path had disappeared amid the luxuriant spires of ling.</p>
+<p>A hunting-horn sounded, and the youth drew himself together into
+an attitude of eager attention; the baying of hounds and trampling of
+horses&rsquo; hoofs came nearer and nearer, and by and by there came
+in view the ends of boar-spears, the tall points of bows, a cluster
+of heads of men and horses&mdash;strong, sturdy, shaggy, sure-footed
+creatures, almost ponies, but the only steeds fit to pursue the chase
+on this rough and encumbered ground.</p>
+<p>Foremost rode, with ivory and gold hunting-horn slung in a rich Spanish
+baldrick, and a slender gilt circlet round his green hunting-cap, a
+stout figure, with a face tanned to a fiery colour, keen eyes of a dark
+auburn tint, and a shock of hair of the same deep red.</p>
+<p>At sight of him, the lad flung himself on his knees on the path,
+with the cry, &ldquo;Haro!&nbsp; Haro!&nbsp; Justice, Sir King!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Out of my way, English hound!&rdquo; cried the King.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;This is no time for thy Haro.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, but one word, good fair King!&nbsp; I am French&mdash;French
+by my father&rsquo;s side!&rdquo; cried the lad, as there was a halt,
+more from the instinct of the horse than the will of the King.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Bertram de Maisonforte!&nbsp; My father married the Lady of Boyatt,
+and her inheritance was confirmed to him by your father, brave King
+William, my Lord; but now he is dead, and his kinsman, Roger de Maisonforte,
+hath ousted her and me, her son and lawful heir, from house and home,
+and we pray for justice, Sir King?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Ha, Roger, thou there!&nbsp; What say&rsquo;st thou to this
+bold beggar!&rsquo; shouted the Red King.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I say,&rsquo; returned a black, bronzed hunter, pressing to
+the front, &lsquo;that what I hold of thee, King William, on tenure
+of homage, and of two good horses and staunch hounds yearly, I yield
+to no English mongrel churl, who dares to meddle with me.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Thou hear&rsquo;st, lad,&rsquo; said Rufus, with his accustomed
+oath, &lsquo;homage hath been done to us for the land, nor may it be
+taken back.&nbsp; Out of our way, or&mdash;&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Sir! sir!&rsquo; entreated the lad, grasping the bridle, &lsquo;if
+no more might be, we would be content if Sir Roger would but leave my
+mother enough for her maintenance among the nuns of Romsey, and give
+me a horse and suit of mail to go on the Holy War with Duke Robert.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Ho! ho! a modest request for a beggarly English clown!&rsquo;
+cried the King, aiming a blow at the lad with his whip, and pushing
+on his horse, so as almost to throw him back on the heath.&nbsp; &lsquo;Ho!
+ho! fit him out for a fool&rsquo;s errand!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;We&rsquo;ll fit him!&nbsp; We&rsquo;ll teach him to take the
+cross at other men&rsquo;s expense!&rsquo; shouted the followers, seizing
+on the boy.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Nay; we&rsquo;ll bestow his cross on him for a free gift!&rsquo;
+exclaimed Roger de Maisonforte.</p>
+<p>And Bertram, struggling desperately in vain among the band of ruffians,
+found his left arm bared, and two long and painful slashes, in the form
+of the Crusader&rsquo;s cross, inflicted, amid loud laughter, as the
+blood sprang forth.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;There, Sir Crusader,&rsquo; said Roger, grinding his teeth
+over him.&nbsp; &lsquo;Go on thy way now&mdash;as a horse-boy, if so
+please thee, and know better than to throw thy mean false English pretension
+in the face of a gentle Norman.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Men, horses, dogs, all seemed to trample and scoff at Bertram as
+he fell back on the elastic stems of the heath and gorse, whose prickles
+seemed to renew the insults by scratching his face.&nbsp; When the King&rsquo;s
+horn, the calls, the brutal laughter, and the baying of the dogs had
+begun to die away in the distance, he gathered himself together, sat
+up, and tried to find some means of stanching the blood.&nbsp; Not only
+was the wound in a place hard to reach, but it had been ploughed with
+the point of a boar-spear, and was grievously torn.&nbsp; He could do
+nothing with it, and, as he perceived, he had further been robbed of
+his sword, his last possession, his father&rsquo;s sword.</p>
+<p>The large tears of mingled rage, grief, and pain might well spring
+from the poor boy&rsquo;s eyes in his utter loneliness, as he clenched
+his hand with powerless wrath, and regained his feet, to retrace, as
+best he might, his way to where his widowed mother had found a temporary
+shelter in a small religious house.</p>
+<p>The sun grew hotter and hotter, Bertram&rsquo;s wound bled, though
+not profusely, the smart grew upon him, his tongue was parched with
+thirst, and though he kept resolutely on, his breath came panting, his
+head grew dizzy, his eyes dim, his feet faltered, and at last, just
+as he attained a wider and more trodden way, he dropped insensible by
+the side of the path, his dry lips trying to utter the cry, &ldquo;Lord,
+have mercy on me!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>II.&nbsp; DE JURE</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>When Bertram de Maisonforte opened his eyes again cold waters were
+on his face, wine was moistening his lips, the burning of his wound
+was assuaged by cooling oil, while a bandage was being applied, and
+he was supported on a breast and in arms, clad indeed in a hauberk,
+but as tenderly kind as the full deep voice that spoke in English, &ldquo;He
+comes round.&nbsp; How now, my child?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Father,&rdquo; murmured Bertram, with dreamy senses.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Better now; another sup from the flask, David,&rdquo; again
+said the kind voice, and looking up, he became aware of the beautiful
+benignant face, deep blue eyes, and long light locks of the man in early
+middle age who had laid him on his knee, while a priest was binding
+his arm, and a fair and graceful boy, a little younger than himself,
+was standing by with the flask of wine in his hand, and a face of such
+girlish beauty that as he knelt to hold the wine to his lips, Bertram
+asked&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Am I among the Angels?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not yet,&rdquo; said the elder man.&nbsp; &ldquo;Art thou
+near thine home?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alack!&nbsp; I have no home, kind sir,&rdquo; said Bertram,
+now able to raise himself and to perceive that he was in the midst of
+a small hand of armed men, such as every knight or noble necessarily
+carried about with him for protection.&nbsp; There was a standard with
+a dragon, and their leader himself was armed, all save his head, and,
+as Bertram saw, was a man of massive strength, noble stature, and kingly
+appearance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What shall we do for thee?&rdquo; he asked.&nbsp; &ldquo;Who
+hath put thee in this evil case?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Bertram gave his name, and at its Norman sound there was a start
+of repulsion from the boy.&nbsp; &ldquo;French after all!&rdquo; he
+exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, David,&rdquo; said the leader, &ldquo;if I mind me rightly,
+the Lady Elftrud of Boyatt wedded a brave Norman of that name.&nbsp;
+Art thou her son?&nbsp; I see something of her face, and thou hast an
+English tongue.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am; I am her only son!&rdquo; exclaimed Bertram; and as
+he told of his wrongs and the usage he had met with, young David cried
+out with indignation&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Uncle, uncle, how canst thou suffer that these things should
+be?&nbsp; Here are our faithful cnihts.&nbsp; Let us ride to the forest.&nbsp;
+Wherefore should it not be with Red William and his ruffians as with
+Scottish Duncan and Donald?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush thee, David, my nephew.&nbsp; Thou knowest that may not
+be.&nbsp; But for thee, young Bertram, we will see what can be done.&nbsp;
+Canst sit a horse now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yea, my lord, full well.&nbsp; I know not what came over me,
+even now,&rdquo; said Bertram, much ashamed of the condition in which
+he had been found.</p>
+<p>A sumpter horse was found for him, the leader of the party saying
+that they would go on to his own home, where the youth&rsquo;s wound
+should be looked to, and they could then decide what could be done for
+him.</p>
+<p>Bertram was still so far faint, suffering, weak, and weary, that
+he was hardly awake to curiosity as to his surroundings, and had quite
+enough to do to keep his seat in the saddle, and follow in the wake
+of the leader&rsquo;s tall white horse, above which shone his bright
+chain mail and his still brighter golden locks, so that the exhausted
+boy began in some measure to feel as if he were following St. Michael
+on his way to some better world.</p>
+<p>Now and then the tall figure turned to see how it was with him, and
+as he drooped more with fatigue and pain, bade one of the retainers
+keep beside him and support him.</p>
+<p>Thus at length the cavalcade left the heathery expanse and reached
+a valley, green with meadow-land and waving corn, with silvery beards
+of barley rippling in the evening light, and cows and sheep being gathered
+for the night towards a dwelling where the river had been trained to
+form a moat round low green ramparts enclosing a number of one-storied
+thatched houses and barns, with one round tower, a strong embattled
+gateway, and at a little distance a square church tower, and other cottages
+standing outside.</p>
+<p>A shout of ecstasy broke out from the village as the advancing party
+was seen and recognised.&nbsp; Men, women, and children, rudely but
+substantially clad, and many wearing the collar of the thrall, ran out
+from their houses, baring their heads, bowing low, and each in turn
+receiving some kind word or nod of greeting from the lord whom they
+welcomed, while one after another of his armed followers turned aside,
+and was absorbed into a happy family by wife or parent.&nbsp; A drawbridge
+crossed the moat, and there was a throng of joyful servants in the archway&mdash;foremost
+a priest, stretching out his hands in blessing, and a foreign-looking
+old woman, gray-haired and dark-eyed, who gathered young David into
+her embrace as he sprang from his horse, calling him her heart&rsquo;s
+darling and her sunshine, and demanding, with a certain alarm, where
+were his brothers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In Scotland, dear Nurse Agnes&mdash;even where they should
+be,&rdquo; was David&rsquo;s answer.&nbsp; &ldquo;We are conquerors,
+do you see!&nbsp; Edgar is a crowned and anointed King&mdash;seated
+on the holy stone of Scone, and Alexander is beside him to fight for
+him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is even so, nurse,&rdquo; said the elder man, turning from
+the priest, to whom he had more briefly spoken; &ldquo;God hath blessed
+our arms, and young Edgar has his right.&nbsp; God shield him in it!&nbsp;
+And now, nurse, here is a poor youth who needs thy care, after one of
+Red William&rsquo;s rough jests.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>III.&nbsp; KING AT HOME</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Weary, faint, and feverish as Bertram de Maisonforte was, he was
+past caring for anything but the relief of rest, cool drink, and the
+dressing of his wound; nor did he even ask where he was until he awoke
+in broad daylight the next morning, to the sound of church bells, to
+the sight of a low but spacious chamber, with stone walls, deerskins
+laid on the floor, and the old nurse standing by him with a cup of refreshing
+drink, and ready to attend to his wound.</p>
+<p>It was then that, feeling greatly refreshed, he ventured upon asking
+her in whose house he was, and who was the good lord who had taken pity
+on him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who should it be save him who should be the good lord of every
+Englishman,&rdquo; she replied, &ldquo;mine own dear foster-son, the
+princely Atheling&mdash;he who takes up the cause of every injured man
+save his own?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Bertram was amazed, for he had only heard Normans speak of Edgar
+Atheling, the heir of the ancient race, as a poor, tame-spirited, wretched
+creature, unable to assert himself, and therefore left unmolested by
+the conquerors out of contempt.&nbsp; He proceeded to ask what the journey
+was from which the Atheling was returning, and the nurse, nothing loth,
+beguiled the tendance on his arm by explaining how she had long ago
+travelled from Hungary with her charges, Edgar, Margaret, and Christina;
+how it had come about that the crown, which should have been her darling&rsquo;s,
+had been seized by the fierce duke from beyond the sea; how Edgar, then
+a mere child, had been forced to swear oaths of fealty by which he held
+himself still bound; how her sweetest pearl of ladies, her jewel Margaret,
+had been wedded to the rude wild King of Scots, and how her gentle sweetness
+and holiness had tamed and softened him, so that she had been the blessing
+of his kingdom till he and his eldest son had fallen at Alnwick while
+she lay a-dying; how the fierce savage Scots had risen and driven forth
+her young children; and how their uncle the Atheling had ridden forth,
+taken them to his home, bred them in all holiness and uprightness and
+good and knightly courage, and when Edgar and Alexander, the two eldest,
+were full grown, had gone northward with them once more, and had won
+back, in fair field, the throne of their father Malcolm.</p>
+<p>Truly there might well be rejoicing and triumph on the estate where
+the Atheling ruled as a father and had been sorely missed.&nbsp; He
+was at his early mass of thanksgiving at present, and Bertram was so
+much better that Nurse Agnes did not withstand his desire to rise and
+join the household and villagers, who were all collected in the building,
+low and massive, but on which Edgar Atheling had lavished the rich ornamental
+work introduced by the Normans.&nbsp; The round arched doorway was set
+in a succession of elaborate zigzags, birds&rsquo; heads, lions&rsquo;
+faces, twists and knots; and within, the altar-hangings and the priest&rsquo;s
+robes were stiff with the exquisite and elaborate embroidery for which
+the English nunneries were famed.</p>
+<p>The whole building, with its low-browed roof, circular chancel arch
+still more richly adorned, and stout short columns, was filled with
+kneeling figures in rough homespun or sheepskin garments, and with shaggy
+heads, above which towered the shining golden locks of the Atheling,
+which were allowed to grow to a much greater length than was the Norman
+fashion, and beside him was the still fairer head of his young nephew,
+David of Scotland.&nbsp; It was a thanksgiving service for their victory
+and safe return; and Bertram was just in time for the <i>Te Deum</i>
+that followed the mass.</p>
+<p>The Atheling, after all was over, came forth, exchanging greetings
+with one after another of his franklins, cnihts, and thralls, all of
+whom seemed to be equally delighted to see him back again, and whom
+he bade to a feast in the hall, which would be prepared in the course
+of the day.&nbsp; Some, meantime, went to their homes near at hand,
+others would amuse themselves with games at ball, archery, singlestick,
+and the like, in an open space within the moat&mdash;where others fished.</p>
+<p>Bertram was not neglected.&nbsp; The Atheling inquired after his
+health, heard his story in more detail, and after musing on it, said
+that after setting affairs in order at home, he meant to visit his sister
+and niece in the Abbey at Romsey, and would then make some arrangement
+for the Lady of Maisonforte; also he would endeavour to see the King
+on his return to Winchester, and endeavour to plead with him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;William will at times hearken to an old comrade,&rdquo; he
+said; &ldquo;but it is an ill time to take him when he is hot upon the
+chase.&nbsp; Meantime, thou art scarce yet fit to ride, and needest
+more of good Agnes&rsquo;s leech-craft.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Bertram was indeed stiff and weary enough to be quite content to
+lie on a bearskin in the wide hall of the dwelling, or under the eaves
+without, and watch the doings with some amusement.</p>
+<p>He had been bred in some contempt of the Saxons.&nbsp; His father&rsquo;s
+marriage had been viewed as a <i>m&eacute;salliance</i>, and though
+the knight of Maisonforte had been honourable and kindly, and the Lady
+Elftrud had fared better than many a Saxon bride, still the French and
+the Breton dames of the neighbourhood had looked down on her, and the
+retainers had taught her son to look on the English race as swine, boors,
+and churls, ignorant of all gentle arts, of skill and grace.</p>
+<p>But here was young David among youths of his own age, tilting as
+gracefully and well as any young Norman could&mdash;making Bertram long
+that his arm should cease to be so heavy and burning, so that he might
+show his prowess.</p>
+<p>Here was a contention with bow and arrow that would not have disgraced
+the best men-at-arms of Maisonforte&mdash;here again, later in the day,
+was minstrelsy of a higher order than his father&rsquo;s ears had cared
+for, but of which his mother had whispered her traditions.</p>
+<p>Here, again, was the chaplain showing his brother-priests with the
+greatest pride and delight a scroll of Latin, copied from a MS. Psalter
+of the holy and Venerable Beda by the hand of his own dear pupil, young
+David.</p>
+<p>Bertram, who could neither read nor write, and knew no more Latin
+than his Paternoster, Credo, and Ave, absolutely did not believe his
+eyes and ears till he had asked the question, whether this were indeed
+the youth&rsquo;s work.&nbsp; How could it be possible to wield pen
+as well as lance?</p>
+<p>But the wonder of all was the Atheling.&nbsp; After an absence of
+more than a year, there was much to be adjusted, and his authority on
+his own lands was thoroughly judicial even for life or death, since
+even under Norman sway he held the power of an earl.</p>
+<p>Seated in a high-backed, cross-legged chair&mdash;his majestic form
+commanding honour and respect&mdash;he heard one after another causes
+that came before him, reserved for his judgment, questions of heirship,
+disputes about cattle, complaints of thievery, encroachments on land;
+and Bertram, listening with the interest that judgment never fails to
+excite, was deeply impressed with the clear-headedness, the ready thought,
+and the justice of the decision, even when the dispute lay between Saxon
+and Norman, always with reference to the laws of Alfred and Edward which
+he seemed to carry in his head.</p>
+<p>Indeed, ere long, two Norman knights, hearing of the Atheling&rsquo;s
+return, came to congratulate him, and lay before him a dispute of boundaries
+which they declared they would rather entrust to him than to any other.&nbsp;
+And they treated him far more as a prince than as a Saxon churl.</p>
+<p>They willingly accepted his invitation to go in to the feast of welcome,
+and a noble one it was, with music and minstrelsy, hospitality to all
+around, plenty and joy, wassail bowls going round, and the Atheling
+presiding over it, and with a strange and quiet influence, breaking
+up the entertainment in all good will, by the memory of his sweet sister
+Margaret&rsquo;s grace-cup, ere mirth had become madness, or the English
+could incur their reproach of coarse revelry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And,&rdquo; as the Norman knight who had prevailed said to
+Bertram, &ldquo;Sir Edgar the Atheling had thus shown himself truly
+an uncrowned King.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>IV.&nbsp; WHO SHALL BE KING?</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The noble cloisters of Romsey, with the grand church rising in their
+midst, had a lodging-place, strictly cut off from the nunnery, for male
+visitors.</p>
+<p>Into this Edgar Atheling rode with his armed train, and as they entered,
+some strange expression in the faces of the porters and guards met them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Had my lord heard the news?&rdquo; demanded a priest, who
+hastened forward, bowing low.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, Holy Father.&nbsp; No ill of my sister?&rdquo; anxiously
+inquired the Prince.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Mother Abbess is well, my Lord Atheling; but the King&mdash;William
+the Red&mdash;is gone to his account.&nbsp; He was found two eves ago
+pierced to the heart with an arrow beneath an oak in Malwood Chace.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;God have mercy on his poor soul!&rdquo; ejaculated Edgar,
+crossing himself.&nbsp; &ldquo;No moment vouchsafed for penitence!&nbsp;
+Alas!&nbsp; Who did the deed, Father Dunstan?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is not known,&rdquo; returned the priest, &ldquo;save
+that Walter Tyrrel is fled like a hunted felon beyond seas, and my Lord
+Henry to Winchester.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Young David pressed up to his uncle&rsquo;s side.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir, sir,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;what a time is this!&nbsp;
+Duke Robert absent, none know where; our men used to war, all ready
+to gather round you.&nbsp; This rule will be ended, the old race restored.&nbsp;
+Say but the word, and I will ride back and raise our franklins as one
+man.&nbsp; Thou wilt, too, Bertram!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With all mine heart!&rdquo; cried Bertram.&nbsp; &ldquo;Let
+me be the first to do mine homage.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And as Edgar Atheling stood in the outer court, with lofty head and
+noble thoughtful face, pure-complexioned and high-browed, each who beheld
+him felt that there stood a king of men.&nbsp; A shout of &ldquo;King
+Edgar!&nbsp; Edgar, King of England,&rdquo; echoed through the buildings;
+and priests, men-at-arms, and peasants began to press forward to do
+him homage.&nbsp; But he raised his hand&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hold, children,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;I thank you all;
+but much must come ere ye imperil yourselves by making oaths to me that
+ye might soon have to break!&nbsp; Let me pass on and see my sister.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Abbeys were not strictly cloistered then, and the Abbess Christina
+was at the door, a tall woman, older than her brother, and somewhat
+hard-featured, and beside her was a lovely fair girl, with peach-like
+cheeks and bright blue eyes, who threw herself into David&rsquo;s arms,
+full of delight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Brother,&rdquo; said Christina, &ldquo;did I hear aright?&nbsp;
+And have they hailed thee King?&nbsp; Are the years of cruel wrong ended
+at last?&nbsp; Victor for others, wilt thou be victor for thyself?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is consistent with God&rsquo;s will, and with mine oaths,
+that I hope to do,&rdquo; was Edgar&rsquo;s reply.</p>
+<p>But even as he stood beside the Abbess in the porch, without having
+yet entered, there was a clattering and trampling of horse, and through
+the gate came hastily a young man in a hauberk, with a ring of gold
+about his helmet, holding out his hands as he saw the Atheling.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sire Edgar,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I knew not I should find
+you here, when I came to pay my first <i>devoirs</i> as a King to the
+Lady Mother Abbess&rdquo; (he kissed her unwilling hand) &ldquo;and
+the Lady Edith.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Edith turned away a blushing face, and the Abbess faltered&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As a King?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yea, lady.&nbsp; As such have I been owned by all at Winchester.&nbsp;
+I should be at Westminster for my Coronation, save that I turned from
+my course to win her who shall share my crown.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it even thus, Henry?&rdquo; said Edgar.&nbsp; &ldquo;Hast
+not thought of other rights?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of that crazed fellow Robert&rsquo;s?&rdquo; demanded Henry.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Trouble not thine head for him!&nbsp; Even if he came back living
+from this Holy War in the East, my father had too much mercy on England
+to leave it to the like of him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There be other and older rights, Sir Henry,&rdquo; said the
+Abbess.</p>
+<p>Henry looked up for a moment in some consternation.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ho!&nbsp;
+Sir Edgar, thou hast been so long a peaceful man that I had forgotten.&nbsp;
+Thou knowest thy day went by with Hereward le Wake.&nbsp; See, fair
+Edith and I know one another&mdash;she shall be my Queen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Veiled and vowed,&rdquo; began the Abbess.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, not yet!&nbsp; Tell her not yet!&rdquo; whispered Edith
+in David&rsquo;s ear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou little traitress!&nbsp; Wed thy house&rsquo;s foe, who
+takes thine uncle&rsquo;s place?&nbsp; Nay!&nbsp; I will none of thee,&rdquo;
+said David, shaking her off roughly; but her uncle threw his arm round
+her kindly.</p>
+<p>At that moment a Norman knight spurred up to Henry with some communication
+that made him look uneasy, and Christina, laying her hand on Edgar&rsquo;s
+arm, said: &ldquo;Brother, we have vaults.&nbsp; Thy troop outnumbers
+his.&nbsp; The people of good old Wessex are with thee!&nbsp; Now is
+thy time!&nbsp; Save thy country.&nbsp; Restore the line and laws of
+Alfred and Edward.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou know&rsquo;st not what thou wouldst have, Christina,&rdquo;
+said Edgar.&nbsp; &ldquo;One sea of blood wherever a Norman castle rises!&nbsp;
+I love my people too well to lead them to a fruitless struggle with
+all the might of Normandy unless I saw better hope than lies before
+me now!&nbsp; Mind thee, I swore to Duke William that I would withstand
+neither him nor any son of his whom the English duly hailed.&nbsp; Yet,
+I will see how it is with this young man,&rdquo; he added, as she fell
+back muttering, &ldquo;Craven!&nbsp; Who ever won throne without blood?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Henry had an anxious face when he turned from his knight, who, no
+doubt, had told him how completely he was in the Atheling&rsquo;s power.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir Edgar,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;a word with you.&nbsp; Winchester
+is not far off&mdash;nor Porchester&mdash;nor my brother William&rsquo;s
+Free companies, and his treasure.&nbsp; Normans will scarce see Duke
+William&rsquo;s son tampered with, nor bow their heads to the English!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Belike, Henry of Normandy,&rdquo; said Edgar, rising above
+him in his grave majesty.&nbsp; &ldquo;Yet have I a question or two
+to put to thee.&nbsp; Thou art a graver, more scholarly man than thy
+brother, less like to be led away by furies.&nbsp; Have the people of
+England and Normandy sworn to thee willingly as their King?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Even so, in the Minster,&rdquo; Henry began, and would have
+said more, but Edgar again made his gesture of authority.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wilt thou grant them the charter of Alfred and Edward, with
+copies spread throughout the land?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wilt thou do equal justice between English and Norman?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To the best of my power.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wilt thou bring home the Archbishop, fill up the dioceses,
+do thy part by the Church?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So help me God, I will.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then, Henry of Normandy, I, Edgar Atheling, kiss thine hand,
+and become thy man; and may God deal with thee, as thou dost with England.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The noble form of Edgar bent before the slighter younger figure of
+Henry, who burst into tears, genuine at the moment, and vowed most earnestly
+to be a good King to the entire people.&nbsp; No doubt, he meant it&mdash;then.</p>
+<p>And now&mdash;far more humbly, he made his suit to the Atheling for
+the hand of his niece.</p>
+<p>Edgar took her apart.&nbsp; &ldquo;Edith, canst thou brook this man?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Uncle, he was good to me when we were children together at
+the old King&rsquo;s Court.&nbsp; I have made no vows, I tore the veil
+mine aunt threw over me from mine head.&nbsp; Methinks with me beside
+him he would never be hard to our people.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So be it then, Edith.&nbsp; If he holds to this purpose when
+he hath been crowned at Westminster, he shall have thee, though I fear
+thou hast chosen a hard lot, and wilt rue the day when thou didst quit
+these peaceful walls.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And one more stipulation was made by Edgar the Atheling, ere he rode
+to own Henry as King in the face of the English people at Westminster&mdash;namely,
+that Boyatt should be restored to the true heiress the Lady Elftrud.&nbsp;
+And to Roger, compensation was secretly made at the Atheling&rsquo;s
+expense, ere departing with Bertram in his train for the Holy War.&nbsp;
+For Bertram could not look at the scar without feeling himself a Crusader;
+and Edgar judged it better for England to remove himself for awhile,
+while he laid all earthly aspirations at the Feet of the King of kings.</p>
+<p>The little English troop arrived just in time to share in the capture
+of the Holy City, to join in the eager procession of conquerors to the
+Holy Sepulchre, and to hear Godfrey de Bouillon elected to defend the
+sacred possession, refusing to wear a crown where the King of Saints
+and Lord of Heaven and Earth had worn a Crown of Thorns.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>SIGBERT&rsquo;S GUERDON</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>A feudal castle, of massive stone, with donjon keep and high crenellated
+wall, gateway tower, moat and drawbridge, was a strange, incongruous
+sight in one of the purple-red stony slopes of Palestine, with Hermon&rsquo;s
+snowy peak rising high above.&nbsp; It was accounted for, however, by
+the golden crosses of the kingdom of Jerusalem waving above the watch-tower,
+that rose like a pointing finger above the keep, in company with a lesser
+ensign bearing a couchant hound, sable.</p>
+<p>It was a narrow rocky pass that the Castle of Gebel-Aroun guarded,
+overlooking a winding ravine between the spurs of the hills, descending
+into the fertile plain of Esdraelon from the heights of Galilee Hills,
+noted in many an Israelite battle, and now held by the Crusaders.</p>
+<p>Bare, hard, and rocky were the hills around&mdash;the slopes and
+the valley itself, which in the earlier season had been filled with
+rich grass, Calvary clover, blood-red anemones, and pale yellow amaryllis,
+only showed their arid brown or gray remnants.&nbsp; The moat had become
+a deep waterless cleft; and beneath, on the accessible sides towards
+the glen, clustered a collection of black horsehair tents, the foremost
+surmounted by the ill-omened crescent.</p>
+<p>The burning sun had driven every creature under shelter, and no one
+was visible; but well was it known that watch and ward was closely kept
+from beneath those dark tents, that to the eyes within had the air of
+couching beasts of prey.&nbsp; Yes, couching to devour what could not
+fail to be theirs, in spite of the mighty walls of rock and impregnable
+keep, for those deadly and insidious foes, hunger and thirst, were within,
+gaining the battle for the Saracens without, who had merely to wait
+in patience for the result.</p>
+<p>Some years previously, Sir William de Hundberg, a Norman knight,
+had been expelled from his English castle by the partisans of Stephen,
+and with wife and children had followed Count Fulk of Anjou to his kingdom
+of Palestine, and had been endowed by him with one of the fortresses
+which guarded the passes of Galilee, under that exaggeration of the
+feudal system which prevailed in the crusading kingdom of Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>Climate speedily did its work with the lady, warfare with two of
+her sons, and there only remained of the family a youth of seventeen,
+Walter, and his sister Mabel, fourteen, who was already betrothed to
+the young Baron of Courtwood, then about to return to England.&nbsp;
+The treaty with Stephen and the success of young Henry of Anjou gave
+Sir William hopes of restitution; but just as he was about to conduct
+her to Jerusalem for the wedding, before going back to England, he fell
+sick of one of the recurring fevers of the country; and almost at the
+same time the castle was beleaguered by a troop of Arabs, under the
+command of a much-dreaded Sheik.</p>
+<p>His constitution was already much shaken, and Sir William, after
+a few days of alternate torpor and delirium, passed away, without having
+been conscious enough to leave any counsel to his children, or any directions
+to Father Philip, the chaplain, or Sigbert, his English squire.</p>
+<p>At the moment, sorrow was not disturbed by any great alarm, for the
+castle was well victualled, and had a good well, supplied by springs
+from the mountains; and Father Philip, after performing the funeral
+rites for his lord, undertook to make his way to Tiberias, or to Jerusalem,
+with tidings of their need; and it was fully anticipated that succour
+would arrive long before the stores in the castle had been exhausted.</p>
+<p>But time went on, and, though food was not absolutely lacking, the
+spring of water which had hitherto supplied the garrison began to fail.&nbsp;
+Whether through summer heats, or whether the wily enemy had succeeded
+in cutting off the source, where once there had been a clear crystal
+pool in the rock, cold as the snow from which it came, there only dribbled
+a few scanty drops, caught with difficulty, and only imbibed from utter
+necessity, so great was the suspicion of their being poisoned by the
+enemy.</p>
+<p>The wine was entirely gone, and the salted provision, which alone
+remained, made the misery of thirst almost unbearable.</p>
+<p>On the cushions, richly embroidered in dainty Eastern colouring,
+lay Mabel de Hundberg, with dry lips half opened and panting, too weary
+to move, yet listening all intent.</p>
+<p>Another moment, and in chamois leather coat, his helmet in hand,
+entered her brother from the turret stair, and threw himself down hopelessly,
+answering her gesture.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no, of course no.&nbsp; The dust was only from another
+swarm of those hateful Saracens.&nbsp; I knew it would be so.&nbsp;
+Pah! it has made my tongue more like old boot leather than ever.&nbsp;
+Have no more drops been squeezed from the well?&nbsp; It&rsquo;s time
+the cup was filled!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was Roger&rsquo;s turn.&nbsp; Sigbert said he should have
+the next,&rdquo; said Mabel.</p>
+<p>Walter uttered an imprecation upon Roger, and a still stronger one
+on Sigbert&rsquo;s meddling.&nbsp; But instantly the cry was, &ldquo;Where
+is Sigbert?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Walter even took the trouble to shout up and down the stair for Sigbert,
+and to demand hotly of the weary, dejected men-at-arms where Sigbert
+was; but no one could tell.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Gone over to the enemy, the old traitor,&rdquo; said Walter,
+again dropping on the divan.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never!&nbsp; Sigbert is no traitor,&rdquo; returned his sister.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is an English churl, and all churls are traitors,&rdquo;
+responded Walter.</p>
+<p>The old nurse, who was fitfully fanning Mabel with a dried palm-leaf,
+made a growl of utter dissent, and Mabel exclaimed, &ldquo;None was
+ever so faithful as good old Sigbert.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was a promising quarrel, but their lips were too dry to keep it
+up for more than a snarl or two.&nbsp; Walter cast himself down, and
+bade old Tata fan him; why should Mabel have it all to herself?</p>
+<p>Then sounds of wrangling were heard below, and Walter roused himself
+to go down and interfere.&nbsp; The men were disputing over some miserable
+dregs of wine at the bottom of a skin.&nbsp; Walter shouted to call
+them to order, but they paid little heed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do not meddle and make, young sir,&rdquo; said a low-browed,
+swarthy fellow.&nbsp; &ldquo;There&rsquo;s plenty of cool drink of the
+right sort out there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Traitor!&rdquo; cried Walter; &ldquo;better die than yield.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If one have no mind for dying like an old crab in a rock,&rdquo;
+said the man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They would think nought of making an end of us out there,&rdquo;
+said another.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d as lief be choked at once by a cord as by thirst,&rdquo;
+was the answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That you are like to be, if you talk such treason,&rdquo;
+threatened Walter.&nbsp; &ldquo;Seize him, Richard&mdash;Martin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Richard and Martin, however, hung back, one muttering that Gil had
+done nothing, and the other that he might be in the right of it; and
+when Walter burst out in angry threats he was answered in a gruff voice
+that he had better take care what he said, &ldquo;There was no standing
+not only wasting with thirst and hunger, but besides being blustered
+at by a hot-headed lad, that scarce knew a hauberk from a helmet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Walter, in his rage, threw himself with drawn sword on the mutineer,
+but was seized and dragged back by half a dozen stalwart arms, such
+as he had no power to resist, and he was held fast amid rude laughs
+and brutal questions whether he should thus be carried to the Saracens,
+and his sister with him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The old Sheik would give a round sum for a fair young damsel
+like her!&rdquo; were the words that maddened her brother into a desperate
+struggle, baffled with a hoarse laugh by the men-at-arms, who were keeping
+him down, hand and foot, when a new voice sounded: &ldquo;How now, fellows!&nbsp;
+What&rsquo;s this?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In one moment Walter was released and on his feet, and the men fell
+back, ashamed and gloomy, as a sturdy figure, with sun-browned face,
+light locks worn away by the helmet, and slightly grizzled, stood among
+them, in a much-rubbed and soiled chamois leather garment.</p>
+<p>Walter broke out into passionate exclamations; the men, evidently
+ashamed, met them with murmurs and growls.&nbsp; &ldquo;Bad enough,
+bad enough!&rdquo; broke in Sigbert; &ldquo;but there&rsquo;s no need
+to make it worse.&nbsp; Better to waste with hunger and thirst than
+be a nidering fellow&mdash;rising against your lord in his distress.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We would never have done it if he would have kept a civil
+tongue.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Civility&rsquo;s hard to a tongue dried up,&rdquo; returned
+Sigbert.&nbsp; &ldquo;But look you here, comrades, leave me a word with
+my young lord here, and I plight my faith that you shall have enow to
+quench your thirst within six hours at the least.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was an attempt at a cheer, broken by the murmur, &ldquo;We
+have heard enough of that!&nbsp; It is always six hours and six hours.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the Saracen hounds outside would at least give us a draught
+of water ere they made away with us,&rdquo; said another.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Saracens, forsooth!&rdquo; said Sigbert.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+shall leave the Saracens far behind you.&nbsp; A few words first with
+my lord, and you shall hear.&nbsp; Meanwhile, you, John Cook, take all
+the beef remaining; make it in small fardels, such as a man may easily
+carry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s soon done,&rdquo; muttered the cook.&nbsp; &ldquo;The
+entire weight would scarce bow a lad&rsquo;s shoulders.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The rest of you put together what you would save from the
+enemy, and is not too heavy to carry.&rdquo;&nbsp; One man made some
+attempt at growling at a mere lad being consulted, while the stout warriors
+were kept in ignorance; but the spirit of discipline and confidence
+had returned with Sigbert, and no one heeded the murmur.&nbsp; Meantime,
+Sigbert followed the young Lord Walter up the rough winding stairs to
+the chamber where Mabel lay on her cushions.&nbsp; &ldquo;What! what!&rdquo;
+demanded the boy, pausing to enter.&nbsp; Sigbert, by way of answer,
+quietly produced from some hidden pouch two figs.&nbsp; Walter snatched
+at one with a cry of joy.&nbsp; Mabel held out her hand, then, with
+a gasp, drew it back.&nbsp; &ldquo;Has Roger had one?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sigbert signed in the affirmative, and Mabel took a bite of the luscious
+fruit with a gasp of pleasure, yet paused once more to hold the remainder
+to her nurse.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Saints bless you, my sweet lamb!&rdquo; exclaimed the
+old woman; &ldquo;finish it yourself.&nbsp; I could not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you don&rsquo;t want it, give it to me,&rdquo; put in Walter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For shame, my lord,&rdquo; Sigbert did not scruple to say,
+nor could the thirsty girl help finishing the refreshing morsel, while
+Walter, with some scanty murmur of excuse, demanded where it came from,
+and what Sigbert had meant by promises of safety.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said Sigbert, &ldquo;you may remember how some
+time back your honoured father threw one of the fellaheen into the dungeon
+for maiming old Leo.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The villain!&nbsp; I remember.&nbsp; I thought he was hanged.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir.&nbsp; He escaped.&nbsp; I went to take him food,
+and he was gone!&nbsp; I then found an opening in the vault, of which
+I spoke to none, save your father, for fear of mischief; but I built
+it up with stones.&nbsp; Now, in our extremity, I bethought me of it,
+and resolved to try whether the prisoner had truly escaped, for where
+he went, we might go.&nbsp; Long and darksome is the way underground,
+but it opens at last through one of the old burial-places of the Jews
+into the thickets upon the bank of the Jordan.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Jordan!&nbsp; Little short of a league!&rdquo; exclaimed
+Walter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A league, underground, and in the dark,&rdquo; sighed Mabel.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Better than starving here like a rat in a trap,&rdquo; returned
+her brother.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah yes; oh yes!&nbsp; I will think of the cool river and the
+trees at the end.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will find chill enough, lady, long ere you reach the river,&rdquo;
+said Sigbert.&nbsp; &ldquo;You must wrap yourself well.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis
+an ugsome passage; but your heart must not fail you, for it is the only
+hope left us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The two young people were far too glad to hear of any prospect of
+release, to think much of the dangers or discomforts of the mode.&nbsp;
+Walter danced for joy up and down the room like a young colt, as he
+thought of being in a few hours more in the free open air, with the
+sound of water rippling below, and the shade of trees above him.&nbsp;
+Mabel threw herself on her knees before her rude crucifix, partly in
+thankfulness, partly in dread of the passage that was to come first.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Like going through the grave to life,&rdquo; she murmured
+to her nurse.</p>
+<p>And when the scanty garrison was gathered together, as many as possible
+provided with brands that might serve as torches, and Sigbert led them,
+lower and lower, down rugged steps hewn in the rock, through vaults
+where only a gleam came from above, and then through deeper cavernous
+places, intensely dark, there was a shudder perceptible by the clank
+and rattle of the armour which each had donned.&nbsp; In the midst,
+Walter paused and exclaimed&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Our banner!&nbsp; How leave it to the Paynim dogs?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s here, sir,&rdquo; said Sigbert, showing a bundle
+on his back.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Warning to the foe to break in and seek us,&rdquo; grumbled
+Gilbert.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not so,&rdquo; replied Sigbert.&nbsp; &ldquo;I borrowed an
+old wrapper of nurse&rsquo;s that will cheat their eyes till we shall
+be far beyond their ken.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In the last dungeon a black opening lay before them, just seen by
+the light of the lamp Sigbert carried, but so low that there was no
+entrance save on hands and knees.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That den!&rdquo; exclaimed Walter.&nbsp; &ldquo;&rsquo;Tis
+a rat-hole.&nbsp; Never can we go that way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have tried it, sir,&rdquo; quoth Sigbert.&nbsp; &ldquo;Where
+I can go, you can go.&nbsp; Your sister quails not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is fearful,&rdquo; said Mabel, unable to repress a shiver;
+&ldquo;but, Walter, think what is before us if we stay here!&nbsp; The
+Saints will guard us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The worst and lowest part only lasts for a few rods,&rdquo;
+explained Sigbert.&nbsp; &ldquo;Now, sir, give your orders.&nbsp; Torches
+and lanterns, save Hubert&rsquo;s and nurse&rsquo;s, to be extinguished.&nbsp;
+We cannot waste them too soon, but beware of loosing hold on them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Walter repeated the orders thus dictated to him, and Sigbert arranged
+the file.&nbsp; It was absolutely needful that Sigbert should go first
+to lead the way.&nbsp; Mabel was to follow him for the sake of his help,
+then her brother, next nurse, happily the only other female.&nbsp; Between
+two stout and trustworthy men the wounded Roger came.&nbsp; Then one
+after another the rest of the men-at-arms and servants, five-and-twenty
+in number.&nbsp; The last of the file was Hubert, with a lamp; the others
+had to move in darkness.&nbsp; There had been no horse of any value
+in the castle, for the knight&rsquo;s charger had been mortally hurt
+in his last expedition, and there had been no opportunity of procuring
+another.&nbsp; A deerhound, however, pushed and scrambled to the front,
+and Sigbert observed that he might be of great use in running before
+them.&nbsp; Before entering, however, Sigbert gave the caution that
+no word nor cry must be uttered aloud, hap what might, until permission
+was given, for they would pass under the Saracen camp, and there was
+no knowing whether the sounds would reach the ears above ground.</p>
+<p>A strange plunge it was into the utter darkness, crawling on hands
+and knees, with the chill cavernous gloom and rock seeming to press
+in upon those who slowly crept along, the dim light of Sigbert&rsquo;s
+lamp barely showing as he slowly moved on before.&nbsp; One of the two
+in the rear was dropped and extinguished in the dismal passage, a loss
+proclaimed by a suppressed groan passing along the line, and a louder
+exclamation from Walter, causing Sigbert to utter a sharp &lsquo;Hush!&rsquo;
+enforced by a thud and tramp above, as if the rock were coming down
+on them, but which probably was the trampling of horses in the camp
+above.</p>
+<p>The smoke of the lamp in front drifted back, and the air was more
+and more oppressive.&nbsp; Mabel, with set teeth and compressed lips,
+struggled on, clinging tight to the end of the cord which Sigbert had
+tied to his body for her to hold by, while in like manner Walter&rsquo;s
+hand was upon her dress.&nbsp; It became more and more difficult to
+breathe, or crawl on, till at last, just as there was a sense that it
+was unbearable, and that it would be easier to lie still and die than
+be dragged an inch farther, the air became freer, the roof seemed to
+be farther away, the cavern wider, and the motion freer.</p>
+<p>Sigbert helped his young lady to stand upright, and one by one all
+the train regained their feet.&nbsp; The lamp was passed along to be
+rekindled, speech was permitted, crevices above sometimes admitted air,
+sometimes dripped with water.&nbsp; The worst was over&mdash;probably
+the first part had been excavated, the farther portion was one of the
+many natural &lsquo;dens and caves of the earth,&rsquo; in which Palestine
+abounds.&nbsp; There was still a considerable distance to be traversed,
+the lamps burnt out, and had to be succeeded by torches carefully husbanded,
+for the way was rough and rocky, and a stumble might end in a fall into
+an abyss.&nbsp; In time, however, openings of side galleries were seen,
+niches in the wall, and tokens that the outer portion of the cavern
+had been once a burial-place of the ancient Israelites&mdash;&lsquo;the
+dog Jews,&rsquo; as the Crusaders called them, with a shudder of loathing
+and contempt.</p>
+<p>And joy infinite&mdash;clear daylight and a waving tree were perceptible
+beyond.&nbsp; It was daylight, was it? but the sun was low.&nbsp; Five
+hours at least had been spent in that dismal transit, before the exhausted,
+soiled, and chilled company stepped forth into a green thicket with
+the Jordan rushing far below.&nbsp; Five weeks&rsquo; siege in a narrow
+fortress, then the two miles of subterranean struggle&mdash;these might
+well make the grass beneath the wild sycamore, the cork-tree, the long
+reeds, the willows, above all, the sound of the flowing water, absolute
+ecstasy.&nbsp; There was an instant rush for the river, impeded by many
+a thorn-bush and creeper; but almost anything green was welcome at the
+moment, and the only disappointment was at the height and steepness
+of the banks of rock.&nbsp; However, at last one happy man found a place
+where it was possible to climb down to the shingly bed of the river,
+close to a great mass of the branching headed papyrus reed.&nbsp; Into
+the muddy but eminently sweet water most of them waded; helmets became
+cups, hands scooped up the water, there were gasps of joy and refreshment
+and blessing on the cool wave so long needed.</p>
+<p>Sigbert and Walter between them helped down Mabel and her nurse,
+and found a secure spot for them, where weary faces, feet, and hands
+might be laved in the pool beneath a rock.</p>
+<p>Then, taking up a bow and arrows laid down by one of the men, Sigbert
+applied himself to the endeavour to shoot some of the water-fowl which
+were flying wildly about over the reeds in the unwonted disturbance
+caused by the bathers.&nbsp; He brought down two or three of the duck
+kind, and another of the party had bethought him of angling with a string
+and one of the only too numerous insects, and had caught sundry of the
+unsuspecting and excellent fish.&nbsp; He had also carefully preserved
+a little fire, and, setting his boy to collect fuel, he produced embers
+enough to cook both fish and birds sufficiently to form an appetising
+meal for those who had been reduced to scraps of salt food for full
+a fortnight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All is well so far,&rdquo; said Walter, with his little lordly
+air.&nbsp; &ldquo;We have arranged our retreat with great skill.&nbsp;
+The only regret is that I have been forced to leave the castle to the
+enemy! the castle we were bound to defend.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, sir, if it be your will,&rdquo; said Sigbert, &ldquo;the
+tables might yet be turned on the Saracen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With great eagerness Walter asked how this could be, and Sigbert
+reminded him that many a time it had been observed from the tower that,
+though the Saracens kept careful watch on the gates of the besieged
+so as to prevent a sally, they left the rear of their camp absolutely
+undefended, after the ordinary Eastern fashion, and Sigbert, with some
+dim recollection of rhymed chronicles of Gideon and of Jonathan, believed
+that these enemies might be surprised after the same fashion as theirs.&nbsp;
+Walter leapt up for joy, but Sigbert had to remind him that the sun
+was scarcely set, and that time must be given for the Saracens to fall
+asleep before the attack; besides that, his own men needed repose.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is all the distance to be traversed,&rdquo; said Walter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Barely a league, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was hard to believe that the space, so endless underground, was
+so short above, and Walter was utterly incredulous, till, climbing the
+side of the ravine so high as to be above the trees, Sigbert showed
+him the familiar landmarks known in hunting excursions with his father.&nbsp;
+He was all eagerness; but Sigbert insisted on waiting till past midnight
+before moving, that the men might have time to regain their vigour by
+sleep, and also that there might be time for the Saracens to fall into
+the deepest of all slumbers in full security.</p>
+<p>The moon was low in the West when Sigbert roused the party, having
+calculated that it would light them on the way, but would be set by
+the time the attack was to be made.</p>
+<p>For Mabel&rsquo;s security it was arranged that a small and most
+unwilling guard should remain with her, near enough to be able to perceive
+how matters went; and if there appeared to be defeat and danger for
+her brother, there would probably be full time to reach Tiberias even
+on foot.</p>
+<p>However, the men of the party had little fear that flight would be
+needed, for, though perhaps no one would have thought of the scheme
+for himself, there was a general sense that what Sigbert devised was
+prudent, and that he would not imperil his young lord and lady upon
+a desperate venture.</p>
+<p>Keeping well and compactly together, the little band moved on, along
+arid, rocky paths, starting now and then at the howls of the jackals
+which gradually gathered into a pack, and began to follow, as if&mdash;some
+one whispered&mdash;they scented prey, &ldquo;On whom?&rdquo; was the
+question.</p>
+<p>On a cliff looking down on the Arab camp, and above it on the dark
+mass of the castle, where, in the watch-tower, Sigbert had left a lamp
+burning, they halted just as the half-moon was dipping below the heights
+towards the Mediterranean.&nbsp; Here the Lady Mabel and her guard were
+to wait until they heard the sounds which to their practised ears would
+show how the fight went.</p>
+<p>The Arab shout of victory they knew only too well, and it was to
+be the signal of flight towards Tiberias; but if success was with the
+assailants, the war-cry &lsquo;Deus vult,&rsquo; and &lsquo;St. Hubert
+for Hundberg,&rsquo; were to be followed by the hymn of victory as the
+token that it was safe to descend.</p>
+<p>All was dark, save for the magnificent stars of an Eastern night,
+as Mabel, her nurse, and the five men, commanded by the wounded Roger,
+stood silently praying while listening intently to the muffled tramp
+of their own people, descending on the blacker mass denoting the Saracen
+tents.</p>
+<p>The sounds of feet died away, only the jackal&rsquo;s whine and moan,
+were heard.&nbsp; Then suddenly came a flash of lights in different
+directions, and shouts here, there, everywhere, cries, yells, darkness,
+an undistinguishable medley of noise, the shrill shriek of the Moslem,
+and the exulting war-cry of the Christian ringing farther and farther
+off, in the long valley leading towards the Jordan fords.</p>
+<p>Dawn began to break&mdash;overthrown tents could be seen.&nbsp; Mabel
+had time to wonder whether she was forgotten, when the hymn began to
+sound, pealing on her ears up the pass, and she had not had time for
+more than an earnest thanksgiving, and a few steps down the rocky pathway,
+before a horse&rsquo;s tread was heard, and a man-at-arms came towards
+her leading a slender, beautiful Arab horse.&nbsp; &ldquo;All well!
+the young lord and all.&nbsp; The Saracens, surprised, fled without
+ever guessing the number of their foes.&nbsp; The Sheik made prisoner
+in his tent.&nbsp; Ay, and a greater still, the Emir Hussein Bey, who
+had arrived to take possession of the castle only that very evening.&nbsp;
+What a ransom he would pay!&nbsp; Horses and all were taken, the spoil
+of the country round, and Master Sigbert had sent this palfrey for Lady
+Mabel to ride down.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Perhaps Sigbert, in all his haste and occupation, had been able to
+discern that the gentle little mare was not likely to display the Arab
+steed&rsquo;s perilous attachment to a master, for Mabel was safely
+mounted, and ere sunrise was greeted by her joyous and victorious brother.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Is not this noble, sister?&nbsp; Down went the Pagan dogs before
+my good sword!&nbsp; There are a score of them dragged off to the dead
+man&rsquo;s hollow for the jackals and vultures; but I kept one fellow
+uppermost to show you the gash I made!&nbsp; Come and see.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Roger here observed that the horse might grow restive at the carcase,
+and Mabel was excused the sight, though Walter continued to relate his
+exploits, and demand whether he had not won his spurs by so grand a
+ruse and victory.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Truly I think Sigbert has,&rdquo; said his sister.&nbsp; &ldquo;It
+was all his doing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sigbert, an English churl!&nbsp; What are you thinking of,
+Mabel?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am thinking to whom the honour is due.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are a mere child, sister, or you would know better.&nbsp;
+Sigbert is a very fair squire; but what is a squire&rsquo;s business
+but to put his master in the way of honour?&nbsp; Do not talk such folly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mabel was silenced, and after being conducted across the bare trampled
+ground among the tents of the Arabs, she re-entered the castle, where
+in the court groups of disarmed Arabs stood, their bournouses pulled
+over their brows, their long lances heaped in a corner, grim and disconsolate
+at their discomfiture and captivity.</p>
+<p>A repast of stewed kid, fruit, and sherbet was prepared for her and
+her brother from the spoil, after which both were weary enough to throw
+themselves on their cushions for a long sound sleep.</p>
+<p>Mabel slept the longer, and when she awoke, she found that the sun
+was setting, and that supper was nearly ready.</p>
+<p>Walter met her just as she had arranged her dress, to bid nurse make
+ready her bales, for they were to start at dawn on the morrow for Tiberias.&nbsp;
+It was quite possible that the enemy might return in force to deliver
+their Emir.&nbsp; A small garrison, freshly provisioned, could hold
+out the castle until relief could be sent; but it would be best to conduct
+the two important prisoners direct to the King, to say nothing of Walter&rsquo;s
+desire to present them and to display these testimonies of his prowess
+before the Court of Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>The Emir was a tall, slim, courteous Arab, with the exquisite manners
+of the desert.&nbsp; Both he and the Sheik were invited to the meal.&nbsp;
+Both looked startled and shocked at the entrance of the fair-haired
+damsel, and the Sheik crouched in a corner, with a savage glare in his
+eye like a freshly caught wild beast, though the Emir sat cross-legged
+on the couch eating, and talking in the <i>lingua Franca</i>, which
+was almost a native tongue, to the son and daughter of the Crusader.&nbsp;
+From him Walter learnt that King Fulk was probably at Tiberias, and
+this quickened the eagerness of all for a start.&nbsp; It took place
+in the earliest morning, so as to avoid the heat of the day.&nbsp; How
+different from the departure in the dark underground passage!</p>
+<p>Horses enough had been captured to afford the Emir and the Sheik
+each his own beautiful steed (the more readily that the creatures could
+hardly have been ridden by any one else), and their parole was trusted
+not to attempt to escape.&nbsp; Walter, Mabel, Sigbert, and Roger were
+also mounted, and asses were found in the camp for the nurse, and the
+men who had been hurt in the night&rsquo;s surprise.</p>
+<p>The only mischance on the way was that in the noontide halt, just
+as the shimmer of the Lake of Galilee met their eyes, under a huge terebinth-tree,
+growing on a rock, when all, except Sigbert, had composed themselves
+to a siesta, there was a sudden sound of loud and angry altercation,
+and, as the sleepers started up, the Emir was seen grasping the bridle
+of the horse on which the Sheik sat downcast and abject under the storm
+of fierce indignant words hurled at him for thus degrading his tribe
+and all Islam by breaking his plighted word to the Christian.</p>
+<p>This was in Arabic, and the Emir further insisted on his prostrating
+himself to ask pardon, while he himself in <i>lingua Franca</i> explained
+that the man was of a low and savage tribe of Bedouins, who knew not
+how to keep faith.</p>
+<p>Walter broke out in loud threats, declaring that the traitor dog
+ought to be hung up at once on the tree, or dragged along with hands
+tied behind him; but Sigbert contented himself with placing a man at
+each side of his horse&rsquo;s head, as they proceeded on their way
+to the strongly fortified town of the ancient Herods, perched at the
+head of the dark gray Lake of Galilee, shut in by mountain peaks.&nbsp;
+The second part of the journey was necessarily begun in glowing heat,
+for it was most undesirable to have to spend a night in the open country,
+and it was needful to push on to a fortified hospice or monastery of
+St. John, which formed a half-way house.</p>
+<p>Weary, dusty, athirst, they came in sight of it in the evening; and
+Walter and Roger rode forward to request admittance.&nbsp; The porter
+begged them to wait when he heard that the party included women and
+Saracen prisoners; and Walter began to storm.&nbsp; However, a few moments
+more brought a tall old Knight Hospitalier to the gate, and he made
+no difficulties as to lodging the Saracens in a building at the end
+of the Court, where they could be well guarded; and Mabel and her nurse
+were received in a part of the precincts appropriated to female pilgrims.</p>
+<p>It was a bare and empty place, a round turret over the gateway, with
+a stone floor, and a few mats rolled up in the corner, mats which former
+pilgrims had not left in an inviting condition.</p>
+<p>However, the notions of comfort of the twelfth century were not exacting.&nbsp;
+Water to wash away the dust of travel was brought to the door, and was
+followed by a substantial meal on roasted kid and thin cakes of bread.&nbsp;
+Sigbert came up with permission for the women to attend compline, though
+only strictly veiled; and Mabel knelt in the little cool cryptlike chapel,
+almost like the late place of her escape, and returned thanks for the
+deliverance from their recent peril.</p>
+<p>Then, fresh mats and cushions having been supplied, the damsel and
+her nurse slept profoundly, and were only roused by a bell for a mass
+in the darkness just before dawn, after which they again set forth,
+the commander of the Hospice himself, and three or four knights, accompanying
+them, and conversing familiarly with the Emir on the current interests
+of Palestine.</p>
+<p>About half-way onward, the glint and glitter of spears was seen amid
+a cloud of dust on the hill-path opposite.&nbsp; The troop drew together
+on their guard, though, as the Hospitalier observed, from the side of
+Tiberias an enemy could scarcely come.&nbsp; A scout was sent forward
+to reconnoitre; but, even before he came spurring joyously back, the
+golden crosses of Jerusalem had been recognised, and confirmed his tidings
+that it was the rearguard of the army, commanded by King Fulk himself,
+on the way to the relief of the Castle of Gebel-Aroun.</p>
+<p>In a brief half-hour more, young Walter de Hundberg, with his sister
+by his side, was kneeling before an alert, slender, wiry figure in plain
+chamois leather, with a worn sunburnt face and keen blue eyes&mdash;Fulk
+of Anjou&mdash;who had resigned his French county to lead the crusading
+cause in Palestine.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stand up, fair youth, and tell thy tale, and how thou hast
+forestalled our succour.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Walter told his tale of the blockaded castle, the underground passage,
+and the dexterous surprise of the besiegers, ending by presenting, not
+ungracefully, his captives to the pleasure of the King.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, this is well done!&rdquo; exclaimed Fulk.&nbsp; &ldquo;Thou
+art a youth of promise, and wilt well be a prop to our grandson&rsquo;s
+English throne.&nbsp; Thou shalt take knighthood from mine own hand
+as thy prowess well deserveth.&nbsp; And thou, fair damsel, here is
+one whom we could scarce hold back from rushing with single hand to
+deliver his betrothed.&nbsp; Sir Raymond of Courtwood, you are balked
+of winning thy lady at the sword&rsquo;s point, but thou wilt scarce
+rejoice the less.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A dark-eyed, slender young knight, in bright armour, drew towards
+Mabel, and she let him take her hand; but she was intent on something
+else, and exclaimed&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, sir, Sir King, let me speak one word!&nbsp; The guerdon
+should not be only my brother&rsquo;s.&nbsp; The device that served
+us was&mdash;our squire&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Baron of Courtwood uttered a fierce exclamation.&nbsp; Walter
+muttered, &ldquo;Mabel, do not be such a meddling fool&rdquo;; but the
+King asked, &ldquo;And who may this same squire be?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An old English churl,&rdquo; said Walter impatiently.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;My father took him as his squire for want of a better.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And he has been like a father to us,&rdquo; added Mabel</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Silence, sister!&nbsp; It is not for you to speak!&rdquo;
+petulantly cried Walter.&nbsp; &ldquo;Not that the Baron of Courtwood
+need be jealous,&rdquo; added he, laughing somewhat rudely.&nbsp; &ldquo;Where
+is the fellow?&nbsp; Stand forth, Sigbert.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Travel and heat-soiled, sunburnt, gray, and ragged, armour rusted,
+leathern garment stained, the rugged figure came forward, footsore and
+lame, for he had given up his horse to an exhausted man-at-arms.&nbsp;
+A laugh went round at the bare idea of the young lady&rsquo;s preferring
+such a form to the splendid young knight, her destined bridegroom.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is this the esquire who hath done such good service, according
+to the young lady?&rdquo; asked the King.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, sir,&rdquo; returned Walter; &ldquo;he is true and faithful
+enough, though nothing to be proud of in looks; and he served us well
+in my sally and attack.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was his&mdash;&rdquo; Mabel tried to say, but Sigbert hushed
+her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let be, let be, my sweet lady; it was but my bounden duty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s that?&nbsp; Speak out what passes there,&rdquo;
+demanded young Courtwood, half-jealously still.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A mere English villein, little better than a valet of the
+camp!&rdquo; were the exclamations around.&nbsp; &ldquo;A noble damsel
+take note of him!&nbsp; Fie for shame!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He has been true and brave,&rdquo; said the King.&nbsp; &ldquo;Dost
+ask a guerdon for him, young sir?&rdquo; he added to Walter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What wouldst have, old Sigbert?&rdquo; asked Walter, in a
+patronising voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I ask nothing, sir,&rdquo; returned the old squire.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;To have seen my lord&rsquo;s children in safety is all I wish.&nbsp;
+I have but done my duty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>King Fulk, who saw through the whole more clearly than some of those
+around, yet still had the true Angevin and Norman contempt for a Saxon,
+here said: &ldquo;Old man, thou art trusty and shrewd, and mayst be
+useful.&nbsp; Wilt thou take service as one of my men-at-arms?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou mayst,&rdquo; said Walter; &ldquo;thou art not bound
+to me.&nbsp; England hath enough of Saxon churls without thee, and I
+shall purvey myself an esquire of youthful grace and noble blood.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mabel looked at her betrothed and began to speak.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no, sweet lady, I will have none of that rough, old masterful
+sort about me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir King,&rdquo; said Sigbert, &ldquo;I thank thee heartily.&nbsp;
+I would still serve the Cross; but my vow has been, when my young lord
+and lady should need me no more, to take the Cross of St. John with
+the Hospitaliers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As a lay brother?&nbsp; Bethink thee,&rdquo; said Fulk of
+Anjou.&nbsp; &ldquo;Noble blood is needed for a Knight of the Order.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sigbert smiled slightly, in spite of all the sadness of his face,
+and the Knight Commander who had ridden with them, a Fleming by birth,
+said&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For that matter, Sir King, we are satisfied.&nbsp; Sigbert,
+the son of Sigfrid, hath proved his descent from the old English kings
+of the East Saxons, and the Order will rejoice to enrol in the novitiate
+so experienced a warrior.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is this indeed so?&rdquo; asked Fulk.&nbsp; &ldquo;A good
+lineage, even if English!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But rebel,&rdquo; muttered Courtwood.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is so, Sir King,&rdquo; said Sigbert.&nbsp; &ldquo;My father
+was disseised of the lands of Hundberg, and died in the fens fighting
+under Hereward le Wake.&nbsp; My mother dwelt under the protection of
+the Abbey of Colchester, and, by and by, I served under our Atheling,
+and, when King Henry&rsquo;s wars in Normandy were over, I followed
+the Lord of Hundberg&rsquo;s banner, because the men-at-arms were mine
+own neighbours, and his lady my kinswoman.&nbsp; Roger can testify to
+my birth and lineage.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So, thou art true heir of Hundberg, if that be the name of
+thine English castle?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, sir, save for the Norman!&nbsp; But I would not, if I
+could, meddle with thee, my young lord, though thou dost look at me
+askance, spite of having learnt of me to ride and use thy lance.&nbsp;
+I am the last of the English line of old Sigfrid the Wormbane, and a
+childless man, and I trust the land and the serfs will be well with
+thee, who art English born, and son to Wulfrida of Lexden.&nbsp; And
+I trust that thou, my sweet Lady Mabel, will be a happy bride and wife.&nbsp;
+All I look for is to end my days under the Cross, in the cause of the
+Holy Sepulchre, whether as warrior or lay brother.&nbsp; Yes, dear lady,
+that is enough for old Sigbert.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Mabel had to acquiesce and believe that her old friend found
+peace and gladness beneath the eight-pointed Cross, when she and her
+brother sailed for England, where she would behold the green fields
+and purple heather of which he had told her amid the rocks of Palestine.</p>
+<p>Moreover, she thought of him when on her way through France, she
+heard the young monk Bernard, then rising into fame, preach on the beleaguered
+city, saved by the poor wise man; and tell how, when the city was safe,
+none remembered the poor man.&nbsp; True, the preacher gave it a mystic
+meaning, and interpreted it as meaning the emphatically Poor Man by
+Whom Salvation came, and Whom too few bear in mind.&nbsp; Yet such a
+higher meaning did not exclude the thought of one whose deserts surpassed
+his honours here on earth.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>THE BEGGAR&rsquo;S LEGACY</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>An Alderman bold, Henry Smith was enrolled,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of
+the Silversmiths&rsquo; Company;<br />Highly praised was his name, his
+skill had high fame,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And a prosperous man was
+he.</p>
+<p>Knights drank to his health, and lauded his wealth;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sailors
+came from the Western Main,<br />Their prizes they sold, of ingots of
+gold,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or plate from the galleys of Spain.</p>
+<p>Then beakers full fine, to hold the red wine,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Were
+cast in his furnace&rsquo;s mould,<br />Or tankards rich chased, in
+intricate taste,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Gimmal rings of the purest gold.</p>
+<p>On each New Year&rsquo;s morn, no man thought it scorn&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Whether
+statesman, or warrior brave&mdash;<br />The choicest device, of costliest
+price,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For a royal off&rsquo;ring to crave.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bring here such a toy as the most may joy<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The
+eyes of our gracious Queen,<br />Rows of orient pearls, gold pins for
+her curls,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Silver network, all glistening sheen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Each buyer who came&mdash;lord, squire, or dame&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Behaved
+in most courteous guise,<br />Showing honour due, as to one they knew<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To
+be at once wealthy and wise.</p>
+<p>In London Guild Hall, the citizens all,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Esteemed
+him their future Lord Mayor;<br />Not one did he meet, in market or
+street,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But made him a reverence fair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ho,&rdquo; said Master Smith, &ldquo;I will try the pith<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of
+this smooth-faced courtesy;<br />Do they prize myself, do they prize
+my pelf,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Do they value what&rsquo;s mine or me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His gold chain of pride he hath laid aside,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+furred gown of the scarlet red;<br />He set on his back a fardel and
+pack,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And a hood on his grizzled head.</p>
+<p>His &rsquo;prentices all he hath left in stall,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But
+running right close by his side,<br />In spite of his rags, guarding
+well his bags,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;His small Messan dog would abide.</p>
+<p>So thus, up and down, through village and town,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In
+rain or in sunny weather,<br />Through Surrey&rsquo;s fair land, his
+staff in his hand,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Went he and the dog together.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good folk, hear my prayer, of your bounty spare,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Help
+a wanderer in his need;<br />Better days I have seen, a rich man I have
+been,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Esteemed both in word and deed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In the first long street, certain forms he did meet,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But
+scarce might behold their faces;<br />From matted elf-locks eyes stared
+like an ox,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And shambling were their paces!</p>
+<p>Not one gave him cheer, nor would one come near,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As
+he turned him away to go,<br />Then a heavy stone at the dog was thrown,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To
+deal a right cowardly blow.</p>
+<p>In Mitcham&rsquo;s fair vale, the men &rsquo;gan to rail,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;Not
+a vagabond may come near;&rdquo;<br />Each mother&rsquo;s son ran, each
+boy and each man,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To summon the constable here.</p>
+<p>The cart&rsquo;s tail behind, the beggar they bind,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;They
+flogged him full long and full sore;<br />They hunted him out, did that
+rabble rout,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And bade him come thither no more!</p>
+<p>All weary and bruised, and scurvily used,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;He
+went trudging along his track;<br />The lesson was stern he had come
+to learn,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And yet he disdained to turn back.</p>
+<p>Where Walton-on-Thames gleams fair through the stems<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of
+its tufted willow palms,<br />There were loitering folk who most vilely
+spoke,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor would give him one groat in alms.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dog Smith,&rdquo; was the cry, &ldquo;behold him go by,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The
+fool who hath lost all he had!&rdquo;<br />For only to tease can delight
+and can please<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The ill-nurtured village lad.</p>
+<p>Behold, in Betchworth was a blazing hearth<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With
+a hospitable door.<br />&ldquo;Thou art tired and lame,&rdquo; quoth
+a kindly dame,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;Come taste of our humble
+store.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Though scant be our fare, thou art welcome to share;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We
+rejoice to give thee our best;<br />Come sit by our fire, thou weary
+old sire,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Come in, little doggie, and rest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And where Mole the slow doth by Cobham go,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;He
+beheld a small village maiden;<br />Of loose flocks of wool her lap
+was quite full,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With a bundle her arms were laden.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What seekest thou, child, &rsquo;mid the bushes wild,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Thy
+face and thine arms that thus tear?&rdquo;<br />&ldquo;The wool the
+sheep leave, to spin and to weave;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It makes us
+our clothes to wear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then she led him in, where her mother did spin,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+make barley bannocks to eat;<br />They gave him enough, though the food
+was rough&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The kindliness made it most
+sweet.</p>
+<p>Many years had past, report ran at last,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The
+rich Alderman Smith was dead.<br />Then each knight and dame, and each
+merchant came,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To hear his last testament read.</p>
+<p>I, Harry Smith, found of mind clear and sound,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Thus
+make and devise my last will:<br />While England shall stand, I bequeath
+my land,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My last legacies to fulfil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To the muddy spot, where they cleaned them not,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When
+amongst their fields I did roam;<br />To every one there with the unkempt
+hair<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I bequeath a small-toothed comb.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Next, to Mitcham proud, and the gaping crowd,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Who
+for nobody&rsquo;s sorrows grieve;<br />With a lash double-thong, plaited
+firm and strong,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A horsewhip full stout do I
+leave.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To Walton-on-Thames, where, &rsquo;mid willow stems,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The
+lads and the lasses idle;<br />To restrain their tongues, and breath
+of their lungs,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I bequeath a bit and a bridle.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To Betchworth so fair, and the households there<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Who
+so well did the stranger cheer,<br />I leave as my doles to the pious
+souls,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Full seventy pounds by the year.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To Cobham the thrifty I leave a good fifty,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To
+be laid out in cloth dyed dark;<br />On Sabbath-day to be given away,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+known by Smith&rsquo;s badge and mark.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To Leatherhead too my gratitude&rsquo;s due,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For
+a welcome most freely given;<br />Let my bounty remain, for each village
+to gain,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Whence the poor man was never driven.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So in each sweet dale, and bright sunny vale,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In
+the garden of England blest;<br />Those have found a friend, whose gifts
+do not end,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Who gave to that stranger a rest!</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Henry Smith&rsquo;s history is literally true.&nbsp; He was a silversmith
+of immense wealth in London in the latter part of the sixteenth century,
+but in his later years he chose to perambulate the county of Surrey
+as a beggar, and was known as &lsquo;Dog Smith.&rsquo;&nbsp; He met
+with various fortune in different parishes, and at Mitcham was flogged
+at the cart&rsquo;s tail.&nbsp; On his death, apparently in 1627, he
+was found to have left bequests to almost every place in Surrey, according
+to the manners of the inhabitants&mdash;to Mitcham a horsewhip, to Walton-on-Thames
+a bridle, to Betchworth, Leatherhead, and many more, endowments which
+produce from &pound;50 to &pound;75 a year, and to Cobham a sum to be
+spent annually in woollen cloth of a uniform colour, bearing Smith&rsquo;s
+badge, to be given away in church to the poor and impotent, as the following
+tablet still records:&mdash;</p>
+<p>1627</p>
+<p><i>Item</i>&mdash;That the Gift to the impotent and aged poor people,
+shall be bestowed in Apparell of one Coulour, with some Badge or other
+Mark, that it may be known to be the Gift of the said Henry Smith, or
+else in Bread, flesh, or fish on the Sabbath-day publickly in the Church.&nbsp;
+In Witness whereof the said Henry Smith did put to his Hand and seal
+the Twenty-first day of January in the Second Year of the Reign of our
+most gracious Sovereign Lord King Charles the First.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>A REVIEW OF NIECES</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>GENERAL SIR EDWARD FULFORD, K.G.C., <i>to his sister</i> MISS FULFORD<br />UNITED
+SERVICE CLUB, 29<i>th</i> <i>June.</i></p>
+<p>My Dear Charlotte,&mdash;I find I shall need at least a month to
+get through the necessary business; so that I shall only have a week
+at last for my dear mother and the party collected at New Cove.&nbsp;
+You will have ample time to decide which of the nieces shall be asked
+to accompany us, but you had better give no hint of the plan till you
+have studied them thoroughly.&nbsp; After all the years that you have
+accompanied me on all my stations, you know how much depends on the
+young lady of our house being one able to make things pleasant to the
+strange varieties who will claim our hospitality in a place like Malta,
+yet not likely to flag if left in solitude with you.&nbsp; She must
+be used enough to society to do the honours genially and gracefully,
+and not have her head turned by being the chief young lady in the place.&nbsp;
+She ought to be well bred, if not high bred, enough to give a tone to
+the society of her contemporaries, and above all she must not flirt.&nbsp;
+If I found flirtation going on with the officers, I should send her
+home on the spot.&nbsp; Of course, all this means that she must have
+the only real spring of good breeding, and be a thoroughly good, religious,
+unselfish, right-minded girl; otherwise we should have to rue our scheme.&nbsp;
+In spite of all you would do towards moulding and training a young maiden,
+there will be so many distractions and unavoidable counter-influences
+that the experiment would be too hazardous, unless there were a character
+and manners ready formed.&nbsp; There ought likewise to be cultivation
+and intelligence to profit by the opportunities she will have.&nbsp;
+I should not like Greece and Italy, to say nothing of Egypt and Palestine,
+to be only so much gape seed.&nbsp; You must have an eye likewise to
+good temper, equal to cope with the various emergencies of travelling.&nbsp;
+<i>N.B</i>.&nbsp; You should have more than one in your eye, for probably
+the first choice will be of some one too precious to be attainable.&mdash;Your
+affectionate brother,</p>
+<p>EDWARD FULFORD.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>MISS FULFORD <i>to</i> SIR EDWARD FULFORD<br />1 SHINGLE COTTAGES,
+NEW COVE, S. CLEMENTS, 30<i>th</i> <i>June.</i></p>
+<p>My Dear Edward,&mdash;When Sydney Smith led Perfection to the Pea
+because the Pea would not come to Perfection, he could hardly have had
+such an ideal as yours.&nbsp; Your intended niece is much like the &lsquo;not
+impossible she&rsquo; of a youth under twenty.&nbsp; One comfort is
+that such is the blindness of your kind that you will imagine all these
+charms in whatever good, ladylike, simple-hearted girl I pitch upon,
+and such I am sure I shall find all my nieces.&nbsp; The only difficulty
+will be in deciding, and that will be fixed by details of style, and
+the parents&rsquo; willingness to spare their child.</p>
+<p>This is an excellent plan of yours for bringing the whole family
+together round our dear old mother and her home daughter.&nbsp; This
+is the end house of three on a little promontory, and has a charming
+view&mdash;of the sea in the first place, and then on the one side of
+what is called by courtesy the parade, on the top of the sea wall where
+there is a broad walk leading to S. Clements, nearly two miles off.&nbsp;
+There are not above a dozen houses altogether, and the hotel is taken
+for the two families from London and Oxford, while the Druces are to
+be in the house but one next to us, the middle one being unluckily let
+off to various inhabitants.&nbsp; We have one bedroom free where we
+may lodge some of the overflowings, and I believe the whole party are
+to take their chief meals together in the large room at the hotel.&nbsp;
+The houses are mostly scattered, being such as fortunate skippers build
+as an investment, and that their wives may amuse themselves with lodgers
+in their absence.&nbsp; The church is the weakest point in this otherwise
+charming place.&nbsp; The nearest, and actually the parish church, is
+a hideous compo structure, built in the worst of times as a chapel of
+ease to S. Clements.&nbsp; I am afraid my mother&rsquo;s loyalty to
+the parochial system will make her secure a pew there, though at the
+farther end of the town there is a new church which is all that can
+be wished, and about a mile and a half inland there is a village church
+called Hollyford, held, I believe, by a former fellow-curate of Horace
+Druce.&nbsp; Perhaps they will exchange duties, if Horace can be persuaded
+to take a longer holiday than merely for the three weeks he has provided
+for at Bourne Parva.&nbsp; They cannot come till Monday week, but our
+Oxford professor and his party come on Thursday, and Edith will bring
+her girls the next day.&nbsp; Her husband, our Q.C., cannot come till
+his circuit is over, but of course you know more about his movements
+than I do.&nbsp; I wonder you have never said anything about those girls
+of his, but I suppose you class them as unattainable.&nbsp; I have said
+nothing to my mother or Emily of our plans, as I wish to be perfectly
+unbiased, and as I have seen none of the nieces for five years, and
+am prepared to delight in them all, I may be reckoned as a blank sheet
+as to their merits.&mdash;Your affectionate sister,</p>
+<p>CHARLOTTE FULFORD.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p><i>July</i> 4.&mdash;By noon to-day arrived Martyn, <a name="citation127"></a><a href="#footnote127">{127}</a>
+with Mary his wife, Margaret and Avice their daughters, Uchtred their
+second son, and poor Harry Fulford&rsquo;s orphan, Isabel, who has had
+a home with them ever since she left school.&nbsp; Though she is only
+a cousin once removed, she seems to fall into the category of eligible
+nieces, and indeed she seems the obvious companion for us, as she has
+no home, and seems to me rather set aside among the others.&nbsp; I
+hope there is no jealousy, for she is much better looking than her cousins,
+with gentle, liquid eyes, a pretty complexion, and a wistful expression.&nbsp;
+Moreover, she is dressed in a quiet ladylike way, whereas grandmamma
+looked out just now in the twilight and said, &ldquo;My dear Martyn,
+have you brought three boys down?&rdquo;&nbsp; It was a showery, chilly
+evening, and they were all out admiring the waves.&nbsp; Ulsters and
+sailor hats were appropriate enough then, but the genders were not easy
+to distinguish, especially as the elder girl wears her hair short&mdash;no
+improvement to a keen face which needs softening.&nbsp; She is much
+too like a callow undergraduate altogether, and her sister follows suit,
+though perhaps with more refinement of feature&mdash;indeed she looks
+delicate, and was soon called in.&nbsp; They are in slight mourning,
+and appear in gray serges.&nbsp; They left a strap of books on the sofa,
+of somewhat alarming light literature for the seaside.&nbsp; Bacon&rsquo;s
+<i>Essays and Elements of Logic</i> were the first Emily beheld, and
+while she stood regarding them with mingled horror and respect, in ran
+Avice to fetch them, as the two sisters are reading up for the Oxford
+exam&mdash;&lsquo;ination&rsquo; she added when she saw her two feeble-minded
+aunts looking for the rest of the word.&nbsp; However, she says it is
+only Pica who is going up for it this time.&nbsp; She herself was not
+considered strong enough.&nbsp; Yet there have those two set themselves
+down with their books under the rocks, blind to all the glory of sea
+and shore, deaf to the dash and ripple of the waves!&nbsp; I long to
+go and shout Wordsworth&rsquo;s warning about &lsquo;growing double&rsquo;
+to them.&nbsp; I am glad to say that Uchtred has come and fetched Avice
+away.&nbsp; I can hardly believe Martyn and Mary parents to this grown-up
+family.&nbsp; They look as youthful as ever, and are as active and vigorous,
+and full of their jokes with one another and their children.&nbsp; They
+are now gone out to the point of the rocks at the end of our promontory,
+fishing for microscopical monsters, and comporting themselves boy and
+girl fashion.</p>
+<p>Isabel has meantime been chatting very pleasantly with grandmamma,
+and trying to extricate us from our bewilderment as to names and nicknames.&nbsp;
+My poor mother, after strenuously preventing abbreviations in her own
+family, has to endure them in her descendants, and as every one names
+a daughter after her, there is some excuse!&nbsp; This Oxford Margaret
+goes by the name of Pie or Pica, apparently because it is the remotest
+portion of Magpie, and her London cousin is universally known as Metelill&mdash;the
+Danish form, I believe; but in the Bourne Parva family the young Margaret
+Druce is nothing worse than Meg, and her elder sister remains Jane.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Nobody would dare to call her anything else,&rdquo; says Isa.&nbsp;
+Avice cannot but be sometimes translated into the Bird; while my poor
+name, in my second London niece, has become the masculine Charley.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I shall know why when I see her,&rdquo; says Isa laughing.&nbsp;
+This good-natured damsel is coming out walking with us old folks, and
+will walk on with me, when grandmamma turns back with Emily.&nbsp; Her
+great desire is to find the whereabouts of a convalescent home in which
+she and her cousins have subscribed to place a poor young dressmaker
+for a six weeks&rsquo; rest; but I am afraid it is on the opposite side
+of S. Clements, too far for a walk.</p>
+<p><i>July</i> 5.&mdash;Why did you never tell me how charming Metelill
+is?&nbsp; I never supposed the Fulford features capable of so much beauty,
+and the whole manner and address are so delightful that I do not wonder
+that all her cousins are devoted to her; Uchtred, or Butts, as they
+are pleased to name him, has brightened into another creature since
+she came, and she seems like sunshine to us all.&nbsp; As to my namesake,
+I am sorry to say that I perceive the appropriateness of Charley; but
+I suppose it is style, for the masculine dress which in Pica and Avice
+has an air of being worn for mere convenience&rsquo; sake, and is quite
+ladylike, especially on Avice, has in her an appearance of defiance
+and coquetry.&nbsp; Her fox-terrier always shares her room, which therefore
+is eschewed by her sister, and this has made a change in our arrangements.&nbsp;
+We had thought the room in our house, which it seems is an object of
+competition, would suit best for Jane Druce and one of her little sisters;
+but a hint was given by either Pica or her mother that it would be a
+great boon to let Jane and Avice share it, as they are very great friends,
+and we had the latter there installed.&nbsp; However, this fox-terrier
+made Metelill protest against sleeping at the hotel with her sister,
+and her mother begged us to take her in.&nbsp; Thereupon, Emily saw
+Isa looking annoyed, and on inquiry she replied sweetly, &ldquo;Oh,
+never mind, aunty dear; I daresay Wasp won&rsquo;t be so bad as he looks;
+and I&rsquo;ll try not to be silly, and then I daresay Charley will
+not tease me!&nbsp; Only I had hoped to be with dear Metelill; but no
+doubt she will prefer her Bird&mdash;people always do.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+So they were going to make that poor child the victim!&nbsp; For it
+seems Pica has a room to herself, and will not give it up or take in
+any one.&nbsp; Emily went at once to Avice and asked whether she would
+mind going to the hotel, and letting Isa be with Metelill, and this
+she agreed to at once.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t know why I tell you all these
+details, except that they are straws to show the way of the wind, and
+you will see how Isabel is always the sacrifice, unless some one stands
+up for her.&nbsp; Here comes Martyn to beguile me out to the beach.</p>
+<p><i>July</i> 6 (Sunday).&mdash;My mother drove to church and took
+Edith, who was glad neither to walk nor to have to skirmish for a seat.&nbsp;
+Isa walked with Emily and me, and so we made up our five for our seat,
+which, to our dismay, is in the gallery, but, happily for my mother,
+the stairs are easy.&nbsp; The pews there are not quite so close to
+one&rsquo;s nose as those in the body of the church; they are a little
+wider, and are furnished with hassocks instead of traps to prevent kneeling,
+so that we think ourselves well off, and we were agreeably surprised
+at the service.&nbsp; There is a new incumbent who is striving to modify
+things as well as his people and their architecture permit, and who
+preached an excellent sermon.&nbsp; So we triumph over the young folk,
+who try to persuade us that the gallery is a judgment on us for giving
+in to the hired pew system.&nbsp; They may banter me as much as they
+like, but I don&rsquo;t like to see them jest with grandmamma about
+it, as if they were on equal terms, and she does not understand it either.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;My dear,&rdquo; she gravely says, &ldquo;your grandpapa always
+said it was a duty to support the parish church.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Nothing
+will do but the Congregational system in these days; don&rsquo;t you
+think so?&rdquo; began Pica dogmatically, when her father called her
+off.&nbsp; Martyn cannot bear to see his mother teased.&nbsp; He and
+his wife, with the young ones, made their way to Hollyford, where they
+found a primitive old church and a service to match, but were terribly
+late, and had to sit in worm-eaten pews near the door, amid scents of
+peppermint and southernwood.&nbsp; On the way back, Martyn fraternised
+with a Mr. Methuen, a Cambridge tutor with a reading party, who has,
+I am sorry to say, arrived at the house <i>vis-&agrave;-vis</i> to ours,
+on the other side of the cove.&nbsp; Our Oxford young ladies turn up
+their noses at the light blue, and say the men have not the finish of
+the dark; but Charley is in wild spirits.&nbsp; I heard her announcing
+the arrival thus: &ldquo;I say, Isa, what a stunning lark!&nbsp; Not
+but that I was up to it all the time, or else I should have skedaddled;
+for this place was bound to be as dull as ditchwater.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;But
+how did you know?&rdquo; asked Isa.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why, Bertie Elwood
+tipped me a line that he was coming down here with his coach, or else
+I should have told the mater I couldn&rsquo;t stand it and gone to stay
+with some one.&rdquo;&nbsp; This Bertie Elwood is, it seems, one of
+the many London acquaintance.&nbsp; He looks inoffensive, and so do
+the others, but I wish they had chosen some other spot for their studies,
+and so perhaps does their tutor, though he is now smoking very happily
+under a rock with Martyn.</p>
+<p><i>July</i> 7.&mdash;Such a delightful evening walk with Metelill
+and Isa as Emily and I had last night, going to evensong in our despised
+church!&nbsp; The others said they could stand no more walking and heat,
+and yet we met Martyn and Mary out upon the rocks when we were coming
+home, after being, I must confess, nearly fried to death by the gas
+and bad air.&nbsp; They laughed at us and our exertions, all in the
+way of good humour, but it was not wholesome from parents.&nbsp; Mary
+tried to make me confess that we were coming home in a self-complacent
+fakir state of triumph in our headaches, much inferior to her humble
+revelling in cool sea, sky, and moonlight.&nbsp; It was like the difference
+between the <i>Benedicite</i> and the <i>Te Deum</i>, I could not help
+thinking; while Emily said a few words to Martyn as to how mamma would
+be disappointed at his absenting himself from Church, and was answered,
+&ldquo;Ah!&nbsp; Emily, you are still the good home child of the primitive
+era,&rdquo; which she did not understand; but I faced about and asked
+if it were not what we all should be.&nbsp; He answered rather sadly,
+&ldquo;If we could&rsquo;; and his wife shrugged her shoulders.&nbsp;
+Alas! I fear the nineteenth century tone has penetrated them, and do
+not wonder that this poor Isabel does not seem happy in her home.</p>
+<p>9.&mdash;What a delightful sight is a large family of young things
+together!&nbsp; The party is complete, for the Druces arrived yesterday
+evening in full force, torn from their bucolic life, as Martyn tells
+them.&nbsp; My poor dear old Margaret!&nbsp; She does indeed look worn
+and aged, dragged by cares like a colonist&rsquo;s wife, and her husband
+is quite bald, and as spare as a hermit.&nbsp; It is hard to believe
+him younger than Martyn; but then his whole soul is set on Bourne Parva,
+and hers on him, on the children, on the work, and on making both ends
+meet; and they toil five times more severely in one month than the professor
+and his lady in a year, besides having just twice as many children,
+all of whom are here except the schoolboys.&nbsp; Margaret declares
+that the entire rest, and the talking to something not entirely rural,
+will wind her husband up for the year; and it is good to see her sitting
+in a basket-chair by my mother, knitting indeed, but they both do that
+like breathing, while they purr away to one another in a state of perfect
+repose and felicity.&nbsp; Meantime her husband talks Oxford with Martyn
+and Mary.&nbsp; Their daughter Jane seems to be a most valuable helper
+to both, but she too has a worn, anxious countenance, and I fear she
+may be getting less rest than her parents, as they have brought only
+one young nursemaid with them, and seem to depend on her and Meg for
+keeping the middle-sized children in order.&nbsp; She seems to have
+all the cares of the world on her young brow, and is much exercised
+about one of the boxes which has gone astray on the railway.&nbsp; What
+do you think she did this morning?&nbsp; She started off with Avice
+at eight o&rsquo;clock for the S. Clements station to see if the telegram
+was answered, and they went on to the Convalescent Home and saw the
+Oxford dressmaker.&nbsp; It seems that Avice had taken Uchtred with
+her on Sunday evening, made out the place, and gone to church at S.
+Clements close by&mdash;a very long walk; but it seems that those foolish
+girls thought me too fine a lady to like to be seen with her in her
+round hat on a Sunday.&nbsp; I wish they could understand what it is
+that I dislike.&nbsp; If I objected to appearances, I am afraid the
+poor Druces would fare ill.&nbsp; Margaret&rsquo;s girls cannot help
+being essentially ladies, but they have not much beauty to begin with&mdash;and
+their dress!&nbsp; It was chiefly made by their own sewing machine,
+with the assistance of the Bourne Parva mantua-maker, superintended
+by Jane, &lsquo;to prevent her from making it foolish&rsquo;; and the
+effect, I grieve to say, is ill-fitting dowdiness, which becomes grotesque
+from their self-complacent belief that it displays the only graceful
+and sensible fashion in the place.&nbsp; It was laughable to hear them
+criticising every hat or costume they have seen, quite unaware that
+they were stared at themselves, till Charley told them people thought
+they had come fresh out of Lady Bountiful&rsquo;s goody-box, which piece
+of impertinence they took as a great compliment to their wisdom and
+excellence.&nbsp; To be sure, the fashions are distressing enough, but
+Metelill shows that they can be treated gracefully and becomingly, and
+even Avice makes her serge and hat look fresh and ladylike.&nbsp; Spite
+of contrast, Avice and Jane seem to be much devoted to each other.&nbsp;
+Pica and Charley are another pair, and Isa and Metelill&mdash;though
+Metelill is the universal favourite, and there is always competition
+for her.&nbsp; In early morning I see the brown heads and blue bathing-dresses,
+a-mermaiding, as they call it, in the cove below, and they come in all
+glowing, with the floating tresses that make Metelill look so charming,
+and full of merry adventures at breakfast.&nbsp; We all meet in the
+great room at the hotel for a substantial meal at half-past one, and
+again (most of us at least) at eight; but it is a moot point which of
+these meals we call dinner.&nbsp; Very merry both of them are; Martyn
+and Horace Druce are like boys together, and the girls scream with laughter,
+rather too much so sometimes.&nbsp; Charley is very noisy, and so is
+Meg Druce, when not overpowered by shyness.&nbsp; She will not exchange
+a sentence with any of the elders, but in the general laugh she chuckles
+and shrieks like a young Cochin-Chinese chicken learning to crow; and
+I hear her squealing like a maniac while she is shrimping with the younger
+ones and Charley.&nbsp; I must except those two young ladies from the
+unconscious competition, for one has no manners at all, and the other
+affects those of a man; but as to the rest, they are all as nice as
+possible, and I can only say, &ldquo;How happy could I be with either.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Isa, poor girl, seems to need our care most, and would be the most obliging
+and attentive.&nbsp; Metelill would be the prettiest and sweetest ornament
+of our drawing-room, and would amuse you the most; Pica, with her scholarly
+tastes, would be the best and most appreciative fellow-traveller; and
+Jane, if she could or would go, would perhaps benefit the most by being
+freed from a heavy strain, and having her views enlarged.</p>
+<p>10.&mdash;A worthy girl is Jane Druce, but I fear the Vicarage is
+no school of manners.&nbsp; Her mother is sitting with us, and has been
+discoursing to grandmamma on her Jane&rsquo;s wonderful helpfulness
+and activity in house and parish, and how everything hinged on her last
+winter when they had whooping-cough everywhere in and out of doors;
+indeed she doubts whether the girl has ever quite thrown off the effects
+of all her exertions then.&nbsp; Suddenly comes a trampling, a bounce
+and a rush, and in dashes Miss Jane, fiercely demanding whether the
+children had leave to go to the cove.&nbsp; Poor Margaret meekly responds
+that she had consented.&nbsp; &ldquo;And didn&rsquo;t you know,&rdquo;
+exclaims the damsel, &ldquo;that all their everyday boots are in that
+unlucky trunk?&rdquo;&nbsp; There is a humble murmur that Chattie had
+promised to be very careful, but it produces a hotter reply.&nbsp; &ldquo;As
+if Chattie&rsquo;s promises of that kind could be trusted!&nbsp; And
+I had <i>told</i> them that they were to keep with baby on the cliff!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Then came a real apology for interfering with Jane&rsquo;s plans, to
+which we listened aghast, and Margaret was actually getting up to go
+and look after her amphibious offspring herself, when her daughter cut
+her off short with, &ldquo;Nonsense, mamma, you know you are not to
+do any such thing!&nbsp; I must go, that&rsquo;s all, or they won&rsquo;t
+have a decent boot or stocking left among them.&rdquo;&nbsp; Off she
+went with another bang, while her mother began blaming herself for having
+yielded in haste to the persuasions of the little ones, oblivious of
+the boots, thus sacrificing Jane&rsquo;s happy morning with Avice.&nbsp;
+My mother showed herself shocked by the tone in which Margaret had let
+herself be hectored, and this brought a torrent of almost tearful apologies
+from the poor dear thing, knowing she did not keep up her authority
+or make herself respected as would be good for her girl, but if we only
+knew how devoted Jane was, and how much there was to grind and try her
+temper, we should not wonder that it gave way sometimes.&nbsp; Indeed
+it was needful to turn away the subject, as Margaret was the last person
+we wished to distress.</p>
+<p>Jane could have shown no temper to the children, for at dinner a
+roly-poly person of five years old, who seems to absorb all the fat
+in the family, made known that he had had a very jolly day, and he loved
+cousin Avice very much indeed, and sister Janie very much indeeder,
+and he could with difficulty be restrained from an expedition to kiss
+them both then and there.</p>
+<p>The lost box was announced while we were at dinner, and Jane is gone
+with her faithful Avice to unpack it.&nbsp; Her mother would have done
+it and sent her boating with the rest, but submitted as usual when commanded
+to adhere to the former plan of driving with grandmamma.&nbsp; These
+Druce children must be excellent, according to their mother, but they
+are terribly brusque and bearish.&nbsp; They are either seen and not
+heard, or not seen and heard a great deal too much.&nbsp; Even Jane
+and Meg, who ought to know better, keep up a perpetual undercurrent
+of chatter and giggle, whatever is going on, with any one who will share
+it with them.</p>
+<p>10.&mdash;I am more and more puzzled about the new reading of the
+Fifth Commandment.&nbsp; None seem to understand it as we used to do.&nbsp;
+The parents are content to be used as equals, and to be called by all
+sorts of absurd names; and though grandmamma is always kindly and attentively
+treated, there is no reverence for the relationship.&nbsp; I heard Charley
+call her &lsquo;a jolly old party,&rsquo; and Metelill respond that
+she was &lsquo;a sweet old thing.&rsquo;&nbsp; Why, we should have thought
+such expressions about our grandmother a sort of sacrilege, but when
+I ventured to hint as much Charley flippantly answered, &ldquo;Gracious
+me, we are not going back to buckram&rdquo;; and Metelill, with her
+caressing way, declared that she loved dear granny too much to be so
+stiff and formal.&nbsp; I quoted&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I be a Father, where is My honour?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And one of them taking it, I am sorry to say, for a line of secular
+poetry, exclaimed at the stiffness and coldness.&nbsp; Pica then put
+in her oar, and began to argue that honour must be earned, and that
+it was absurd and illogical to claim it for the mere accident of seniority
+or relationship.&nbsp; Jane, not at all conscious of being an offender,
+howled at her that this was her horrible liberalism and neology, while
+Metelill asked what was become of loyalty.&nbsp; &ldquo;That depends
+on what you mean by it,&rdquo; returned our girl graduate.&nbsp; &ldquo;<i>Loi-aut&eacute;</i>,
+steadfastness to principle, is noble, but personal loyalty, to some
+mere puppet or the bush the crown hangs on, is a pernicious figment.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Charley shouted that this was the No. 1 letter A point in Pie&rsquo;s
+prize essay, and there the discussion ended, Isa only sighing to herself,
+&ldquo;Ah, if I had any one to be loyal to!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How you would jockey them!&rdquo; cried Charley, turning upon
+her so roughly that the tears came into her eyes; and I must have put
+on what you call my Government-house look, for Charley subsided instantly.</p>
+<p>11.&mdash;Here was a test as to this same obedience.&nbsp; The pupils,
+who are by this time familiars of the party, had devised a boating and
+fishing expedition for all the enterprising, which was satisfactory
+to the elders because it was to include both the fathers.&nbsp; Unluckily,
+however, this morning&rsquo;s post brought a summons to Martyn and Mary
+to fulfil an engagement they have long made to meet an American professor
+at ---, and they had to start off at eleven o&rsquo;clock; and at the
+same time the Hollyford clergyman, an old fellow-curate of Horace Druce,
+sent a note imploring him to take a funeral.&nbsp; So the voice of the
+seniors was for putting off the expedition, but the voice of the juniors
+was quite the other way.&nbsp; The three families took different lines.&nbsp;
+The Druces show obedience though not respect; they growled and grumbled
+horribly, but submitted, though with ill grace, to the explicit prohibition.&nbsp;
+Non-interference is professedly Mary&rsquo;s principle, but even she
+said, with entreaty veiled beneath the playfulness, when it was pleaded
+that two of the youths had oars at Cambridge, &ldquo;Freshwater fish,
+my dears.&nbsp; I wish you would wait for us!&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t want
+you to attend the submarine wedding of our old friends Tame and Isis.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+To which Pica rejoined, likewise talking out of Spenser, that Proteus
+would provide a nice ancient nymph to tend on them.&nbsp; Her father
+then chimed in, saying, &ldquo;You will spare our nerves by keeping
+to dry land unless you can secure the ancient mariner who was with us
+yesterday.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, come, most illustrious,&rdquo; said Pica good-humouredly,
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not going to encourage you to set up for nerves.&nbsp;
+You are much better without them, and I must get some medus&aelig;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It ended with, &ldquo;I beg you will not go without that old man,&rdquo;
+the most authoritative speech I have heard either Martyn or Mary make
+to their daughters; but it was so much breath wasted on Pica, who maintains
+her right to judge for herself.&nbsp; The ancient mariner had been voted
+an encumbrance and exchanged for a jolly young waterman.</p>
+<p>Our other mother, Edith, implored, and was laughed down by Charley,
+who declared she could swim, and that she did not think Uncle Martyn
+would have been so old-womanish.&nbsp; Metelill was so tender and caressing
+with her frightened mother that I thought here at last was submission,
+and with a good grace.&nbsp; But after a turn on the esplanade among
+the pupils, back came Metelill in a hurry to say, &ldquo;Dear mother,
+will you very much <i>mind</i> if I go?&nbsp; They will be so disappointed,
+and there will be such a fuss if I don&rsquo;t; and Charley really ought
+to have some one with her besides Pie, who will heed nothing but magnifying
+medus&aelig;.&rdquo;&nbsp; I am afraid it is true, as Isa says, that
+it was all owing to the walk with that young Mr Horne.</p>
+<p>Poor Edith fell into such a state of nervous anxiety that I could
+not leave her, and she confided to me how Charley had caught her foolish
+masculine affectations in the family of this very Bertie Elwood, and
+told me of the danger of an attachment between Metelill and a young
+government clerk who is always on the look-out for her.&nbsp; &ldquo;And
+dear Metelill is so gentle and gracious that she cannot bear to repel
+any one,&rdquo; says the mother, who would, I see, be thankful to part
+with either daughter to our keeping in hopes of breaking off perilous
+habits.&nbsp; I was saved, however, from committing myself by the coming
+in of Isabel.&nbsp; That child follows me about like a tame cat, and
+seems so to need mothering that I cannot bear to snub her.</p>
+<p>She came to propound to me a notion that has risen among these Oxford
+girls, namely, that I should take out their convalescent dressmaker
+as my maid instead of poor Am&eacute;lie.&nbsp; She is quite well now,
+and going back next week; but a few years in a warm climate might be
+the saving of her health.&nbsp; So I agreed to go with Isa to look at
+her, and judge whether the charming account I heard was all youthful
+enthusiasm.&nbsp; Edith went out driving with my mother, and we began
+our <i>t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te</i> walk, in which I heard a great
+deal of the difficulties of that free-and-easy house at Oxford, and
+how often Isa wishes for some one who would be a real guide and helper,
+instead of only giving a playful, slap-dash answer, like good-natured
+mockery.&nbsp; The treatment may suit Mary&rsquo;s own daughters, but
+&lsquo;Just as you please, my dear,&rsquo; is not good for sensitive,
+anxious spirits.&nbsp; We passed Jane and Avice reading together under
+a rock; I was much inclined to ask them to join us, but Isa was sure
+they were much happier undisturbed, and she was so unwilling to share
+me with any one that I let them alone.&nbsp; I was much pleased with
+the dressmaker, Maude Harris, who is a nice, modest, refined girl, and
+if the accounts I get from her employers bear out what I hear of her,
+I shall engage her; I shall be glad, for the niece&rsquo;s sake, to
+have that sort of young woman about the place.&nbsp; She speaks most
+warmly of what the Misses Fulford have done for her.</p>
+<p>Jane will be disappointed if I cannot have her rival candidate&mdash;a
+pet schoolgirl who works under the Bourne Parva dressmaker.&nbsp; &ldquo;What
+a recommendation!&rdquo; cries Pica, and there is a burst of mirth,
+at which Jane looks round and says, &ldquo;What is there to laugh at?&nbsp;
+Miss Dadworthy is a real good woman, and a real old Bourne Parva person,
+so that you may be quite sure Martha will have learnt no nonsense to
+begin with.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; says Pica, &ldquo;from all such pomps and vanities
+as style, she will be quite clear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>While Avice&rsquo;s friendship goes as far as to say that if Aunt
+Charlotte cannot have Maude, perhaps Martha could get a little more
+training.&nbsp; Whereupon Jane runs off by the yard explanations of
+the admirable training&mdash;religious, moral, and intellectual&mdash;of
+Bourne Parva, illustrated by the best answers of her favourite scholars,
+anecdotes of them, and the reports of the inspectors, religious and
+secular; and Avice listens with patience, nay, with respectful sympathy.</p>
+<p>12.&mdash;We miss Mary and Martyn more than I expected.&nbsp; Careless
+and easy-going as they seem, they made a difference in the ways of the
+young people; they were always about with them, not as dragons, but
+for their own pleasure.&nbsp; The presence of a professor must needs
+impose upon young men, and Mary, with her brilliant wit and charming
+manners, was a check without knowing it.&nbsp; The boating party came
+back gay and triumphant, and the young men joined in our late meal;
+and oh, what a noise there was! though I must confess that it was not
+they who made the most.&nbsp; Metelill was not guilty of the noise,
+but she was&mdash;I fear I must say it&mdash;flirting with all her might
+with a youth on each side of her, and teasing a third; I am afraid she
+is one of those girls who are charming to all, and doubly charming to
+your sex, and that it will never do to have her among the staff.&nbsp;
+I don&rsquo;t think it is old-maidish in us to be scandalised at her
+walking up and down the esplanade with young Horne till ten o&rsquo;clock
+last night; Charley was behind with Bertie Elwood, and, I grieve to
+say, was smoking.&nbsp; It lasted till Horace Druce went out to tell
+them that Metelill must come in at once, as it was time to shut up the
+house.</p>
+<p>The Oxford girls were safe indoors; Isa working chess problems with
+another of the lads, Avice keeping Jane company over the putting the
+little ones to sleep&mdash;in Mount Lebanon, as they call the Druce
+lodging&mdash;and Pica preserving microscopic objects.&nbsp; &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t
+she awful?&rdquo; said one of those pupils.&nbsp; &ldquo;She&rsquo;s
+worse than all the dons in Cambridge.&nbsp; She wants to be at it all
+day long, and all through the vacation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They perfectly flee from her.&nbsp; They say she is always whipping
+out a microscope and lecturing upon protoplasms&mdash;and there is some
+truth in the accusation.&nbsp; She is almost as bad on the emancipation
+of women, on which there is a standing battle, in earnest with Jane&mdash;in
+joke with Metelill; but it has, by special orders, to be hushed at dinner,
+because it almost terrifies grandmamma.&nbsp; I fear Pica tries to despise
+her!</p>
+<p>This morning the girls are all out on the beach in pairs and threes,
+the pupils being all happily shut up with their tutor.&nbsp; I see the
+invalid lady creep out with her beach-rest from the intermediate house,
+and come down to her usual morning station in the shade of a rock, unaware,
+poor thing, that it has been monopolised by Isa and Metelill.&nbsp;
+Oh, girls! why don&rsquo;t you get up and make room for her?&nbsp; No;
+she moves on to the next shady place, but there Pica has a perfect fortification
+of books spread on her rug, and Charley is sketching on the outskirts,
+and the fox-terrier barks loudly.&nbsp; Will she go on to the third
+seat? where I can see, though she cannot, Jane and Avice sitting together,
+and Freddy shovelling sand at their feet.&nbsp; Ah! at last she is made
+welcome.&nbsp; Good girls!&nbsp; They have seated her and her things,
+planted a parasol to shelter her from the wind, and lingered long enough
+not to make her feel herself turning them out before making another
+settlement out of my sight.</p>
+<p><i>Three o&rsquo;clock</i>.&mdash;I am sorry to say Charley&rsquo;s
+sketch turned into a caricature of the unprotected female wandering
+in vain in search of a bit of shelter, with a torn parasol, a limp dress,
+and dragging rug, and altogether unspeakably forlorn.&nbsp; It was exhibited
+at the dinner-table, and elicited peals of merriment, so that we elders
+begged to see the cause of the young people&rsquo;s amusement.&nbsp;
+My blood was up, and when I saw what it was, I said&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wonder you like to record your own discourtesy, to call
+it nothing worse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, Aunt Charlotte,&rdquo; said Metelill in her pretty pleading
+way, &ldquo;we did not know her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, what of that?&rdquo; I said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, you know it is only abroad that people expect that sort
+of things from strangers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One of the worst imputations on English manners I ever heard,&rdquo;
+I said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But she was such a guy!&rdquo; cried Charley.&nbsp; &ldquo;Mother
+said she was sure she was not a lady.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And therefore you did not show yourself one,&rdquo; I could
+not but return.</p>
+<p>There her mother put in a gentle entreaty that Charley would not
+distress grandmamma with these loud arguments with her aunt, and I added,
+seeing that Horace Druce&rsquo;s attention was attracted, that I should
+like to have added another drawing called &lsquo;Courtesy,&rsquo; and
+shown that there was <i>some</i> hospitality <i>even</i> to strangers,
+and then I asked the two girls about her.&nbsp; They had joined company
+again, and carried her beach-rest home for her, finding out by the way
+that she was a poor homeless governess who had come down to stay in
+cheap lodgings with an old nurse to try to recruit herself till she
+could go out again.&nbsp; My mother became immediately interested, and
+has sent Emily to call on her, and to try and find out whether she is
+properly taken care of.</p>
+<p>Isa was very much upset at my displeasure.&nbsp; She came to me afterwards
+and said she was greatly grieved; but Metelill would not move, and she
+had always supposed it wrong to make acquaintance with strangers in
+that chance way.&nbsp; I represented that making room was not picking
+up acquaintance, and she owned it, and was really grateful for the reproof;
+but, as I told her, no doubt such a rule must be necessary in a place
+like Oxford.</p>
+<p>How curiously Christian courtesy and polished manners sometimes separate
+themselves! and how conceit interferes with both!&nbsp; I acquit Metelill
+and Isa of all but thoughtless habit, and Pica was absorbed.&nbsp; She
+can be well mannered enough when she is not defending the rights of
+woman, or hotly dogmatical on the crude theories she has caught&mdash;and
+suppose she has thought out, poor child!&nbsp; And Jane, though high-principled,
+kind, and self-sacrificing, is too narrow and&mdash;not exactly conceited&mdash;but
+exclusive and Bourne Parvaish, not to be as bad in her way, though it
+is the sound one.&nbsp; The wars of the Druces and Maronites, as Martyn
+calls them, sometimes rage beyond the bounds of good humour.</p>
+<p><i>Ten</i> P.M.&mdash;I am vexed too on another score.&nbsp; I must
+tell you that this hotel does not shine in puddings and sweets, and
+Charley has not been ashamed to grumble beyond the bounds of good manners.&nbsp;
+I heard some laughing and joking going on between the girls and the
+pupils, Metelill with her &ldquo;Oh no!&nbsp; You won&rsquo;t!&nbsp;
+Nonsense!&rdquo; in just that tone which means &ldquo;I wish, I would,
+but I cannot bid you,&rdquo;&mdash;the tone I do not like to hear in
+a maiden of any degree.</p>
+<p>And behold three of those foolish lads have brought her gilt and
+painted boxes of bon-bons, over which there was a prodigious giggling
+and semi-refusing and bantering among the young folks, worrying Emily
+and me excessively, though we knew it would not do to interfere.</p>
+<p>There is a sea-fog this evening unfavourable to the usual promenades,
+and we elders, including the tutor, were sitting with my mother, when,
+in her whirlwind fashion, in burst Jane, dragging her little sister
+Chattie with her, and breathlessly exclaiming, &ldquo;Father, father,
+come and help!&nbsp; They are gambling, and I can&rsquo;t get Meg away!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When the nervous ones had been convinced that no one had been caught
+by the tide or fallen off the rocks, Jane explained that Metelill had
+given one box of bon-bons to the children, who were to be served with
+one apiece all round every day.&nbsp; And the others were put up by
+Metelill to serve as prizes in the &lsquo;racing game,&rsquo; which
+some one had routed out, left behind in the lodging, and which was now
+spread on the dining-table, with all the young people playing in high
+glee, and with immense noise.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Betting too!&rdquo; said Jane in horror.&nbsp; &ldquo;Mr.
+Elwood betted three chocolate creams upon Charley, and Pica took it!&nbsp;
+Father!&nbsp; Come and call Meg away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She spoke exactly as if she were summoning him to snatch her sister
+from <i>rouge et noir</i> at Monaco; and her face was indescribable
+when her aunt Edith set us all off laughing by saying, &ldquo;Fearful
+depravity, my dear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Won&rsquo;t you come, father?&rdquo; continued Jane; &ldquo;Mr.
+Methuen, won&rsquo;t you come and stop those young men?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Methuen smiled a little and looked at Horace, who said&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush, Janie; these are not things in which to interfere.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then,&rdquo; quoth Jane sententiously, &ldquo;I am not astonished
+at the dissipation of the university.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And away she flounced in tears of wrath.&nbsp; Her mother went after
+her, and we laughed a little, it was impossible to help it, at the bathos
+of the chocolate creams; but, as Mr. Methuen said, she was really right,
+the amusement was undesirable, as savouring of evil.&nbsp; Edith, to
+my vexation, saw no harm in it; but Horace said very decidedly he hoped
+it would not happen again; and Margaret presently returned, saying she
+hoped that she had pacified Jane, and shown her that to descend as if
+there were an uproar in the school would only do much more harm than
+was likely to happen in that one evening; and she said to me afterwards,
+&ldquo;I see what has been wanting in our training.&nbsp; We have let
+children&rsquo;s loyalty run into intolerance and rudeness.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+But Meg was quite innocent of there being any harm in it, and only needed
+reproof for being too much charmed by the pleasure for once to obey
+her dictatorial sister.</p>
+<p>13, <i>ten</i> A.M.&mdash;Horace has had it out with sundry of the
+young ladies, so as to prevent any more betting.&nbsp; Several had regretted
+it.&nbsp; &ldquo;Only they did so want to get rid of the bon-bons!&nbsp;
+And Jane did make such an uproar.&rdquo;&nbsp; After all, nobody did
+really bet but Charley and the young Elwood, and Pica only that once.&nbsp;
+Jane candidly owns that a little gentleness would have made a difference.</p>
+<p>Again I see this obtuseness to courtesy towards strangers.&nbsp;
+Our despised church has become popular, and so many of the young folks
+choose to accompany us that they overflowed into the free seats in the
+aisle, where I had a full view of them from above.&nbsp; These benches
+are long, and I was sorry to see the girls planting themselves fast
+at the outer end, and making themselves square, so as to hinder any
+one else from getting in, till the verger came and spoke to them, when
+Charley giggled offensively; and even then they did not make room, but
+forced the people to squeeze past.&nbsp; Isa could not help herself,
+not being the outermost; but she was much distressed, and does not shelter
+herself under Charley&rsquo;s plea that it was so hot that the verger
+should have been indicted for cruelty to animals.&nbsp; Certainly they
+all did come home very hot from walking back with the pupils.</p>
+<p>Pica and Avice were not among them, having joined the Druces in going
+to Hollyford, where Horace preached this morning.&nbsp; Their gray serges
+and sailor hats were, as they said, &ldquo;not adapted to the town congregation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is the congregation you dress for?&rdquo; said their uncle
+dryly, whereupon Pica upbraided him with inconsistency in telling his
+poor people not to use the excuse of &lsquo;no clothes,&rsquo; and that
+the heart, not the dress, is regarded.&nbsp; He said it was true, but
+that he should still advocate the poor man&rsquo;s coming in his cleanest
+and best.&nbsp; &ldquo;There are manners towards God as well as towards
+man,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>I was too much tired by the heat to go to church again this evening,
+and am sitting with my mother, who is dozing.&nbsp; Where the young
+people are I do not know exactly, but I am afraid I hear Charley&rsquo;s
+shrill laugh on the beach.</p>
+<p>14.&mdash;Who do you think has found us out?&nbsp; Our dear old Governor-General,
+&ldquo;in all his laurels,&rdquo; as enthusiastic little Avice was heard
+saying, which made Freddy stare hard and vainly in search of them.&nbsp;
+He is staying at Hollybridge Park, and seeing our name in the S. Clements&rsquo;
+list of visitors, he made Lady Hollybridge drive him over to call, and
+was much disappointed to find that you could not be here during his
+visit.&nbsp; He was as kind and warm-hearted as ever, and paid our dear
+mother such compliments on her son, that we tell her the bows on her
+cap are starting upright with pride.</p>
+<p>Lady Hollybridge already knew Edith.&nbsp; She made herself very
+pleasant, and insisted on our coming <i>en masse</i> to a great garden
+party which they are giving to-morrow.&nbsp; Hollybridge is the S. Clements&rsquo;
+lion, with splendid grounds and gardens, and some fine old pictures,
+so it is a fine chance for the young people; and we are going to hire
+one of the large excursion waggonettes, which will hold all who have
+age, dress, and will for gaieties.&nbsp; The pupils, as Mr. Methuen
+is a friend of the Hollybridge people, will attend us as outriders on
+their bicycles.&nbsp; I am rather delighted at thus catching out the
+young ladies who did not think it worth while to bring a Sunday bonnet.&nbsp;
+They have all rushed into S. Clements to furbish themselves for the
+occasion, and we are left to the company of the small Druces.&nbsp;
+Neither Margaret nor Emily chooses to go, and will keep my mother company.</p>
+<p>I ventured on administering a sovereign apiece to Isa and Jane Druce.&nbsp;
+The first blushed and owned that it was very welcome, as her wardrobe
+had never recovered a great thunderstorm at Oxford.&nbsp; Jane&rsquo;s
+awkwardness made her seem as if it were an offence on my part, but her
+mother tells me it made her very happy.&nbsp; Her father says that she
+tells him he was hard on Avice, a great favourite of his, and that I
+must ask Jane to explain, for it is beyond him.&nbsp; It is all right
+about the Oxford girl.&nbsp; I have engaged her, and she goes home to-morrow
+to prepare herself.&nbsp; This afternoon she is delighted to assist
+her young ladies in their preparations.&nbsp; I liked her much in the
+private interview.&nbsp; I was rather surprised to find that it was
+&lsquo;Miss Avice,&rsquo; of whom she spoke with the greatest fervour,
+as having first made friends with her, and then having constantly lent
+her books and read to her in her illness.</p>
+<p>15.&mdash;S.&nbsp; Swithun is evidently going to be merciful to us
+to-day, and the damsels have been indefatigable&mdash;all, that is to
+say, but the two Londoners, who have lawn tennis dresses, and their
+mother&rsquo;s maid to turn them out complete.&nbsp; Isa brought home
+some tulle and white jessamine with which she is deftly freshening the
+pretty compromise between a bonnet and a hat which she wears on Sunday;
+also a charming parasol, with a china knob and a wreath of roses at
+the side.&nbsp; She hopes I shall not think her extravagant, but she
+had a little money of her own.</p>
+<p>Jane Druce displays two pairs of gloves and two neckties for herself
+and her sister; and after all Meg will not go; she is so uncouth that
+her mother does not like her to go without her own supervision; and
+she with true Bourne Parva self-appreciation and exclusiveness says&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure I don&rsquo;t want to go among a lot of stupid
+people, who care for nothing but fine clothes and lawn tennis.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was a light till one o&rsquo;clock last night in the room where
+Avice sleeps with Charley and the dog; and I scarcely saw either of
+the Oxford sisters or Jane all this morning till dinner-time, when Pica
+appeared very appropriately to her name, turned out in an old black
+silk dress left behind by her mother, and adorned with white tulle in
+all sorts of folds, also a pretty white bonnet made up by Avice&rsquo;s
+clever fingers, and adorned with some soft gray sea-birds&rsquo; feathers
+and white down.&nbsp; Isa and Metelill were very well got up and nice.&nbsp;
+Metelill looks charming, but I am afraid her bouquet is from one of
+those foolish pupils.&nbsp; She, as usual, has shared it with Isa, who
+has taken half to prevent her cousin being remarkable.&nbsp; And, after
+all, poor Avice is to be left behind.&nbsp; There was no time to make
+up things for two, and being in mourning, she could not borrow, though
+Metelill would have been too happy to lend.&nbsp; She says she shall
+be very happy with the children, but I can&rsquo;t help thinking there
+was a tear in her eye when she ran to fetch her dress cloak for Jane,
+whom, by the bye, Avice has made wonderfully more like other people.&nbsp;
+Here is the waggonette, and I must finish to-morrow.</p>
+<p>16.&mdash;We have had a successful day.&nbsp; The drive each way
+was a treat in itself, and the moon rising over the sea on our way home
+was a sight never to be forgotten.&nbsp; Hollybridge is charming in
+itself.&nbsp; Those grounds with their sea-board are unique, and I never
+saw such Spanish chestnuts in England.&nbsp; Then the gardens and the
+turf!&nbsp; One must have lived as long in foreign parts as we have
+to appreciate the perfect finish and well-tended look of such places.&nbsp;
+Your dear old chief does not quite agree.&nbsp; He says he wants space,
+and is oppressed with the sense of hedges and fences, except when he
+looks to the sea, and even there the rocks look polished off, and treated
+by landscape gardeners!&nbsp; He walked me about to see the show places,
+and look at the pictures, saying he had been so well lionised that he
+wanted some one to discharge his information upon.&nbsp; It was great
+fun to hear him criticising the impossibilities of a battle-piece&mdash;Blenheim,
+I think&mdash;the anachronisms of the firearms and uniforms, and the
+want of discipline around Marlborough, who would never have won a battle
+at that rate.&nbsp; You know how his hawk&rsquo;s eye takes note of
+everything.&nbsp; He looked at Metelill and said, &ldquo;Uncommonly
+pretty girl that, and knows it,&rdquo; but when I asked what he thought
+of Isabel&rsquo;s looks, he said, &ldquo;Pretty, yes; but are you sure
+she is quite aboveboard?&nbsp; There&rsquo;s something I don&rsquo;t
+like about her eyes.&rdquo;&nbsp; I wish he had not said so.&nbsp; I
+know there is a kind of unfriendly feeling towards her among some of
+the girls, especially the Druces and Charley.&nbsp; I have heard Charley
+openly call her a humbug, but I have thought much of this was dislike
+to the softer manners, and perhaps jealousy of my notice, and the expression
+that the old lord noticed is often the consequence of living in an uncongenial
+home.</p>
+<p>Of course my monopoly of the hero soon ended, and as I had no acquaintances
+there, and the young ones had been absorbed into games, or had fraternised
+with some one, I betook myself to explorations in company with Jane,
+who had likewise been left out.&nbsp; After we had wandered along a
+dazzling stand of calceolarias, she said, &ldquo;Aunt Charlotte, papa
+says I ought to tell you something; I mean, why Avice could not come
+to-day, and why she has nothing to wear but her round hat.&nbsp; It
+is because she and Pica spent all they had in paying for that Maude
+Harris at the Convalescent Home.&nbsp; They had some kind of flimsy
+gauzy bonnets that were faded and utterly done for after Commemoration
+week; and as Uncle Martyn is always growling about ladies&rsquo; luggage,
+they thought it would be a capital plan to go without all the time they
+are down here, till another quarter is due.&nbsp; Avice never thought
+of its not being right to go to Church such a figure, and now she finds
+that papa thinks the command to &ldquo;have power on her head&rdquo;
+really may apply to that sort of fashion, we are going to contrive something
+for Sunday, but it could not be done in time for to-day.&nbsp; Besides,
+she had no dress but a serge.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She preferred dressing her sister to dressing herself,&rdquo;
+I answered; and Jane began assuring me that no one knew how unselfish
+that dear old Bird is.&nbsp; The little money she had, she added to
+Pica&rsquo;s small remnant, and thus enough had been provided to fit
+the elder sister out.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;that Isa manages better,
+for she does not seem to be reduced to the same extremities, though
+I suppose she has less allowance than her cousins.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She has exactly the same.&nbsp; I know it.&rdquo;&nbsp; And
+Jane caught herself up, evidently checking something I might have thought
+ill-natured, which made me respond something intended to be moralising,
+but which was perhaps foolish, about good habits of economy, and how
+this disappointment, taken so good-humouredly, would be a lesson to
+Avice.&nbsp; &ldquo;A lesson?&nbsp; I should think so,&rdquo; said Jane
+bluntly.&nbsp; &ldquo;A lesson not to lend her money to Isa&rdquo;;
+and then, when I asked what she meant, she blurted out that all Isa&rsquo;s
+so-called share of the subscription for Maude Harris had been advanced
+by Avice&mdash;Pica had told her so, with comments on her sister&rsquo;s
+folly in lending what she well knew would never be repaid; and Alice
+could not deny it, only defending herself by saying, she could not sacrifice
+the girl.&nbsp; It was a very uncomfortable revelation, considering
+that Isa might have given her cousin my sovereign, but no doubt she
+did not think that proper, as I had meant it to be spent for this outing.</p>
+<p>I will at least give her the benefit of the doubt, and I would not
+encourage Jane to say any more about her.&nbsp; Indeed, the girl herself
+did not seem so desirous of dwelling on Isa as of doing justice to Avice,
+whom, she told me very truly, I did not know.&nbsp; &ldquo;She is always
+the one to give way and be put aside for Pie and Isa,&rdquo; said Jane.&nbsp;
+And now I think over the time we have had together, I believe it has
+often been so.&nbsp; &ldquo;You are very fond of her,&rdquo; I said;
+and Jane answered, &ldquo;I should <i>think</i> so!&nbsp; Why, she spent
+eight months with us once at Bourne Parva, just after the great row
+with Miss Hurlstone.&nbsp; Oh, didn&rsquo;t you know?&nbsp; They had
+a bad governess, who used to meet a lover&mdash;a German musician, I
+think he was&mdash;when they were out walking, and bullied Avice because
+she was honest.&nbsp; When it all came to light, Pica came out and Isa
+was sent to school, but Avice had got into a low state of health, and
+they said Oxford was not good for her, so she came to us.&nbsp; And
+papa prepared her for Confirmation, and she did everything with us,
+and she really is just like one of ourselves,&rdquo; said Jane, as the
+highest praise imaginable, though any one who contrasted poor Jane&rsquo;s
+stiff <i>piqu&eacute;</i> (Miss Dadsworth&rsquo;s turn-out) with the
+grace even of the gray serge, might not think it a compliment.&nbsp;
+Jane was just beginning to tell me that Avice always wrote to her to
+lay before her father the difficulties about right and wrong faith and
+practice that their way of life and habits of society bring before the
+poor child, when Isa descended upon us with &ldquo;Oh! Aunt Charlotte,
+I could not think what had become of you, when I saw the great man without
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I begin to wonder whether she is really so very fond of me, or whether
+she does not like to see me with one of the others.</p>
+<p>However, I shall be able to take Jane&rsquo;s hint, and cultivate
+Avice, for, as my mother did not come yesterday, Lady Hollybridge has
+most kindly insisted on her going over to-day.&nbsp; The carriage is
+taking some one to the station, and is to call for her and me to bring
+us to luncheon, the kind people promising likewise to send us back.&nbsp;
+So I asked whether I might bring a niece who had not been able to come
+yesterday, and as the young people had, as usual, become enamoured of
+Metelill, they begged for her likewise.&nbsp; Avice looks very well
+in the dress she made up for Pica, and being sisters and in mourning,
+the identity will only be natural.&nbsp; She is very much pleased and
+very grateful, and declares that she shall see everything she cares
+about much more pleasantly than in the larger party, and perhaps &lsquo;really
+hear the hero talk.&rsquo;&nbsp; And Uncle Horace says, &ldquo;True,
+you Bird, you are not like some young folk, who had rather hear themselves
+talk than Socrates and S. Ambrose both at once.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo;
+said saucy Pica, &ldquo;now we know what Uncle Horace thinks of his
+own conversations with father!&rdquo;&nbsp; By the bye, Martyn and Mary
+come home to-morrow, and I am very glad of it, for those evening diversions
+on the beach go on in full force, and though there is nothing tangible,
+except Charley&rsquo;s smoke, to object to, and it is the present way
+of young people, there is something unsatisfactory in it.&nbsp; Edith
+does not seem to mind what her daughters do.&nbsp; Margaret has no occasion
+to be uneasy about Jane, who always stays with the little ones while
+the maids are at supper, and generally takes with her the devoted Avice,
+who has some delicacy of throat forbidding these evening excursions.&nbsp;
+Meg gets more boisterous and noisy every day, Uchtred being her chief
+companion; but as she is merely a tomboy, I believe her parents think
+it inexpedient to give her hints that might only put fancies in her
+head.&nbsp; So they have only prohibited learning to smoke, staying
+out later than nine o&rsquo;clock, and shrieking louder than a steam
+whistle!</p>
+<p>17.&mdash;Yesterday was a great success.&nbsp; Avice was silent at
+first, but Metelill drew her out, and she had become quite at her ease
+before we arrived.&nbsp; You would have been enchanted to see how much
+was made of our dear mother.&nbsp; Lord Hollybridge came out himself
+to give her his arm up the stone steps and across the slippery hall.&nbsp;
+The good old chief talked to her by the hour about you, and Avice&rsquo;s
+eyes shone all the time.&nbsp; After luncheon our kind hostess arranged
+that dear mother should have half an hour&rsquo;s perfect rest, in a
+charming little room fitted like a tent, and then had a low chair with
+two little fairy ponies in it to drive her about the gardens, while
+I walked with the two gentlemen and saw things much better than in the
+former hurly-burly, though that was a beautiful spectacle in its way.&nbsp;
+Avice, who has seen scores of <i>f&ecirc;tes</i> in college grounds,
+much preferred the scenery, etc., in their natural state to a crowd
+of strangers.&nbsp; The young people took possession of the two girls,
+and when we all met for the five o&rsquo;clock tea, before going home,
+Lady Georgina eagerly told her father that Miss Fulford had made out
+the subject of &lsquo;that picture.&rsquo;&nbsp; It was a very beautiful
+Pre-Raffaelite, of a lady gathering flowers in a meadow, and another
+in contemplation, while a mysterious shape was at the back; the ladies
+stiff-limbed but lovely faced, and the flowers&mdash;irises, anemones,
+violets, and even the grass-blossom, done with botanical accuracy.&nbsp;
+A friend of Lord Hollybridge had picked it up for him in some obscure
+place in Northern Italy, and had not yet submitted it to an expert.&nbsp;
+Avice, it appeared, had recognised it as representing Leah and Rachel,
+as Action and Contemplation in the last books of Dante&rsquo;s <i>Purgatorio</i>,
+with the mystic griffin car in the distance.&nbsp; Our hosts were very
+much delighted; we all repaired to the picture, where she very quietly
+and modestly pointed out the details.&nbsp; A Dante was hunted up, but
+Lady Hollybridge and I were the only elders who knew any Italian, and
+when the catalogue was brought, Avice knew all the names of the translators,
+but as none were to be found, Lord Hollybridge asked if she would make
+him understand the passage, which she did, blushing a little, but rendering
+it in very good fluent English, so that he thanked her, and complimented
+her so much that she was obliged to answer that she had got it up when
+they were hearing some lectures on Dante; and besides it was mentioned
+by Ruskin; whereupon she was also made to find the reference, and mark
+both it and Dante.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I like that girl,&rdquo; said the old Governor-General, &ldquo;she
+is intelligent and modest both.&nbsp; There is something fine about
+the shape of her head.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When we went home, Metelill was as proud and delighted as possible
+at what she called the Bird&rsquo;s triumph; but Avice did not seem
+at all elated, but to take her knowledge as a mere outcome of her ordinary
+Oxford life, where allusions, especially Ruskinese and Dantesque, came
+naturally.&nbsp; And then, as grandmamma went to sleep in her corner,
+the two girls and I fell into a conversation on that whole question
+of Action and Contemplation.&nbsp; At least Metelill asked the explanation,
+but I doubt whether she listened much while Avice and I talked out the
+matter, and I felt myself a girl again, holding the old interminable
+talks with the first dear Avice, before you made her my sister for those
+two happy years, and&mdash;Well, it is no use paining you and myself
+with going back to those days, though there was something in the earnest
+thoughtfulness and depth of her young namesake and godchild that carried
+me back to the choicest day of companionship before you came on the
+scene.&nbsp; And to think what a jewel I have missed all this time!</p>
+<p>18.&mdash;I am deeply grieved, and am almost ashamed to write what
+I have to tell you.&nbsp; I had been out to see my mother with Margaret
+and Emily settle in their favourite resort on the beach, and was coming
+in to write my letters, when, in the sitting-room, which has open French
+windows down to the ground, I heard an angry voice&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I tell you it was no joke.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s no use saying
+so,&rdquo; and I beheld Charley and Isa in the midst of a violent quarrel.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve looked on at plenty of your dodges, sucking up to
+Aunt Charlotte to get taken out with her; but when it comes to playing
+spiteful tricks on my sister I will speak out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>By this time I was on the window-step, checking Charley&rsquo;s very
+improper tone, and asking what was the matter.&nbsp; Isa sprang to me,
+declaring that it was all Charley&rsquo;s absurd suspicion and misconstruction.&nbsp;
+At last, amid hot words on both sides, I found that Charley had just
+found, shut into a small album which Metelill keeps upon the drawing-room
+table, a newly taken photograph of young Horne, one of the pupils, with
+a foolish devoted inscription upon the envelope, directed to Miss Fulford.</p>
+<p>Isa protested that she had only popped it in to keep it safe until
+she could return it.&nbsp; Charley broke out.&nbsp; &ldquo;As if I did
+not know better than that!&nbsp; Didn&rsquo;t you make him give you
+that parasol and promise him your photo?&nbsp; Ay, and give it him in
+return?&nbsp; You thought he would keep your secret, I suppose, but
+he tells everything, like a donkey as he is, to Bertie Elwood, and Bertie
+and I have such fun over him.&nbsp; And now, because you are jealous
+of poor Metelill, and think Aunt Charlotte may take a fancy to you instead
+of her, you are sticking his photo into her book just to do her harm
+with the aunts.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m not strait-laced.&nbsp; I wouldn&rsquo;t
+mind having the photos of a hundred and fifty young men, only they would
+be horrid guys and all just alike; but Aunt Charlotte is&mdash;is&mdash;well&mdash;a
+regular old maid about it, and you knew she would mind it, and so you
+did it on purpose to upset Metelill&rsquo;s chances.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Isa clung to me in floods of tears, desiring me not to believe anything
+so cruel and false.&nbsp; Every one always was so hard upon her, she
+said, and she had only put the thing inadvertently there, to get it
+out of sight, into the first book she saw, but unfortunately she did
+not know I had heard her trying to pass it off to Charley as a jest.&nbsp;
+However, as there was no proof there, I asked about the parasol.&nbsp;
+While the shopping was going on, she and young Horne had been in another
+street, and this was the consequence!&nbsp; I was perfectly confounded.&nbsp;
+Receive presents from young men!&nbsp; It seemed to me quite impossible.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Oh, Isa thinks nothing of that!&rdquo; said Charley.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ask
+her where she got those bangles, and that bouquet which she told you
+was half Metelill&rsquo;s.&nbsp; You think me awful, I know, Aunt Charlotte,
+but I do draw a line, though I would never have said one word about
+it if she had not played this nasty trick on Metelill.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Isa would have begun some imploring excuse, but our two gentlemen were
+seen coming up towards the window, and she fled, gasping out an entreaty
+that I would not tell Uncle Martyn.</p>
+<p>Nor did I then and there, for I needed to understand the matter and
+look into it, so I told Martyn and Horace not to wait for me, and heard
+Charley&rsquo;s story more coolly.&nbsp; I had thought that Mr. Horne
+was Metelill&rsquo;s friend.&nbsp; &ldquo;So he was at first,&rdquo;
+Charley said, &ldquo;but he is an uncommon goose, and Isa is no end
+of a hand at doing the pathetic poverty-stricken orphan!&nbsp; That&rsquo;s
+the way she gets so many presents!&rdquo;&nbsp; Then she explained,
+in her select slang, that young Horne&rsquo;s love affairs were the
+great amusement of his fellow-pupils, and that she, being sure that
+the parasol was no present from me, as Isa had given the cousins to
+understand, had set Bertie Elwood to extract the truth by teasing his
+friend.&nbsp; &ldquo;But I never meant to have told,&rdquo; said Charley,
+&ldquo;if you had not come in upon us, when I was in the midst of such
+a wax that I did not know what I was saying&rdquo;; and on my demanding
+what she meant by the elegant expression she had used about Isa and
+me, she explained that it was the schoolboy&rsquo;s word for currying
+favour.&nbsp; Every one but we stupid elders perceived the game, nay,
+even the Druces, living in full confidence with their children, knew
+what was going on.&nbsp; I have never spoken, but somehow people must
+read through one&rsquo;s brains, for there was a general conviction
+that I was going to choose a niece to accompany us.&nbsp; I wonder if
+you, my wise brother, let out anything to Edith.&nbsp; It is what men
+always do, they bind women to silence and then disclose the secret themselves,
+and say, &ldquo;Nothing is safe with these women.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Any way, these girls have been generous, or else true to their <i>esprit
+de corps</i>, I do not know which to call it; for though they looked
+on at Isa&rsquo;s man&oelig;uvres and my blindness with indignant contempt,
+they never attempted to interfere.&nbsp; Jane Druce was seized with
+a fit of passionate wrath and pity for me, but her father withheld her
+from disclosures, assuring her that I should probably find out the girl&rsquo;s
+true disposition, and that it would be wrong to deprive Isa of a chance
+of coming under a fresh influence.</p>
+<p>Poor girl, she must be very clever, for she kept up her constant
+wooing of me while she also coquetted with Mr. Horne, being really,
+as her contemporaries declare, a much worse flirt than Metelill, but
+the temptation of the parasol threw her off her guard, and she was very
+jealous of my taking out Metelill and Avice.&nbsp; I see now that it
+has been her effort to keep the others away from me.&nbsp; This spiteful
+trick, if it be true that she meant it, seems to have been done on Metelill,
+as being supposed to be her only real rival.&nbsp; Avice always yields
+to her, and besides, is too inoffensive to afford her any such opportunity.</p>
+<p>When I talked to Mary, she said, &ldquo;Oh yes, I always knew she
+was a horrid little treacherous puss.&nbsp; Nature began it, and that
+governess worked on a ready soil.&nbsp; We sent her to school, and hoped
+she was cured, but I have long seen that it has only shown her how to
+be more plausible.&nbsp; But what can one do?&nbsp; One could not turn
+out an orphan, and I did not see that she was doing our own girls any
+harm.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m sure I gave her every chance of marrying, for
+there was nothing I wished for so much, and I never told Martyn of her
+little man&oelig;uvres, knowing he would not stand them; and now what
+he will do, I can&rsquo;t think, unless you and Edward will take her
+off our hands.&nbsp; I believe you might do her good.&nbsp; She is an
+unfathomable mixture of sham and earnest, and she really likes you,
+and thinks much of you, as having a certain prestige, and being a woman
+of the world&rdquo; (fancy that).&nbsp; &ldquo;Besides, she is really
+religious in a sort of a way; much good you&rsquo;ll say it does her,
+but, as you know, there&rsquo;s a certain sort of devotion which makes
+no difference to people&rsquo;s conduct.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It seems to be the general desire of the family that we should take
+this unfortunate Isabel off their hands.&nbsp; Shall we?&nbsp; Cruelly
+as I have been disappointed in the girl, I can&rsquo;t help liking her;
+she is obliging, pleasant, ladylike in manners, very affectionate, and
+I can&rsquo;t help thinking that with the respect and fear for you she
+would feel she might be restrained, and that we could be the saving
+of her, though at the same time I know that my having been so egregiously
+deceived may be a sign that I am not fit to deal with her.&nbsp; I leave
+it to your decision altogether, and will say no more till I hear.&nbsp;
+Metelill is a charming girl, and I fancy you prefer her, and that her
+mother knows it, and would send her for at least a winter; but she gets
+so entirely off her balance whenever a young man of any sort comes near,
+that I should not like to take charge of her.&nbsp; It might be good
+for the worthy Jane, but as she would take a great deal of toning down
+and licking into shape, and as she would despise it all, refer everything
+to the Bourne Parva standard, and pine for home and village school,
+I don&rsquo;t think she need be considered, especially as I am sure
+she would not go, and could not be spared.&nbsp; Pica would absorb herself
+in languages and antiquities, and maintain the rights of women by insisting
+on having full time to study her protoplasms, snubbing and deriding
+all the officers who did not talk like Oxford dons.&nbsp; Probably the
+E. E. would be the only people she would think fit to speak to.&nbsp;
+Avice is the one to whom I feel the most drawn.&nbsp; She is thoroughly
+thoughtful, and her religion is not of the uninfluential kind Mary describes.&nbsp;
+Those distresses and perplexities which poor Isa affected were chiefly
+borrowed from her genuine ones; but she has obtained the high cultivation
+and intelligence that her Oxford life can give in full measure, and
+without conceit or pretension, and it is her unselfish, yielding spirit
+that has prevented me from knowing her sooner, though when not suppressed
+she can be thoroughly agreeable, and take her part in society with something
+of her mother&rsquo;s brilliancy.&nbsp; I think, too, that she would
+be spared, as Oxford does not agree with her, and a southern winter
+or two would be very good for her.&nbsp; Besides, the others might come
+and see her in vacation time.&nbsp; Could we not take both her and Isabel
+at least for the first winter?</p>
+<p>19.&mdash;A stormy wet day, the first we have had.&nbsp; Poor Isa
+has made an attempt at explanation and apology, but lost herself in
+a mist of words and tears.&nbsp; I suppose I was severe, for she shrinks
+from me, and clings to Avice, who has stood her friend in many a storm
+before, and, as Jane indignantly tells me, persists in believing that
+she is really sorry and wishes to be good.&nbsp; She is very attentive
+and obliging, and my dear mother, who is in happy ignorance of all this
+uproar, really likes her the best of all the girls.</p>
+<p>21.&mdash;We have had a great alarm.&nbsp; Last evening we went to
+the parish church; Horace Druce had been asked to preach, and the rain,
+which had fallen all the morning, cleared off just in time for the walk.&nbsp;
+Emily, Margaret, two of her children, and I sat in the gallery, and
+Avice and Isa in the free seats below.&nbsp; Avice had been kept at
+home by the rain in the morning, but had begged leave to go later.&nbsp;
+Darkness came on just as the first hymn was given out, and the verger
+went round with his long wand lighting the gas.&nbsp; In the gallery
+we saw plainly how, at the east end, something went wrong with his match,
+one which he thought had failed, and threw aside.&nbsp; It fell on a
+strip of straw matting in the aisle, which, being very dry, caught fire
+and blazed up for a few seconds before it was trampled out.&nbsp; Some
+foolish person, however, set the cry of &lsquo;Fire!&rsquo; going, and
+you know what that is in a crowded church.&nbsp; The vicar, in his high
+old-fashioned desk with a back to it, could not see.&nbsp; Horace in
+a chair, in the narrow, shallow sanctuary, did see that it was nothing,
+but between the cries of &lsquo;Fire!&rsquo; and the dying peal of the
+organ, could not make his voice heard.&nbsp; All he could do was to
+get to the rear of the crowd, together with the other few who had seen
+the real state of things, and turn back all those whom they could, getting
+them out through the vestry.&nbsp; But the main body were quite out
+of their reach, and everybody tried to rush scrambling into the narrow
+centre aisle, choking up the door, which was a complicated trap meant
+to keep out draughts.&nbsp; We in the gallery tried vainly to assure
+them that the only danger was in the crowd, and the clergyman in his
+desk, sure that was the chief peril, at any rate, went on waving and
+calling to them to wait; but the cries and shrieks drowned everything,
+and there was a most terrible time, as some 600 people jammed themselves
+in that narrow space, fighting, struggling, fainting.</p>
+<p>You may suppose how we watched our girls.&nbsp; They had let themselves
+be thrust up to the end of the seat by later comers: Avice the innermost.&nbsp;
+We saw them look up to us, with white faces.&nbsp; To our joy, Avice
+seemed to understand our signs and to try to withhold Isa, but she was
+too wild with fright not to try to push on to the end of the pew.&nbsp;
+Avice held her dress, and kept her back.&nbsp; Then, as the crowd swayed,
+the two girls stood on the seat, and presently I saw Avice bend down,
+and take from some one&rsquo;s arms a little child, which she seated
+on the edge of the pew, holding it in her arms, and soothing it.&nbsp;
+I don&rsquo;t know how long it all lasted, Horace says it was not ten
+minutes before he had got men and tools to break down the obstruction
+at the door, and pull out the crowded, crushed people, but to us it
+seemed hours.&nbsp; They were getting calmer too in the rear, for many
+had followed the lead through the vestry door, and others had found
+out that there was no fire at all.</p>
+<p>Wonderful to tell, no one was killed.&nbsp; There were some broken
+arms, three I think, and some bad bruises.&nbsp; Many people were fainting,
+and much hurt by the horrible heat and crush, but when at last the way
+was free, we saw Horace come into the church, looking about in great
+anxiety for the two girls, whom he had failed to find in the trampled
+multitude.&nbsp; Then Avice came up to him, with the child in her arms,
+and Isa followed, quite safe!&nbsp; How thankful we all were!&nbsp;
+Avice says she remembered at once that she had been told of the American
+fireman&rsquo;s orders to his little girl always to keep still in such
+an alarm, for the crowd was a worse peril than the fire.&nbsp; By the
+time we had come down the stairs and joined them, the child&rsquo;s
+father had come for it in great anxiety, for its sister had been trampled
+down fainting, and had just only revived enough to miss it!&nbsp; I
+shall never forget what it was to see people sucked down in that surging
+mass, and the thankful thrill of seeing our girls standing there quietly
+with the child between them, its little fair head on Avice&rsquo;s breast.&nbsp;
+We went home quietly and thankfully.&nbsp; Horace took Avice to the
+hotel that he might explain all to her parents, and let them know how
+well she had behaved; Isabel was shaken and tearful, and her voice sounded
+weak and nervous as she bade her cousin good-night and embraced her
+with much agitation.&nbsp; So I went to her room to see whether she
+needed any doctoring, but I found Metelill soothing her nicely, so I
+only kissed her (as I had not done these two nights).&nbsp; &ldquo;Ah,
+dear aunt, you forgive me!&rdquo; she said.&nbsp; The tone threw me
+back, as if she were making capital of her adventure, and I said, &ldquo;You
+have not offended <i>me</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Ah! you are still angry,
+and yet you <i>do</i> love me still a little,&rdquo; she said, not letting
+me go.&nbsp; &ldquo;The more love, the more grief for your having done
+wrong,&rdquo; I said; and she returned, &ldquo;Ah! if I always had you.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+That chilled me, and I went away.&nbsp; She does not know the difference
+between pardon and remission of consequences.&nbsp; One must have something
+of the spirit of the fifty-first Psalm before that perception comes.&nbsp;
+Poor dear child, how one longs for power to breathe into her some such
+penitence!</p>
+<p>Avice is quite knocked up to-day, and her mother has kept her in
+bed, where she is very happy with her Jane.&nbsp; I have been to see
+her, and she has been thanking me for having suggested the making way
+for fresh comers in a pew.&nbsp; Otherwise, she says, she could not
+have withstood the rush.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>SIR EDWARD FULFORD <i>to</i> MISS FULFORD<br /><i>22d July.</i></p>
+<p>My Dear Charlotte,&mdash;I decidedly object to the company of a young
+lady with such a genius for intrigue as Isabel Fulford seems to possess.&nbsp;
+If we had only ourselves to consider, no doubt it would be well for
+you to take her in hand, but in the sort of house ours will be, there
+must be no one we cannot depend upon in our own family.</p>
+<p>I suppose I am guilty of having betrayed my thoughts to Edith.&nbsp;
+I had certainly wished for Metelill.&nbsp; She is an engaging creature,
+and I am sorry you take so adverse a view of her demeanour; but I promised
+to abide by your judgment and I will not question it.&nbsp; We will
+ask Arthur and Edith to bring her to visit us, and then perhaps you
+may be better satisfied with her.</p>
+<p>The learned young lady is out of the question, and as Avice is my
+dear wife&rsquo;s godchild as well as mine, I am very glad she has deserved
+that your choice should fall upon her.&nbsp; It seems as if you would
+find in her just the companionship you wish, and if her health needs
+the southern climate, it is well to give her the opportunity.&nbsp;
+You had better propose the scheme at once, and provide what she will
+need for an outfit.&nbsp; The last touches might be given at Paris.&nbsp;
+I hope to get time to run down to New Cove next week, and if you and
+the niece can be ready to start by the middle of August, we will take
+Switzerland by the way, and arrive at Malta by the end of September.</p>
+<p>I shall be curious to hear the result of your throwing the handkerchief.&mdash;Your
+affectionate brother,</p>
+<p>E. F.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>MISS FULFORD <i>to</i> SIR EDWARD FULFORD</p>
+<p><i>July</i> 24.&mdash;I threw the handkerchief by asking Martyn and
+Mary to spare their daughter.&nbsp; Tears came into Mary&rsquo;s eyes,
+the first I ever saw there, and she tried in vain to say something ridiculous.&nbsp;
+Martyn walked to the window and said huskily, &ldquo;Dr. A--- said it
+would confirm her health to spend a few winters in the South.&nbsp;
+Thank you, Charlotte!&rdquo;&nbsp; They did not doubt a moment, but
+Martyn feels the parting more than I ever thought he would, and Pica
+and Uchtred go about howling and bewailing, and declaring that they
+never shall know where to find anything again.</p>
+<p>Avice herself is much more sorrowful than glad, though she is too
+courteous and grateful not to show herself gracious to me.&nbsp; She
+did entreat me to take Isa instead, so earnestly that I was obliged
+to read her your decided objections.&nbsp; It was a blow to her at first,
+but she is rapidly consoling herself over the wonderful commissions
+she accepts.&nbsp; She is to observe Mediterranean zoophytes, and send
+them home on glass slides for the family benefit.&nbsp; She is to send
+her father photographs and drawings to illustrate his lectures, and
+Jane has begged for a pebble or rock from S. Paul&rsquo;s Bay, to show
+to her class at school.&nbsp; Indeed, I believe Avice is to write a
+special journal, to be published in the <i>Bourne</i> <i>Parva Parish
+Magazine</i>; Charley begs for a sea-horse, and Freddy has been instructed
+by one of the pupils to bargain for nothing less than the Colossus of
+Rhodes; Metelill is quite as cordial in her rejoicing, and Edith owns
+that, now it has come to the point, she is very glad to keep her daughter.</p>
+<p>And Isa?&nbsp; Well, she is mortified, poor child.&nbsp; I think
+she must have cried bitterly over the disappointment, for she looked
+very wretched when we met at dinner.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, Martyn had a walk with Emily, who found that he was very
+sorry not to be relieved from Isabel, though he knew you were quite
+right not to take her.&nbsp; He thought Oxford not a good place for
+such a girl, and the absence of the trustworthy Avice would make things
+worse.&nbsp; Then Emily proposed to take Isabel back to the Birchwood
+with her.&nbsp; Grandmamma really likes the girl, who is kind and attentive.&nbsp;
+There are no young people to whom she could do harm, Emily can look
+after her, and will be glad of help and companionship.&nbsp; The whole
+family council agreed that it will be a really charitable work, and
+that if any one can do her good, it will be the mother and Aunt Emily.</p>
+<p>Isa has acquiesced with an overflow of gratitude and affection to
+them for taking pity on her.&nbsp; It sounds a little fulsome, but I
+believe some of it is genuine.&nbsp; She is really glad that some one
+wishes for her, and I can quite believe that she will lose in Avice
+all that made life congenial to her under Mary&rsquo;s brisk uncompromising
+rule.&nbsp; If she can only learn to be true&mdash;true to herself and
+to others&mdash;she will yet be a woman to love and esteem, and at Birchwood
+they will do their best to show that religious sentiment must be connected
+with Truth.</p>
+<p>And so ends my study of the manners of my nieces, convincing me the
+more that as the manners are, so is the man or woman.&nbsp; The heart,
+or rather the soul, forms the manners, and they <i>are</i> the man.</p>
+<p>C. F.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>COME TO HER KINGDOM</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>&lsquo;Take care!&nbsp; Oh, take care!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Whisk, swish, click, click, through the little crowd at Stokesley
+on a fine April afternoon, of jocund children just let loose from school,
+and mothers emerging from their meeting, collecting their progeny after
+the fashion of old ewes with their lambs; Susan Merrifield in a huge,
+carefully preserved brown mushroom hat, with a big basket under one
+arm, and a roll of calico under the other; her sister Elizabeth with
+a book in one hand, and a packet of ambulance illustrations; the Vicar,
+Mr. Doyle, and his sister likewise loaded, talking to them about the
+farmer&rsquo;s wedding of the morning, for which the bells had been
+ringing fitfully all day, and had just burst out again.&nbsp; Such was
+the scene, through which, like a flash, spun a tricycle, from which
+a tiny curly-haired being in knickerbockers was barely saved by his
+mother&rsquo;s seizing him by one arm.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;A tricycle!&rsquo; exclaimed the Vicar.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;A woman!&nbsp; Oh!&rsquo; cried Susan in horror, &lsquo;and
+she&rsquo;s stopping&mdash;at the Gap.&nbsp; Oh!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;My dear Susie, you must have seen ladies on tricycles before,&rsquo;
+whispered her sister.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;No, indeed, I am thankful to say I have not!&nbsp; If it should
+be Miss Arthuret!&rsquo; said Susan, with inexpressible tones in her
+voice.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;She was bowing right and left,&rsquo; said the Vicar, a little
+maliciously; &lsquo;depend upon it, she thought this was a welcome from
+the rural population.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Hark! here&rsquo;s something coming.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The Bonchamp fly came rattling up, loaded with luggage, and with
+a quiet lady in black seated in it, which stopped at the same gate.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;The obedient mother, no doubt,&rsquo; said Elizabeth.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;She looks like a lady.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>There had been a good deal of excitement at Stokesley about the property
+known by the pleasing name of the Gap.&nbsp; An old gentleman had lived
+there for many years, always in a secluded state, and latterly imbecile,
+and on his death in the previous year no one had for some time appeared
+as heir; but it became known that the inheritrix was a young lady, a
+great-niece, living with a widowed mother in one of the large manufacturing
+towns in the north of England.&nbsp; Her father had been a clergyman
+and had died when she was an infant.&nbsp; That was all that was known,
+and as the house had become almost uninhabitable, the necessary repairs
+had prevented the heiress from taking possession all this time.&nbsp;
+It was not a very large inheritance, only comprising a small farm, the
+substantial village shop, four or five cottages, and a moderate-sized
+house and grounds, where the neglected trees had grown to strange irregular
+proportions, equally with the income, which, owing to the outgoings
+being small, had increased to about &pound;800 or &pound;900 a year,
+and of course it was a subject of much anxiety with Admiral Merrifield&rsquo;s
+family to know what sort of people the newcomers would prove.</p>
+<p>Of the large family only the two eldest daughters were at home; Susan,
+now nearly forty, had never left it, but had been the daughter-of-all-work
+at home and lady-of-all-work to the parish ever since she had emerged
+from the schoolroom; her apricot complexion showing hardly any change,
+and such as there was never perceived by her parents.&nbsp; The Admiral,
+still a light, wiry, hale man, as active as ever, with his hands full
+of county, parish, and farming business; an invalid for many years,
+but getting into that health which is <i>la jeunesse de la vieillesse.</i></p>
+<p>Elizabeth had, from twenty-five to thirty-two, been spared from home
+by her father to take care of his stepmother in London, where she had
+beguiled her time with a certain amount of authorship under a <i>nom
+de plume</i>, and had been introduced to some choice society both through
+her literary abilities and her family connections.</p>
+<p>Four years previous the old lady had died, leaving her a legacy,
+which, together with her gains, would have enabled her to keep such
+a home in town as to remain in touch with the world to which she had
+been introduced; but she had never lost her Stokesley heart enough for
+the temptation to outweigh the disappointment she would have caused
+at home, and the satisfaction and rest of being among her own people.&nbsp;
+So she only went up for an occasional visit, and had become the brightness
+of the house, and Susan&rsquo;s beloved partner in all her works.</p>
+<p>Her father, who understood better than did her mother and sister
+what she had given up, had insisted on her having a sitting-room to
+herself, which she embellished with the personal possessions she had
+accumulated, and where she pursued her own avocations in the forenoon,
+often indeed interrupted, but never showing, and not often feeling,
+that it was to her hindrance, and indeed the family looked on her work
+sufficiently as a profession, not only to acquiesce, but to have a certain
+complacency in it, though it was a kind of transparent fiction that
+MESA was an anagram of her initials and that of Stokesley.&nbsp; Her
+mother at any rate believed that none of the neighbours guessed at any
+such thing.</p>
+<p>Stokesley was a good deal out of the world, five miles from the station
+at Bonchamp, over hilly, stony roads, so that the cyclist movement had
+barely reached it; the neighbourhood was sparse, and Mrs. Merrifield&rsquo;s
+health had not been conducive to visiting, any more than was her inclination,
+so that there was a little agitation about first calls.</p>
+<p>The newcomers appeared at church on Sunday at all the services.&nbsp;
+A bright-faced girl of one-and-twenty, with little black eyes like coals
+of fire, a tight ulster, like a riding habit, and a small billycock
+hat, rather dismayed those who still held that bonnets ought to be the
+Sunday gear of all beyond childhood; but the mother, in rich black silk,
+was unexceptionable.</p>
+<p>Refusing to be marshalled up the aisle to the seat which persistent
+tradition assigned to the Gap in the aristocratic quarter, daughter
+and mother (it was impossible not thus to call them) sat themselves
+down on the first vacant place, close to a surviving white smock-frock,
+and blind to the bewildered glances of his much-bent friend in velveteen,
+who, hobbling in next after, found himself displaced and separated alike
+from his well-thumbed prayer and hymn book and the companion who found
+the places for him.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;It ain&rsquo;t fitty like,&rsquo; said the old man confidentially
+to Susan, &lsquo;nor the ladies wouldn&rsquo;t like it when we comes
+in with our old coats all of a muck with wet.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;The principle is right,&rsquo; said Bessie, when this was
+repeated to her; &lsquo;but practice ought to wait till native manners
+and customs are learnt.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The two sisters offered to save their mother the first visit&mdash;leave
+her card, or make her excuses; but Mrs. Merrifield held that a card
+thus left savoured of deceit, and that the deed must be womanfully done
+in person.&nbsp; But she would not wait till the horses could be spared,
+saying that for near village neighbours it was more friendly to go down
+in her donkey-chair; and so she did, Bessie driving her, and the Admiral
+walking with them.</p>
+<p>The Gap had, ever since Bessie could remember, been absolutely shrouded
+in trees, its encircling wall hidden in ivy bushes, over which laburnums,
+lilacs, pink thorns, and horse chestnuts towered; and the drive from
+the seldom-opened gate was almost obstructed by the sweeping arms of
+laurels and larches.</p>
+<p>It was obstructed now, but by these same limbs lying amputated; and
+&lsquo;chop, chop!&rsquo; was heard in the distance.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh, the Arbutus!&rsquo; sighed Bessie.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Clearing was much needed,&rsquo; said her father, with a man&rsquo;s
+propensity for the axe.</p>
+<p>The donkey, however, thought it uncanny, &lsquo;upon the pivot of
+his skull, turned round his long left ear,&rsquo; and planted his feet
+firmly.&nbsp; Mrs. Merrifield, deprecating the struggle by which her
+husband would on such occasions enforce discipline, begged to get out;
+and while this was going on, the ulstered young lady, with a small axe
+in hand, came, as it were, to the rescue, and, while the donkey was
+committed to a small boy, explained hastily, &lsquo;So overgrown, there
+is nothing to be done but to let in light and air.&nbsp; My mother is
+at home,&rsquo; she added; &lsquo;she will be happy to see you,&rsquo;
+and, conducting them in with complete self-possession&mdash;rather,
+as it occurred to Bessie, as the Queen might have led the way to the
+Duchess of Kent, though there was a perfect simplicity and evident enjoyment
+about her that was very prepossessing, and took off the edge of the
+sense of conceit.&nbsp; Besides, the palace was, to London eyes at least,
+so little to boast of, with the narrow little box of a wooden porch,
+the odd, one-sided vestibule, and the tiny anteroom with the worn carpet;
+but the drawing-room, in spite of George IV furniture, was really pretty,
+with French windows opening on a well-mown lawn, and fresh importations
+of knick-knacks, and vases of wild flowers, which made it look inhabited
+and pleasant.&nbsp; There was no one there, and the young lady proceeded
+to fetch her mother; and the unguarded voice was caught by Bessie&rsquo;s
+quick ears from the window.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Here are Admiral and Mrs. Merrifield, and one daughter.&nbsp;
+Come along, little mammy!&nbsp; Worthy, homely old folks&mdash;just
+in your line.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>To Bessie&rsquo;s relief, she perceived that this was wholly unheard
+by her father and mother.&nbsp; And there was no withstanding the eager,
+happy, shy looks of the mother, whose whole face betrayed that after
+many storms she had come into a haven of peace, and that she was proud
+to owe it to her daughter.</p>
+<p>A few words showed that mother and daughter were absolutely enchanted
+with Stokesley, their own situation, and one another&mdash;the young
+lady evidently all the more because she perceived so much to be done.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Everything wants improving.&nbsp; It is so choked up,&rsquo;
+she said, &lsquo;one wants to let in the light.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;There are a good many trees,&rsquo; said the Admiral, while
+Bessie suspected that she meant figuratively as well as literally; and
+as the damsel was evidently burning to be out at her clearing operations
+again, and had never parted with her axe, the Admiral offered to go
+with her and tell her about the trees, for, as he observed, she could
+hardly judge of those not yet out in leaf.</p>
+<p>She accepted him, though Bessie shrewdly suspected that the advice
+would be little heeded, and, not fancying the wet grass and branches,
+nor the demolition of old friends, she did not follow the pair, but
+effaced herself, and listened with much interest to the two mothers,
+who sat on the sofa with their heads together.&nbsp; Either Mrs. Merrifield
+was wonderful in inspiring confidence, or it was only too delightful
+to Mrs. Arthuret to find a listener of her own standing to whom to pour
+forth her full heart of thankfulness and delight in her daughter.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Oh, it is too much!&rsquo; occurred so often in her talk that,
+if it had not been said with liquid eyes, choking voice, and hands clasped
+in devout gratitude, it would have been tedious; but Mrs. Merrifield
+thoroughly went along with it, and was deeply touched.</p>
+<p>The whole story, as it became known, partly in these confidences,
+partly afterwards, was this.&nbsp; The good lady, who had struck the
+family at first as a somewhat elderly mother for so young a daughter,
+had been for many years a governess, engaged all the time to a curate,
+who only obtained a small district incumbency in a town, after wear
+and tear, waiting and anxiety, had so exhausted him that the second
+winter brought on bronchitis, and he scarcely lived to see his little
+daughter, Arthurine.&nbsp; The mother had struggled on upon a pittance
+eked out with such music teaching as she could procure, with her little
+girl for her sole care, joy, and pride&mdash;a child who, as she declared,
+had never given her one moment&rsquo;s pang or uneasiness.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Poor mamma, could she say that of any one of her nine?&rsquo;
+thought Bessie; and Mrs. Merrifield made no such attempt.</p>
+<p>Arthurine had brought home all prizes, all distinctions at the High
+School, but&mdash;here was the only disappointment of her life&mdash;a
+low fever had prevented her trying for a scholarship at Girton.&nbsp;
+In consideration, however, of her great abilities and high qualities,
+as well as out of the great kindness of the committee, she had been
+made an assistant to one of the class mistresses, and had worked on
+with her own studies, till the wonderful tidings came of the inheritance
+that had fallen to her quite unexpectedly; for since her husband&rsquo;s
+death Mrs. Arthuret had known nothing of his family, and while he was
+alive there were too many between him and the succession for the chance
+to occur to him as possible.&nbsp; The relief and blessing were more
+than the good lady could utter.&nbsp; All things are comparative, and
+to one whose assured income had been &pound;70 a year, &pound;800 was
+unbounded wealth; to one who had spent her life in schoolrooms and lodgings,
+the Gap was a lordly demesne.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And what do you think was the first thing my sweet child said?&rsquo;
+added Mrs. Arthuret, with her eyes glittering through tears.&nbsp; &lsquo;Mammy,
+you shall never hear the scales again, and you shall have the best Mocha
+coffee every day of your life.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Bessie felt that after this she must like the sweet child, though
+sweetness did not seem to her the predominant feature in Arthurine.</p>
+<p>After the pathos to which she had listened there was somewhat of
+a comedy to come, for the ladies had spent the autumn abroad, and had
+seen and enjoyed much.&nbsp; &lsquo;It was a perfect feast to see how
+Arthurine entered into it all,&rsquo; said the mother.&nbsp; &lsquo;She
+was never at a loss, and explained it all to me.&nbsp; Besides, perhaps
+you have seen her article?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I beg your pardon.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Her article in the <i>Kensington</i>.&nbsp; It attracted a
+great deal of attention, and she has had many compliments.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh! the <i>Kensington Magazine</i>,&rsquo; said Mrs. Merrifield,
+rather uneasily, for she was as anxious that Bessie should not be suspected
+of writing in the said periodical as the other mother was that Arthurine
+should have the fame of her contributions.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Do you take it?&rsquo; asked Mrs. Arthuret, &lsquo;for we
+should be very glad to lend it to you.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>A whole pile was on the table, and Mrs. Merrifield looked at them
+with feeble thanks and an odd sort of conscious dread, though she could
+with perfect truth have denied either &lsquo;taking it&rsquo; or reading
+it.</p>
+<p>Bessie came to her relief.&nbsp; &lsquo;Thank you,&rsquo; she said;
+&lsquo;we do; some of us have it.&nbsp; Is your daughter&rsquo;s article
+signed A. A., and doesn&rsquo;t it describe a boarding-house on the
+Italian lakes?&nbsp; I thought it very clever and amusing.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Arthuret&rsquo;s face lighted up.&nbsp; &lsquo;Oh yes, my dear,&rsquo;
+slipped out in her delight.&nbsp; &lsquo;And do you know, it all came
+of her letter to one of the High School ladies, who is sister to the
+sub-editor, such a clever, superior girl!&nbsp; She read it to the headmistress
+and all, and they agreed that it was too good to be lost, and Arthurine
+copied it out and added to it, and he&mdash;Mr. Jarrett&mdash;said it
+was just what he wanted&mdash;so full of information and liveliness&mdash;and
+she is writing some more for him.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Merrifield was rather shocked, but she felt that she herself
+was in a glass house, was, in fact, keeping a literary daughter, so
+she only committed herself to, &lsquo;She is very young.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Only one-and-twenty,&rsquo; returned Mrs. Arthuret triumphantly;
+&lsquo;but then she has had such advantages, and made such use of them.&nbsp;
+Everything seems to come at once, though, perhaps, it is unthankful
+to say so.&nbsp; Of course, it is no object now, but I could not help
+thinking what it would have been to us to have discovered this talent
+of hers at the time when we could hardly make both ends meet.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;She will find plenty of use for it,&rsquo; said Mrs. Merrifield,
+who, as the wife of a country squire and the mother of nine children,
+did not find it too easy to make her ends meet upon a larger income.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh yes! indeed she will, the generous child.&nbsp; She is
+full of plans for the regeneration of the village.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Poor Mrs. Merrifield! this was quite too much for her.&nbsp; She
+thought it irreverent to apply the word in any save an ecclesiastical
+sense; nor did she at all desire to have the parish, which was considered
+to be admirably worked by the constituted authorities, &lsquo;regenerated,&rsquo;
+whatever that might mean, by a young lady of one-and-twenty.&nbsp; She
+rose up and observed to her daughter that she saw papa out upon the
+lawn, and she thought it was time to go home.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Arthuret came out with them, and found what Bessie could only
+regard as a scene of desolation.&nbsp; Though gentlemen, as a rule,
+have no mercy on trees, and ladies are equally inclined to cry, &lsquo;Woodman,
+spare that tree,&rsquo; the rule was reversed, for Miss Arthuret was
+cutting, and ordering cutting all round her ruthlessly with something
+of the pleasure of a child in breaking a new toy to prove that it is
+his own, scarcely listening when the Admiral told her what the trees
+were, and how beautiful in their season; while even as to the evergreens,
+she did not know a yew from a cedar, and declared that she must get
+rid of this horrid old laurustinus, while she lopped away at a Portugal
+laurel.&nbsp; Her one idea seemed to be that it was very unwholesome
+to live in a house surrounded with trees; and the united influence of
+the Merrifields, working on her mother by representing what would be
+the absence of shade in a few months&rsquo; time, barely availed to
+save the life of the big cedar; while the great rhododendron, wont to
+present a mountain of shining leaves and pale purple blossoms every
+summer, was hewn down without remorse as an awful old laurel, and left
+a desolate brown patch in its stead.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Is it an emblem,&rsquo; thought Bessie, &lsquo;of what she
+would like to do to all of us poor old obstructions?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>After all, Mrs. Merrifield could not help liking the gentle mother,
+by force of sympathy; and the Admiral was somewhat fascinated by the
+freshness and impetuosity of the damsel, as elderly men are wont to
+be with young girls who amuse them with what they are apt to view as
+an original form of the silliness common to the whole female world except
+their own wives, and perhaps their daughters; and Bessie was extremely
+amused, and held her peace, as she had been used to do in London.&nbsp;
+Susan was perhaps the most annoyed and indignant.&nbsp; She was presiding
+over seams and button-holes the next afternoon at school, when the mother
+and daughter walked in; and the whole troop started to their feet and
+curtsied.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Don&rsquo;t make them stand!&nbsp; I hate adulation.&nbsp;
+Sit down, please.&nbsp; Where&rsquo;s the master?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;In the boys&rsquo; school, ma&rsquo;am,&rsquo; said the mistress,
+uncomfortably indicating the presence of Miss Merrifield, who felt herself
+obliged to come forward and shake hands.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh! so you have separate schools.&nbsp; Is not that a needless
+expense?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;It has always been so,&rsquo; returned Susan quietly.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Board?&nbsp; No?&nbsp; Well, no doubt you are right; but I
+suppose it is at a sacrifice of efficiency.&nbsp; Have you cookery classes?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;We have not apparatus, and the girls go out too early for
+it to be of much use.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Ah, that&rsquo;s a mistake.&nbsp; Drawing?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;The boys draw.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I shall go and see them.&nbsp; Not the girls?&nbsp; They look
+orderly enough; but are they intelligent?&nbsp; Well, I shall look in
+and examine them on their special subjects, if they have any.&nbsp;
+I suppose not.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Only class.&nbsp; Grammar and needlework.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I see, the old routine.&nbsp; Quite the village school.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;It is very nice work,&rsquo; put in Mrs. Arthuret, who had
+been looking at it.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh yes, it always is when everything is sacrificed to it.&nbsp;
+Good-morning, I shall see more of you, Mrs.&mdash;ahem.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Please, ma&rsquo;am, should I tell her that she is not a school
+manager?&rsquo; inquired the mistress, somewhat indignantly, when the
+two ladies had departed.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;You had better ask the Vicar what to do,&rsquo; responded
+Susan.</p>
+<p>The schoolmaster, on his side, seemed to have had so much advice
+and offers of assistance in lessons on history, geography, and physical
+science, that he had been obliged to refer her to the managers, and
+explain that till the next inspection he was bound to abide by the time-table.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Ah, well, I will be one of the managers another year.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So she told the Vicar, who smiled, and said, &lsquo;We must elect
+you.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I am sure much ought to be done.&nbsp; It is mere waste to
+have two separate schools, when a master can bring the children on so
+much better in the higher subjects.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Mrs. Merrifield and the rest of us are inclined to think that
+what stands highest of all with us is endangered by mixed schools,&rsquo;
+said Mr. Doyle.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh!&rsquo; Arthurine opened her eyes; &lsquo;but education
+does all <i>that</i>!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Education does, but knowledge is not wisdom.&nbsp; Susan Merrifield&rsquo;s
+influence has done more for our young women than the best class teaching
+could do.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh, but the Merrifields are all so <i>born&eacute;s</i> and
+homely; they stand in the way of all culture.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Indeed,&rsquo; said the Vicar, who had in his pocket a very
+favourable review of MESA&rsquo;s new historical essay.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Surely an old-fashioned squire and Lady Bountiful and their
+very narrow daughters should not be allowed to prevent improvement,
+pauperise the place, and keep it in its old grooves.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Well, we shall see what you think by the time you have lived
+here long enough to be eligible for&mdash;what?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;School manager, guardian of the poor!&rsquo; cried Arthurine.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;We shall see,&rsquo; repeated the Vicar.&nbsp; &lsquo;Good-morning.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>He asked Bessie&rsquo;s leave to disclose who MESA was.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh, don&rsquo;t!&rsquo; she cried, &lsquo;it would spoil the
+fun!&nbsp; Besides, mamma would not like it, which is a better reason.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>There were plenty of books, old and new, in Bessie&rsquo;s room,
+magazines and reviews, but they did not come about the house much, unless
+any of the Rockstone cousins or the younger generation were staying
+there, or her brother David had come for a rest of mind and body.&nbsp;
+Between housekeeping, gardening, parish work, and pottering, Mrs. Merrifield
+and Susan never had time for reading, except that Susan thought it her
+duty to keep something improving in hand, which generally lasted her
+six weeks on a moderate average.&nbsp; The Admiral found quite reading
+enough in the newspapers, pamphlets, and business publications; and
+their neighbours, the Greville family, were chiefly devoted to hunting
+and lawn tennis, so that there was some reason in Mrs. Arthuret&rsquo;s
+lamentation to the Vicar that dear Arthurine did so miss intellectual
+society, such as she had been used to with the High School mistresses&mdash;two
+of whom had actually been at Girton!</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Does she not get on with Bessie Merrifield?&rsquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Miss Bessie has a very sweet face; Arthurine did say she seemed
+well informed and more intelligent than her sister.&nbsp; Perhaps Arthurine
+might take her up.&nbsp; It would be such an advantage to the poor girl.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Which?&rsquo; was on Mr. Doyle&rsquo;s tongue, but he restrained
+it, and only observed that Bessie had lived for a good many years in
+London.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;So I understood,&rsquo; said Arthurine, &lsquo;but with an
+old grandmother, and that is quite as bad as if it was in the country;
+but I will see about it.&nbsp; I might get up a debating society, or
+one for studying German.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>In the meantime Arthurine decided on improving and embellishing the
+parish with a drinking fountain, and meeting Bessie one afternoon in
+the village, she started the idea.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;But,&rsquo; said Bessie, &lsquo;there is a very good supply.&nbsp;
+Papa saw that good water was accessible to all the houses in the village
+street ten years ago, and the outlying ones have wells, and there&rsquo;s
+the brook for the cattle.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I am sure every village should have a fountain and a trough,
+and I shall have it here instead of this dirty corner.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Can you get the ground?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh, any one would give ground for such a purpose!&nbsp; Whose
+is it?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Mr. Grice&rsquo;s, at Butter End.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The next time Susan and Bessie encountered Arthurine, she began&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Can you or Admiral Merrifield do nothing with that horrid
+old Grice!&nbsp; Never was any one so pigheaded and stupid.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;What?&nbsp; He won&rsquo;t part with the land you want?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;No; I wrote to him and got no answer.&nbsp; Then I wrote again,
+and I got a peaked-hand sort of note that his wife wrote, I should think.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Mr. Grice presented his compliments&rdquo; (compliments indeed!),
+&ldquo;and had no intention of parting with any part of Spragg&rsquo;s
+portion.&rdquo;&nbsp; Well, then I called to represent what a benefit
+it would be to the parish and his own cattle, and what do you think
+the old brute said?&mdash;that &ldquo;there was a great deal too much
+done for the parish already, and he wouldn&rsquo;t have no hand in setting
+up the labourers, who were quite impudent enough already.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Well, I saw it was of no use to talk to an old wretch like that about
+social movements and equal rights, so I only put the question whether
+having pure water easily accessible would not tend to make them better
+behaved and less impudent as he called it, upon which he broke out into
+a tirade.&nbsp; &ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t hold with cold water and teetotal,
+not he.&nbsp; Why, it had come to <i>that</i>&mdash;that there was no
+such thing as getting a fair day&rsquo;s work out of a labouring man
+with their temperance, and their lectures, and their schools, and their
+county councils and what not!&rdquo;&nbsp; Really I had read of such
+people, but I hardly believed they still existed.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Grice is very old, and the regular old sort of farmer,&rsquo;
+said Bessie.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;But could not the Admiral persuade him, or Mr. Doyle?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh no,&rsquo; said Susan, &lsquo;it would be of no use.&nbsp;
+He was just as bad about a playground for the boys, though it would
+have prevented their being troublesome elsewhere.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Besides,&rsquo; added Bessie, &lsquo;I am sure papa would
+say that there is no necessity.&nbsp; He had the water analysed, and
+it is quite good, and plenty of it.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Well, I shall see what can be done.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;She thinks us as bad as old Grice,&rsquo; said Susan, as they
+saw her walking away in a determined manner.</p>
+<p>The next thing that was heard was the Admiral coming in from the
+servants&rsquo; hall, whither he had been summoned by &lsquo;Please,
+sir, James Hodd wishes to speak to you.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;What is this friend of yours about, Bessie?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;What friend, papa?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Why, this Miss Arthur&mdash;what d&rsquo;ye call her?&rsquo;
+said the Admiral (who on the whole was much more attracted by her than
+were his daughters).&nbsp; &lsquo;Here&rsquo;s a deputation from her
+tenant, James Hodd, with &ldquo;Please, sir, I wants to know if &rsquo;tis
+allowed to turn folks out of their houses as they&rsquo;ve paid rent
+for reg&rsquo;lar with a week&rsquo;s notice, when they pays by the
+year.&rdquo;&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;You don&rsquo;t mean it!&rsquo; exclaimed Mrs. Merrifield
+and Susan together.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Poor old Mrs. West,&rsquo; said the mother.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And all the Tibbinses!&rsquo; exclaimed Susan.&nbsp; &lsquo;She
+can&rsquo;t do it, can she, papa?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Certainly not, without the proper notice, and so I told James,
+and that the notice she had sent down to him was so much waste-paper.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;So at least she has created a village Hampden,&rsquo; said
+Bessie, &lsquo;though, depend upon it, she little supposes herself to
+be the petty tyrant.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I must go and explain to her, I suppose, to-morrow morning,&rsquo;
+said the Admiral.</p>
+<p>However, he had scarcely reached his own gate before the ulstered
+form was seen rushing up to him.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh!&nbsp; Admiral Merrifield, good-morning; I was coming to
+ask you&mdash;&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And I was coming to you.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh!&nbsp; Admiral, is it really so&mdash;as that impudent
+man told me&mdash;that those horrid people can&rsquo;t be got out of
+those awful tumbledown, unhealthy places for all that immense time?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Surely he was not impudent to you?&nbsp; He was only asserting
+his right.&nbsp; The cottages were taken by the year, and you have no
+choice but to give six months&rsquo; notice.&nbsp; I hope he was not
+disrespectful.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Well, no&mdash;I can&rsquo;t say that he was, though I don&rsquo;t
+care for those cap-in-hand ways of your people here.&nbsp; But at any
+rate, he says he won&rsquo;t go&mdash;no, not any of them, though I
+offered to pay them up to the end of the time, and now I must put off
+my beautiful plans.&nbsp; I was drawing them all yesterday morning&mdash;two
+model cottages on each side, and the drinking fountain in the middle.&nbsp;
+I brought them up to show you.&nbsp; Could you get the people to move
+out?&nbsp; I would promise them to return after the rebuilding.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Very nice drawings.&nbsp; Yes&mdash;yes&mdash;very kind intentions.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Then can&rsquo;t you persuade them?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;But, my dear young lady, have you thought what is to become
+of them in the meantime?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Why, live somewhere else!&nbsp; People in Smokeland were always
+shifting about.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Yes&mdash;those poor little town tenements are generally let
+on short terms and are numerous enough.&nbsp; But here&mdash;where are
+the vacant cottages for your four families?&nbsp; Hodd with his five
+children, Tibbins with eight or nine, Mrs. West and her widow daughter
+and three children, and the Porters with a bedridden father?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;They are dreadfully overcrowded.&nbsp; Is there really no
+place?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Probably not nearer than those trumpery new tenements at Bonchamp.&nbsp;
+That would be eight miles to be tramped to the men&rsquo;s work, and
+the Wests would lose the washing and charing that maintains them.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Then do you think it can never be done?&nbsp; See how nice
+my plans are!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh yes! very pretty drawings, but you don&rsquo;t allow much
+outlet.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I thought you had allotments, and that they would do, and
+I mean to get rid of the pig-sties.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;A most unpopular proceeding, I warn you.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;There&rsquo;s nothing more unsanitary than a pig-sty.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;That depends on how it is kept.&nbsp; And may I ask, do you
+mean also to dispense with staircases?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh!&nbsp; I forgot.&nbsp; But do you really mean to say that
+I can never carry out my improvements, and that these people must live
+all herded together till everybody is dead?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Not quite that,&rsquo; said the Admiral, laughing; &lsquo;but
+most improvements require patience and a little experience of the temper
+and habits of the people.&nbsp; There are cottages worse than these.&nbsp;
+I think two of them have four rooms, and the Wests and Porters do not
+require so much.&nbsp; If you built one or two elsewhere, and moved
+the people into them, or waited for a vacant one, you might carry out
+some of your plans&mdash;gradually.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And my fountain?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I am not quite sure, but I am afraid your cottages are on
+that stratum where you could not bring the water without great expense.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Arthurine controlled herself enough for a civil &lsquo;Good-morning!&rsquo;
+but she shed tears as she walked home and told her pitying mother that
+she was thwarted on every side, and that nobody could comprehend her.</p>
+<p>The meetings for German reading were, however, contrived chiefly&mdash;little
+as Arthurine guessed it&mdash;by the influence of Bessie Merrifield.&nbsp;
+The two Greville girls and Mr. Doyle&rsquo;s sister, together with the
+doctor&rsquo;s young wife, two damsels from the next parish, and a friend
+or two that the Arthurets had made at Bonchamp, formed an imposing circle&mdash;to
+begin.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh, not on <i>Wilhelm Tell</i>!&rsquo; cried Arthurine.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;It might as well be the alphabet at once.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>However, the difficulties in the way of books, and consideration
+for general incompetency, reduced her to <i>Wilhelm Tell</i>, and she
+began with a lecture first on Schiller, and then upon Switzerland, and
+on the legend; but when Bessie Merrifield put in a word of such history
+and criticisms as were not in the High School Manual, she was sure everything
+else must be wrong&mdash;&lsquo;Fra&uuml;lein Bl&uuml;menbach never
+said so, and she was an admirable German scholar.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Miss Doyle went so far as to declare she should not go again to see
+Bessie Merrifield so silenced, sitting by after the first saying nothing,
+but only with a little laugh in her eyes.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;But,&rsquo; said Bessie, &lsquo;it is such fun to see any
+person having it so entirely her own way&mdash;like Macaulay, so cock-sure
+of everything&mdash;and to see those Bonchamp girls&mdash;Mytton is
+their name&mdash;so entirely adoring her.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I am sorry she has taken up with those Myttons,&rsquo; said
+Miss Doyle.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;So am I,&rsquo; answered Susan.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;You too, Susie!&rsquo; exclaimed Bessie&mdash;&lsquo;you,
+who never have a word to say against any one!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I daresay they are very good girls,&rsquo; said Susan; &lsquo;but
+they are&mdash;&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Underbred,&rsquo; put in Miss Doyle in the pause.&nbsp; &lsquo;And
+how they flatter!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I think the raptures are genuine gush,&rsquo; said Bessie;
+&lsquo;but that is so much the worse for Arthurine.&nbsp; Is there any
+positive harm in the family beyond the second-rate tone?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;It was while you were away,&rsquo; said Susan; &lsquo;but
+their father somehow behaved very ill about old Colonel Mytton&rsquo;s
+will&mdash;at least papa thought so, and never wished us to visit them.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;He was thought to have used unfair influence on the old gentleman,&rsquo;
+said Miss Doyle; &lsquo;but the daughters are so young that probably
+they had no part in it.&nbsp; Only it gives a general distrust of the
+family; and the sons are certainly very undesirable young men.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;It is unlucky,&rsquo; said Bessie, &lsquo;that we can do nothing
+but inflict a course of snubbing, in contrast with a course of admiration.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I am sure I don&rsquo;t want to snub her,&rsquo; said good-natured
+Susan.&nbsp; &lsquo;Only when she does want to do such queer things,
+how can it be helped?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>It was quite true, Mrs. and Miss Arthuret had been duly called upon
+and invited about by the neighbourhood; but it was a scanty one, and
+they had not wealth and position enough to compensate for the girl&rsquo;s
+self-assertion and literary pretensions.&nbsp; It was not a superior
+or intellectual society, and, as the Rockstone Merrifields laughingly
+declared, it was fifty years behindhand, and where Bessie Merrifield,
+for the sake of the old stock and her meek bearing of her success&mdash;nay,
+her total ignoring of her literary honours&mdash;would be accepted.&nbsp;
+Arthurine, half her age, and a newcomer, was disliked for the pretensions
+which her mother innocently pressed on the world.&nbsp; Simplicity and
+complacency were taken for arrogance, and the mother and daughter were
+kept upon formal terms of civility by all but the Merrifields, who were
+driven into discussion and opposition by the young lady&rsquo;s attempts
+at reformations in the parish.</p>
+<p>It was the less wonder that they made friends where their intimacy
+was sought and appreciated.&nbsp; There was nothing underbred about
+themselves; both were ladies ingrain, though Arthurine was abrupt and
+sometimes obtrusive, but they had not lived a life such as to render
+them sensitive to the lack of fine edges in others, and were quite ready
+to be courted by those who gave the meed of appreciation that both regarded
+as Arthurine&rsquo;s just portion.</p>
+<p>Mr. Mytton had been in India, and had come back to look after an
+old relation; to whom he and his wife had paid assiduous attention,
+and had been so rewarded as to excite the suspicion and displeasure
+of the rest of the family.&nbsp; The prize had not been a great one,
+and the prosperity of the family was further diminished by the continual
+failures of the ne&rsquo;er-do-well sons, so that they had to make the
+best of the dull, respectable old house they had inherited, in the dull,
+respectable old street of the dull, respectable old town.&nbsp; Daisy
+and Pansy Mytton were, however, bright girls, and to them Arthurine
+Arthuret was a sort of realised dream of romance, raised suddenly to
+the pinnacle of all to which they had ever durst aspire.</p>
+<p>After meeting her at a great <i>omnium gatherum</i> garden party,
+the acquaintance flourished.&nbsp; Arthurine was delighted to give the
+intense pleasure that the freedom of a country visit afforded to the
+sisters, and found in them the contemporaries her girl nature had missed.</p>
+<p>They were not stupid, though they had been poorly educated, and were
+quite willing to be instructed by her and to read all she told them.&nbsp;
+In fact, she was their idol, and a very gracious one.&nbsp; Deeply did
+they sympathise in all her sufferings from the impediments cast in her
+way at Stokesley.</p>
+<p>Indeed, the ladies there did not meet her so often on their own ground
+for some time, and were principally disturbed by reports of her doings
+at Bonchamp, where she played at cricket, and at hockey, gave a course
+of lectures on physiology, presided at a fancy-dress bazaar for the
+schools as Lady Jane Grey, and was on two or three committees.&nbsp;
+She travelled by preference on her tricycle, though she had a carriage,
+chiefly for the sake of her mother, who was still in a state of fervent
+admiration, even though perhaps a little worried at times by being hurried
+past her sober paces.</p>
+<p>The next shock that descended on Stokesley was that, in great indignation,
+a cousin sent the Merrifields one of those American magazines which
+are read and contributed to by a large proportion of English.&nbsp;
+It contained an article called &lsquo;The Bide-as-we-bes and parish
+of Stick-stodge-cum-Cadgerley,&rsquo; and written with the same sort
+of clever, flippant irony as the description of the mixed company in
+the boarding-house on the Lago Maggiore.</p>
+<p>There was the parish embowered, or rather choked, in trees, the orderly
+mechanical routine, the perfect self-satisfaction of all parties, and
+their imperviousness to progress,&mdash;the two squires, one a fox-hunter,
+the other a general reposing on his laurels,&mdash;the school where
+everything was subordinated to learning to behave oneself lowly and
+reverently to all one&rsquo;s betters, and to do one&rsquo;s duty in
+that state of life to which it <i>has</i> pleased Heaven to call one,&mdash;the
+horror at her tricycle, the impossibility of improvement, the predilection
+for farmyard odours, the adherence to tumbledown dwellings, the contempt
+of drinking fountains,&mdash;all had their meed of exaggeration not
+without drollery.</p>
+<p>The two ancient spinsters, daughters to the general, with their pudding-baskets,
+buttonholes, and catechisms, had their full share&mdash;dragooning the
+parish into discipline,&mdash;the younger having so far marched with
+the century as to have indited a few little tracts of the Goody Two-Shoes
+order, and therefore being mentioned by her friends with bated breath
+as something formidable, &lsquo;who writes,&rsquo; although, when brought
+to the test, her cultivation was of the vaguest, most discursive order.&nbsp;
+Finally, there was a sketch of the heavy dinner party which had welcomed
+the strangers, and of the ponderous county magnates and their wives
+who had been invited, and the awe that their broad and expansive ladies
+expected to impress, and how one set talked of their babies, and the
+other of G.F.S. girls, and the gentlemen seemed to be chiefly occupied
+in abusing their M.P. and his politics.&nbsp; Altogether, it was given
+as a lesson to Americans of the still feudal and stationary state of
+country districts in poor old England.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;What do you think of this, Bessie?&rsquo; exclaimed Admiral
+Merrifield.&nbsp; &lsquo;We seem to have got a young firebrand in the
+midst of us.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh, papa! have you got that thing?&nbsp; What a pity!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;You don&rsquo;t mean that you have seen it before?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Yes; one of my acquaintances in London sent it to me.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And you kept it to yourself?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I thought it would only vex you and mamma.&nbsp; Who sent
+it to you?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Anne did, with all the passages marked.&nbsp; What a horrid
+little treacherous baggage!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I daresay we are very tempting.&nbsp; For once we see ourselves
+as others see us!&nbsp; And you see &rsquo;tis American.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;All the worse, holding us, who have done our best to welcome
+her hospitably, up to the derision of the Yankees!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;But you won&rsquo;t take any notice.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Certainly not, ridiculous little puss, except to steer as
+clear of her as possible for fear she should be taking her observations.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Bide as we be&rdquo;; why, &rsquo;tis the best we can do.&nbsp;
+She can&rsquo;t pick a hole in your mother though, Bess.&nbsp; It would
+have been hard to have forgiven her that!&nbsp; You&rsquo;re not such
+an aged spinster.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;It is very funny, though,&rsquo; said Bessie; &lsquo;just
+enough exaggeration to give it point!&nbsp; Here is her interview with
+James Hodd.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Whereat the Admiral could not help laughing heartily, and then he
+picked himself out as the general, laughed again, and said: &lsquo;Naughty
+girl!&nbsp; Bess, I&rsquo;m glad that is not your line.&nbsp; Little
+tracts&mdash;Goody Two-Shoes!&nbsp; Why, what did that paper say of
+your essay, Miss Bess?&nbsp; That it might stand a comparison with Helps,
+wasn&rsquo;t it?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And I wish I was likely to enjoy such lasting fame as Goody
+Two-Shoes,&rsquo; laughed Bessie, in a state of secret exultation at
+this bit of testimony from her father.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Merrifield, though unscathed, was much more hurt and annoyed
+than either her husband or her daughter, especially at Susan and Bessie
+being termed old maids.&nbsp; She <i>did</i> think it very ungrateful,
+and wondered how Mrs. Arthuret could have suffered such a thing to be
+done.&nbsp; Only the poor woman was quite foolish about her daughter&mdash;could
+have had no more authority than a cat.&nbsp; &lsquo;So much for modern
+education.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>But it was not pleasant to see the numbers of the magazine on the
+counters at Bonchamp, and to know there were extracts in the local papers,
+and still less to be indignantly condoled with by neighbours who expressed
+their intention of &lsquo;cutting&rsquo; the impertinent girl.&nbsp;
+They were exactly the &lsquo;old fogies&rsquo; Arthurine cared for the
+least, yet whose acquaintance was the most creditable, and the home
+party at Stokesley were unanimous in entreating others to ignore the
+whole and treat the newcomers as if nothing had happened.</p>
+<p>They themselves shook hands, and exchanged casual remarks as if nothing
+were amiss, nor was the subject mentioned, except that Mrs. Arthuret
+contrived to get a private interview with Mrs. Merrifield.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh! dear Mrs. Merrifield, I am so grieved, and so is Arthurine.&nbsp;
+We were told that the Admiral was so excessively angry, and he is so
+kind.&nbsp; I could not bear for him to think Arthurine meant anything
+personal.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Indeed,&rsquo; said Mrs. Merrifield, rather astonished.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;But is he so very angry?&mdash;for it is all a mistake.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;He laughs, and so does Bessie,&rsquo; said the mother.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Laughs!&nbsp; Does he?&nbsp; But I do assure you Arthurine
+never meant any place in particular; she only intended to describe the
+way things go on in country districts, don&rsquo;t you understand?&nbsp;
+She was talking one day at the Myttons, and they were all so much amused
+that they wanted her to write it down.&nbsp; She read it one evening
+when they were with us, and they declared it was too good not to be
+published&mdash;and almost before she knew it, Fred Mytton&rsquo;s literary
+friend got hold of it and took it to the agency of this paper.&nbsp;
+But indeed, indeed, she never thought of its being considered personal,
+and is as vexed as possible at the way in which it has been taken up.&nbsp;
+She has every feeling about your kindness to us, and she was so shocked
+when Pansy Mytton told us that the Admiral was furious.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Whoever told Miss Mytton so made a great mistake.&nbsp; The
+Admiral only is&mdash;is&mdash;amused&mdash;as you know gentlemen will
+be at young girls&rsquo; little&mdash;little scrapes,&rsquo; returned
+Mrs. Merrifield, longing to say &lsquo;impertinences,&rsquo; but refraining,
+and scarcely believing what nevertheless was true, that Arthurine did
+not know how personal she had been, although her mother said it all
+over again twice.&nbsp; Bessie, however, did believe it, from experience
+of resemblances where she had never intended direct portraiture; and
+when there was a somewhat earnest invitation to a garden party at the
+Gap, the Merrifields not only accepted for themselves, but persuaded
+as many of their neighbours as they could to countenance the poor girl.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;There is something solid at the bottom in spite of all the effervescence,&rsquo;
+said Bessie.</p>
+<p>It was late in the year for a garden party, being on the 2d of October,
+but weather and other matters had caused delays, and the Indian summer
+had begun with warm sun and exquisite tints.&nbsp; &lsquo;What would
+not the maple and the liquid amber have been by this time,&rsquo; thought
+the sisters, &lsquo;if they had been spared.&rsquo;&nbsp; Some of the
+<i>petite noblesse</i>, however, repented of their condescension when
+they saw how little it was appreciated.&nbsp; Mrs. Arthuret, indeed,
+was making herself the best hostess that a lady who had served no apprenticeship
+could be to all alike, but Arthurine or &lsquo;Atty,&rsquo; as Daisy
+and Pansy were heard shouting to her&mdash;all in white flannels, a
+man all but the petticoats&mdash;seemed to be absorbed in a little court
+of the second-rate people of Bonchamp, some whom, as Mrs. Greville and
+Lady Smithson agreed, they had never expected to meet.&nbsp; She was
+laughing and talking eagerly, and by and by ran up to Bessie, exclaiming
+in a patronising tone&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh! my dear Miss Bessie, let me introduce you to Mr. Foxholm&mdash;such
+a clever literary man.&nbsp; He knows everybody&mdash;all about everybody
+and everything.&nbsp; It would be such an advantage!&nbsp; And he has
+actually made me give him my autograph!&nbsp; Only think of that!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Bessie thought of her own good luck in being anonymous, but did not
+express it, only saying, &lsquo;Autograph-hunters are a great nuisance.&nbsp;
+I know several people who find them so.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Yes, he said it was one of the penalties of fame that one
+must submit to,&rsquo; returned Miss Arthuret, with a delighted laugh
+of consciousness.</p>
+<p>Bessie rejoiced that none of her own people were near to see the
+patronising manner in which Arthurine introduced her to Mr. Foxholm,
+a heavily-bearded man, whose eyes she did not at all like, and who began
+by telling her that he felt as if he had crossed the Rubicon, and entering
+an Arcadia, had found a Parnassus.</p>
+<p>Bessie looked to see whether the highly-educated young lady detected
+the malaprop for the Helicon, but Arthurine was either too well-bred
+or too much exalted to notice either small slips, or even bad taste,
+and she stood smiling and blushing complacently.&nbsp; However, just
+then Susan hurried up.&nbsp; &lsquo;Bessie, you are wanted.&nbsp; Here&rsquo;s
+a card.&nbsp; The gentleman sent it in, and papa asked me to find you.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Bessie opened her eyes.&nbsp; The card belonged to the editor of
+one of the most noted magazines of the day, but one whose principles
+she did not entirely approve.&nbsp; What could be coming?</p>
+<p>Her father was waiting for her.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Well, Miss Bessie,&rsquo; he said, laughing, &lsquo;Jane said
+the gentleman was very urgent in wanting to know when you would be in.&nbsp;
+An offer, eh?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Perhaps it is an offer, but not of <i>that</i> sort,&rsquo;
+said Bessie, and she explained what the unliterary Admiral had not understood.&nbsp;
+He answered with a whistle.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Shall you do it, Bessie?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I think not,&rsquo; she said quietly.</p>
+<p>The editor was found waiting for her, with many apologies for bringing
+her home, and the Admiral was so delighted with his agreeableness as
+hardly to be able to tear himself away to bring home his wife.</p>
+<p>The offer was, as Bessie expected, of excellent terms for a serial
+story&mdash;terms that proved to her what was her own value, and in
+which she saw education for her sister Anne&rsquo;s eldest boy.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Of course, there would be a certain adaptation to our readers.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>She knew what that meant, and there was that in her face which drew
+forth the assurance.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Of course nothing you would not wish to say would be required,
+but it would be better not to press certain subjects.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I understand,&rsquo; said Bessie.&nbsp; &lsquo;I doubt&mdash;&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Perhaps you will think it over.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Bessie&rsquo;s first thought was, &lsquo;If I forget thee, O Jerusalem,
+then let my right hand forget her cunning.&rsquo;&nbsp; That had been
+the inward motto of her life.&nbsp; Her second was, &lsquo;Little Sam!&nbsp;
+David&rsquo;s mission room!&rsquo;&nbsp; There was no necessity to answer
+at once, and she knew the periodical rather by report than by reading,
+so she accepted the two numbers that were left with her, and promised
+to reply in a week.&nbsp; It was a question on which to take counsel
+with her father, and with her own higher conscience and heavenly Guide.</p>
+<p>The Admiral, though not much given to reading for its own sake, and
+perhaps inclined to think ephemeral literature the more trifling because
+his little daughter was a great light there, was anything but a dull
+man, and had an excellent judgment.&nbsp; So Bessie, with all the comfort
+of a woman still with a wise father&rsquo;s head over her, decided to
+commit the matter to him.&nbsp; He was somewhat disappointed at finding
+her agreeable guest gone, and wished that dinner and bed had been offered.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Merrifield and Susan were still a good deal excited about Arthurine&rsquo;s
+complimentary friend, who they said seemed to belong to Fred Mytton,
+of whom some of the ladies had been telling most unpleasant reports,
+and there was much lamentation over the set into which their young neighbour
+had thrown herself.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Such a dress too!&rsquo; sighed Mrs. Merrifield.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And her headmistress has just arrived,&rsquo; said Susan,
+&lsquo;to make her worse than ever!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;How comes a headmistress to be running about the country at
+this time of year?&rsquo; asked Bessie.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;She has been very ill,&rsquo; said Mrs. Merrifield, &lsquo;and
+they wrote to her to come down as soon as she could move.&nbsp; There
+was a telegram this morning, and she drove up in the midst of the party,
+and was taken to her room at once to rest.&nbsp; That was the reason
+Miss Arthuret was away so long.&nbsp; I thought it nice in her.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Perhaps she will do good,&rsquo; said Bessie.</p>
+<p>Dinner was just over, and the Admiral had settled down with his shaded
+lamp to read and judge of the article that Bessie had given him as a
+specimen, when in came the message, &lsquo;Mrs. Rudden wishes to speak
+to you, sir.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Rudden was the prosperous widow who continued the business in
+the village shop, conjointly with the little farm belonging to the Gap
+property.&nbsp; She was a shrewd woman, had been able to do very well
+by her family, and was much esteemed, paying a rent which was a considerable
+item in the Gap means.&nbsp; The ladies wondered together at the summons.&nbsp;
+Susan hoped &lsquo;that girl&rsquo; did not want to evict her, and Bessie
+suggested that a co-operative store was a more probable peril.&nbsp;
+Presently the Admiral came back.&nbsp; &lsquo;Do any of you know Miss
+Arthuret&rsquo;s writing?&rsquo; he said.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Bessie knows it best,&rsquo; said Susan.</p>
+<p>He showed a letter. &lsquo;That is hers&mdash;the signature,&rsquo;
+said Bessie. &lsquo;I are not sure about the rest.&nbsp; Why&mdash;what
+does it mean?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>For she read&mdash;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&lsquo;The Gap, 2<i>d Oct.</i></p>
+<p>&lsquo;MRS. RUDDEN,&mdash;You are requested to pay over to the bearer,
+Mr. Foxholm, fifty pounds of the rent you were about to bring me to-morrow.&mdash;I
+remain, etc.,</p>
+<p>&lsquo;ARTHURINE ARTHURET.&rsquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&lsquo;What does it mean?&rsquo; asked Bessie again.&nbsp; &lsquo;That&rsquo;s
+just what Mrs. Rudden has come up to me to ask,&rsquo; said the Admiral.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;This fellow presented it in her shop about a quarter of an hour
+ago.&nbsp; The good woman smelt a rat.&nbsp; What do you think she did?&nbsp;
+She looked at it and him, asked him to wait a bit, whipped out at her
+back door, luckily met the policeman starting on his rounds, bade him
+have an eye to the customer in her shop, and came off to show it to
+me.&nbsp; That young woman is demented enough for anything, and is quite
+capable of doing it&mdash;for some absurd scheme.&nbsp; But do you think
+it is hers, or a swindle?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Didn&rsquo;t she say she had given her autograph?&rsquo; exclaimed
+Susan.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And see here,&rsquo; said Bessie, &lsquo;her signature is
+at the top of the sheet of note-paper&mdash;small paper.&nbsp; And as
+she always writes very large, it would be easy to fill up the rest,
+changing the first side over.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I must take it up to her at once,&rsquo; said the Admiral.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Even if it be genuine, she may just as well see that it is a
+queer thing to have done, and not exactly the way to treat her tenants.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;It is strange too that this man should have known anything
+about Mrs. Rudden,&rsquo; said Mrs. Merrifield.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Mrs. Rudden says she had a message this morning, when she
+had come up with her rent and accounts, to say that Miss Arthuret was
+very much engaged, and would be glad if she would come to-morrow!&nbsp;
+Could this fellow have been about then?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>No one knew, but Bessie breathed the word, &lsquo;Was not that young
+Mytton there?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>It was not taken up, for no one liked to pronounce the obvious inference.&nbsp;
+Besides, the Admiral was in haste, not thinking it well that Mr. Foxholm
+should be longer kept under surveillance in the shop, among the bread,
+bacon, cheeses, shoes, and tins of potted meat.</p>
+<p>He was then called for; and on his loudly exclaiming that he had
+been very strangely treated, the Admiral quietly told him that Mrs.
+Rudden had been disturbed at so unusual a way of demanding her rent,
+and had come for advice on the subject; and to satisfy their minds that
+all was right, Mr. Foxholm would, no doubt, consent to wait till the
+young lady could be referred to.&nbsp; Mr. Foxholm did very decidedly
+object; he said no one had any right to detain him when the lady&rsquo;s
+signature was plain, and Admiral Merrifield had seen him in her society,
+and he began an account of the philanthropical purpose for which he
+said the money had been intended, but he was cut short.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;You must be aware,&rsquo; said the Admiral, &lsquo;that this
+is not an ordinary way of acting, and whatever be your purpose, Mrs.
+Rudden must ascertain your authority more fully before paying over so
+large a sum.&nbsp; I give you your choice, therefore, either of accompanying
+us to the Gap, or of remaining in Mrs. Rudden&rsquo;s parlour till we
+return.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The furtive eye glanced about, and the parlour was chosen.&nbsp;
+Did he know that the policeman stationed himself in the shop outside?</p>
+<p>The dinner at the Gap was over, and Miss Elmore, the headmistress,
+was established in an arm-chair, listening to the outpouring of her
+former pupil and the happy mother about all the felicities and glories
+of their present life, the only drawback being the dullness and obstructiveness
+of the immediate neighbours.&nbsp; &lsquo;I thought Miss Merrifield
+was your neighbour&mdash;Mesa?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh no&mdash;quite impossible!&nbsp; These are Merrifields,
+but the daughters are two regular old goodies, wrapped up in Sunday
+schools and penny clubs.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Well, that is odd!&nbsp; The editor of the --- came down in
+the train with me, and said he was going to see Mesa&mdash;Miss Elizabeth
+Merrifield.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I do think it is very unfair,&rsquo; began Arthurine; but
+at that moment the door-bell rang.&nbsp; &lsquo;How strange at this
+time!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh! perhaps the editor is coming here!&rsquo; cried Arthurine.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Did you tell him <i>I</i> lived here, Miss Elmore?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Admiral Merrifield,&rsquo; announced the parlour-maid.</p>
+<p>He had resolved not to summon the young lady in private, as he thought
+there was more chance of common-sense in the mother.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;You are surprised to see me at this time,&rsquo; he said;
+&lsquo;but Mrs. Rudden is perplexed by a communication from you.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Mrs. Rudden!&rsquo; exclaimed Arthurine.&nbsp; &lsquo;Why,
+I only sent her word that I was too busy to go through her accounts
+to-day, and asked her to come to-morrow.&nbsp; That isn&rsquo;t against
+the laws of the Medes and Persians, is it?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Then did you send her this letter?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I?&rsquo; said Arthurine, staring at it, with her eyes at
+their fullest extent.&nbsp; &lsquo;I! fifty pounds!&nbsp; Mr. Foxholm!&nbsp;
+What does it mean?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Then you never wrote that order?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;No! no!&nbsp; How should I?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;That is not your writing?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;No, not that.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Look at the signature.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh! oh! oh!&rsquo;&mdash;and she dropped into a chair.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;The horrible man!&nbsp; That&rsquo;s the autograph I gave him
+this afternoon.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;You are sure?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Quite; for my pen spluttered in the slope of the A.&nbsp;
+Has she gone and given it to him?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;No.&nbsp; She brought it to me, and set the policeman to watch
+him.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;What a dear, good woman!&nbsp; Shall you send him to prison,
+Admiral Merrifield?&nbsp; What can be done to him?&rsquo; said Arthurine,
+not looking at all as if she would like to abrogate capital punishment.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Well, I had been thinking,&rsquo; said the Admiral.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;You see he did not get it, and though I could commit him for
+endeavouring to obtain money on false pretences, I very much doubt whether
+the prosecution would not be worse for you than for him.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;That is very kind of you, Admiral!&rsquo; exclaimed the mother.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;It would be terribly awkward for dear Arthurine to stand up and
+say he cajoled her into giving her autograph.&nbsp; It might always
+be remembered against her!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Exactly so,&rsquo; said the Admiral; &lsquo;and perhaps there
+may be another reason for not pushing the matter to extremity.&nbsp;
+The man is a stranger here, I believe.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;He has been staying at Bonchamp,&rsquo; said Mrs. Arthuret.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;It was young Mr. Mytton who brought him over this afternoon.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Just so.&nbsp; And how did he come to be aware that Mrs. Rudden
+owed you any money?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>There was a pause, then Arthurine broke out&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh, Daisy and Pansy can&rsquo;t have done anything; but they
+were all three there helping me mark the tennis-courts when the message
+came.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Including the brother?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Yes.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;He is a bad fellow, and I would not wish to shield him in
+any way, but that such a plot should be proved against him would be
+a grievous disgrace to the family.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I can&rsquo;t ever feel about them as I have done,&rsquo;
+said Arthurine, in tears.&nbsp; &lsquo;Daisy and Pansy said so much
+about poor dear Fred, and every one being hard on him, and his feeling
+my good influence&mdash;and all the time he was plotting this against
+me, with my chalk in his hand marking my grass,&rsquo; and she broke
+down in child-like sobs.</p>
+<p>The mortification was terrible of finding her pinnacle of fame the
+mere delusion of a sharper, and the shock of shame seemed to overwhelm
+the poor girl.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh, Admiral!&rsquo; cried her mother, &lsquo;she cannot bear
+it.&nbsp; I know you will be good, and manage it so as to distress her
+as little as possible, and not have any publicity.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;1 will do my best,&rsquo; said the Admiral.&nbsp; &lsquo;I
+will try and get a confession out of him, and send him off, though it
+is a pity that such a fellow should get off scot-free.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh, never mind, so that my poor Arthurine&rsquo;s name is
+not brought forward!&nbsp; We can never be grateful enough for your
+kindness.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>It was so late that the Admiral did not come back that night, and
+the ladies were at breakfast when he appeared again.&nbsp; Foxholm had,
+on finding there was no escape, confessed the fraud, but threw most
+of the blame on Fred Mytton, who was in debt, not only to him but to
+others.&nbsp; Foxholm himself seemed to have been an adventurer, who
+preyed on young men at the billiard-table, and had there been in some
+collusion with Fred, though the Admiral had little doubt as to which
+was the greater villain.&nbsp; He had been introduced to the Mytton
+family, who were not particular; indeed, Mr. Mytton had no objection
+to increasing his pocket-money by a little wary, profitable betting
+and gambling on his own account.&nbsp; However, the associates had no
+doubt brought Bonchamp to the point of being too hot to hold them, and
+Fred, overhearing the arrangement with Mrs. Rudden, had communicated
+it to him&mdash;whence the autograph trick.&nbsp; Foxholm was gone,
+and in the course of the day it was known that young Mytton was also
+gone.</p>
+<p>The Admiral promised that none of his family should mention the matter,
+and that he would do his best to silence Mrs. Rudden, who for that matter
+probably believed the whole letter to have been forged, and would not
+enter into the enthusiasm of autographs.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh, thank you!&nbsp; It is so kind,&rsquo; said the mother;
+and Arthurine, who looked as if she had not slept all night, and was
+ready to burst into tears on the least provocation, murmured something
+to the same effect, which the Admiral answered, half hearing&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Never mind, my dear, you will be wiser another time; young
+people will be inexperienced.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Is that the cruellest cut of all?&rsquo; thought Miss Elmore,
+as she beheld her former pupil scarcely restraining herself enough for
+the farewell civilities, and then breaking down into a flood of tears.</p>
+<p>Her mother hovered over her with, &lsquo;What is it?&nbsp; Oh! my
+dear child, you need not be afraid; he is so kind!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I hate people to be kind, that is the very thing,&rsquo; said
+Arthurine,&mdash;&lsquo;Oh!&nbsp; Miss Elmore, don&rsquo;t go!&mdash;while
+he is meaning all the time that I have made such a fool of myself!&nbsp;
+And he is glad, I know he is, he and his hateful, stupid, stolid daughters.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;My dear! my dear!&rsquo; exclaimed her mother.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Well, haven&rsquo;t they done nothing but thwart me, whatever
+I wanted to do, and aren&rsquo;t they triumphing now in this abominable
+man&rsquo;s treachery, and my being taken in?&nbsp; I shall go away,
+and sell the place, and never come back again.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I should think that was the most decided way of confessing
+a failure,&rsquo; said Miss Elmore; and as Mrs. Arthuret was called
+away by the imperative summons to the butcher, she spoke more freely.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Your mother looks terrified at being so routed up again.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh, mother will be happy anywhere; and how can I stay with
+these stick-in-the-mud people, just like what I have read about?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And have gibbeted!&nbsp; Really, Arthurine, I should call
+them very generous!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;It is their thick skins,&rsquo; muttered she; &lsquo;at least
+so the Myttons said; but, indeed, I did not mean to be so personal as
+it was thought.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;But tell me.&nbsp; Why did you not get on with Mesa?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;That was a regular take-in.&nbsp; Not to tell one!&nbsp; When
+I began my German class, she put me out with useless explanations.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;What kind of explanations?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh, about the Swiss being under the Empire, or something,
+and she <i>would</i> go into parallels of Saxon words, and English poetry,
+such as our Fra&uuml;lein never troubled us with.&nbsp; But I showed
+her it would not <i>do</i>.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;So instead of learning what you had not sense to appreciate,
+you wanted to teach your old routine.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;But, indeed, she could not pronounce at all well, and she
+looked ever so long at difficult bits, and then she even tried to correct
+<i>me</i>.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Did she go on coming after you silenced her?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Yes, and never tried to interfere again.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I am afraid she drew her own conclusions about High Schools.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh, Miss Elmore, you used to like us to be thorough and not
+discursive, and how could anybody brought up in this stultifying place,
+ages ago, know what will tell in an exam?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh! Arthurine.&nbsp; How often have I told you that examinations
+are not education.&nbsp; I never saw so plainly that I have not educated
+you.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I wanted to prepare Daisy and Pansy, and they didn&rsquo;t
+care about her prosing when we wanted to get on with the book.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Which would have been the best education for them, poor girls,
+an example of courtesy, patience, and humility, or <i>getting on</i>,
+as you call it?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh! Miss Elmore, you are very hard on me, when I have just
+been so cruelly disappointed.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;My dear child, it is only because I want you to discover why
+you have been so cruelly disappointed.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>It would be wearisome to relate all that Arthurine finally told of
+those thwartings by the Merrifields which had thrown her into the arms
+of the Mytton family, nor how Miss Elmore brought her to confess that
+each scheme was either impracticable, or might have been injurious,
+and that a little grain of humility might have made her see things very
+differently.&nbsp; Yet it must be owned that the good lady felt rather
+like bending a bow that would spring back again.</p>
+<p>Bessie Merrifield had, like her family, been inclined to conclude
+that all was the fault of High Schools.&nbsp; She did not see Miss Elmore
+at first, thinking the Arthurets not likely to wish to be intruded upon,
+and having besides a good deal to think over.&nbsp; For she and her
+father had talked over the proposal, which pecuniarily was so tempting,
+and he, without prejudice, but on principle, had concurred with her
+in deciding that it was her duty not to add one touch of attractiveness
+to aught which supported a cause contrary to their strongest convictions.&nbsp;
+Her father&rsquo;s approbation was the crowning pleasure, though she
+felt the external testimony to her abilities, quite enough to sympathise
+with such intoxication of success as to make any compliment seem possible.&nbsp;
+Miss Elmore had one long talk with her, beginning by saying&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I wish to consult you about my poor, foolish child.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Ah!&nbsp; I am afraid we have not helped her enough!&rsquo;
+said Bessie.&nbsp; &lsquo;If we had been more sympathetic she might
+have trusted us more.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Then you are good enough to believe that it was not all folly
+and presumption.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I am sure it was not,&rsquo; said Bessie.&nbsp; &lsquo;None
+of us ever thought it more than inexperience and a little exaltation,
+with immense good intention at the bottom.&nbsp; Of course, our dear
+old habits did look dull, coming from life and activity, and we rather
+resented her contempt for them; but I am quite sure that after a little
+while, every one will forget all about this, or only recollect it as
+one does a girlish scrape.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Yes.&nbsp; To suppose all the neighbourhood occupied in laughing
+at her is only another phase of self-importance.&nbsp; You see, the
+poor child necessarily lived in a very narrow world, where examinations
+came, whatever I could do, to seem everything, and she only knew things
+beyond by books.&nbsp; She had success enough there to turn her head,
+and not going to Cambridge, never had fair measure of her abilities.&nbsp;
+Then came prosperity&mdash;&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Quite enough to upset any one&rsquo;s balance,&rsquo; said
+Bessie.&nbsp; &lsquo;In fact, only a very sober, not to say stolid,
+nature would have stood it.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Poor things!&nbsp; They were so happy&mdash;so open-hearted.&nbsp;
+I did long to caution them.&nbsp; &ldquo;Pull cup, steady hand.&rdquo;&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;It will all come right now,&rsquo; said Bessie.&nbsp; &lsquo;Mrs
+Arthuret spoke of their going away for the winter; I do not think it
+will be a bad plan, for then we can start quite fresh with them; and
+the intimacy with the Myttons will be broken, though I am sorry for
+the poor girls.&nbsp; They have no harm in them, and Arthurine was doing
+them good.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;A whisper to you, Miss Merrifield&mdash;they are going back
+with me, to be prepared for governesses at Arthurine&rsquo;s expense.&nbsp;
+It is the only thing for them in the crash that young man has brought
+on the family.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Dear, good Arthurine!&nbsp; She only needed to learn how to
+carry her cup.&rsquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>MRS. BATSEYES</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>I.&nbsp; FATHER AND DAUGHTER</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>SCENE.&mdash;<i>The drawing-room of Darkglade Vicarage.&nbsp; Mr.
+Aveland, an elderly clergyman.&nbsp; Mrs. Moldwarp</i>, <i>widow on
+the verge of middle age</i>.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; So, my dear good child, you will come back to
+me, and do what you can for the lonely old man!</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; I know nothing can really make up&mdash;</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; Ah! my dear, you know only too well by your own
+experience, but if any one could, it would be you.&nbsp; And at least
+you will let nothing drop in the parish work.&nbsp; You and Cicely together
+will be able to take that up when Euphrasia is gone too.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; It will be delightful to me to come back to
+it!&nbsp; You know I was to the manner born.&nbsp; Nothing seems to
+be so natural!</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; I am only afraid you are giving up a great deal.&nbsp;
+I don&rsquo;t know that I could accept it&mdash;except for the parish
+and these poor children.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; Now, dear father, you are not to talk so!&nbsp;
+Is not this my home, my first home, and though it has lost its very
+dearest centre, what can be so dear to me when my own has long been
+broken?</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; But the young folks&mdash;young Londoners are
+apt to feel such a change a great sacrifice.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; Lucius always longs to be here whenever he is
+on shore, and Cicely.&nbsp; Oh! it will be so good for Cicely to be
+with you, dear father.&nbsp; I know some day you will be able to enjoy
+her.&nbsp; And I do look forward to having her to myself, as I have
+never had before since she was a little creature in the nursery.&nbsp;
+It is so fortunate that I had not closed the treaty for the house at
+Brompton, so that I can come whenever Phrasie decides on leaving you.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; And she must not be long delayed.&nbsp; She and
+Holland have waited for each other quite long enough.&nbsp; Your dear
+mother begged that there should be no delay; and neither you nor I,
+Mary, could bear to shorten the time of happiness together that may
+be granted them.&nbsp; She will have no scruple about leaving George&rsquo;s
+children now you and Cicely will see to them&mdash;poor little things!</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; Cicely has always longed for a sphere, and between
+the children and the parish she will be quite happy.&nbsp; You need
+have no fears for her, father!</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>II.&nbsp; BROTHER AND SISTER</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>SCENE&mdash;<i>The broad walk under the Vicarage garden wall, Lucius
+Moldwarp, a lieutenant in the Navy.&nbsp; Cicely Moldwarp</i>.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Isn&rsquo;t it disgusting, Lucius?</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; What is?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; This proceeding of the mother&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; Do you mean coming down here to live?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Of course I do!&nbsp; Without so much as consulting
+me.</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; The captain does not ordinarily consult the crew.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Bosh, Lucius.&nbsp; That habit of discipline makes
+you quite stupid.&nbsp; Now, haven&rsquo;t I the right to be consulted?</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; (<i>A whistle</i>)</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; (<i>A stamp</i>)</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; Pray, what would your sagacity have proposed for
+grandpapa and the small children?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; (<i>Hesitation</i>.)</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; (<i>A slight laugh</i>.)</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; I do think it is quite shocking of Aunt Phrasie to
+be in such haste to marry!</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; After eleven years&mdash;eh? or twelve, is it?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; I mean of course so soon after her mother&rsquo;s
+death.</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; You know dear granny herself begged that the wedding
+might not be put off on that account.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Holland might come and live here.</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; Perhaps he thinks he has a right to be consulted.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Then she might take those children away with her.</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; Leaving grandpapa alone.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; The Curate might live in the house.</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; Lively and satisfactory to mother.&nbsp; Come now,
+Cis, why are you so dead set against this plan?&nbsp; It is only because
+your august consent has not been asked?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; I should have minded less if the pros and cons had
+been set before me, instead of being treated like a chattel; but I do
+not think my education should be sacrificed.</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; Not educated!&nbsp; At twenty!</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t be so silly, Lucius.&nbsp; This is the
+time when the most important brain work is to be done.&nbsp; There are
+the art classes at the Slade, and the lectures I am down for, and the
+Senior Cambridge and cookery and nursing.&nbsp; Yes, I see you make
+faces!&nbsp; You sailors think women are only meant for you to play
+with when you are on shore; but I must work.</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; Work enough here!</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Goody-goody!&nbsp; Babies, school-children, and old
+women!&nbsp; I&rsquo;m meant for something beyond that, or what are
+intellect and artistic faculty given for?</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; You could read for Cambridge exam. all the same.&nbsp;
+Here are tons of books, and grandpapa would help you.&nbsp; Why not?&nbsp;
+He is not a bit of a dull man.&nbsp; He is up to everything.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; So far as <i>you</i> know.&nbsp; Oh no, he is not
+naturally dense.&nbsp; He is a dear old man; but you know clerics of
+his date, especially when they have vegetated in the country, never
+know anything but the Fathers and church architecture.</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; Hum!&nbsp; I should have said the old gentleman had
+a pretty good intelligence of his own.&nbsp; I know he set me on my
+legs for my exam. as none of the masters at old Coade&rsquo;s ever did.&nbsp;
+What has made you take such a mortal aversion to the place?&nbsp; We
+used to think it next door to Paradise when we were small children.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Of course, when country freedom was everything, and
+we knew nothing of rational intercourse; but when all the most intellectual
+houses are open to me, it is intolerable to be buried alive here with
+nothing to talk of but clerical shop, and nothing to do but read to
+old women, and cram the unfortunate children with the catechism.&nbsp;
+And mother and Aunt Phrasie expect me to be in raptures!</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; Whereas you seem to be meditating a demonstration.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; I shall tell mother that if she must needs come down
+to wallow in her native goodiness, it is due to let me board in Kensington
+till my courses are completed.</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; Since she won&rsquo;t be an unnatural daughter, she
+is to leave the part to you.&nbsp; Well, I suppose it will be for the
+general peace.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Now, Lucius, you speak out of the remains of the
+old tyrannical barbarism, when the daughters were nothing but goods
+and chattels.</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; Goods, yes, indeed, and betters.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; No doubt the men liked it!&nbsp; But won&rsquo;t
+you stand by me, Lucius?&nbsp; You say it would be for the general peace.</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; I only said you would be better away than making
+yourself obnoxious.&nbsp; I can&rsquo;t think how you can have the heart,
+Cis, such a pet as you always were.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; I would not hurt their feelings for the world, only
+my improvement is too important to be sacrificed, and if no one else
+will stand up for me, I must stand up for myself.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>III.&nbsp; BRIDE-ELECT AND FATHER</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>SCENE.&mdash;<i>Three weeks later.&nbsp; Breakfast table at Darkglade
+Vicarage, Mr. Aveland and Euphrasia reading their letters.&nbsp; Three
+little children eating bread and milk.</i></p>
+<p><i>E</i>.&nbsp; There!&nbsp; Mary has got the house at Brompton off
+her hands and can come for good on the 11th.&nbsp; That is the greatest
+possible comfort.&nbsp; She wants to bring her piano; it has a better
+tone than ours.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; Certainly!&nbsp; Little Miss Hilda there will
+soon be strumming her scales on the old one, and Mary and Cis will send
+me to sleep in the evening with hers.</p>
+<p><i>E</i>.&nbsp; Oh!</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; Why, Phrasie, what&rsquo;s the matter?</p>
+<p><i>E</i>.&nbsp; This is a blow!&nbsp; Cicely is only coming to be
+bridesmaid, and then going back to board at Kensington and go on with
+her studies.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; To board?&nbsp; All alone?</p>
+<p><i>E</i>.&nbsp; Oh! that&rsquo;s the way with young ladies!</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; Mary cannot have consented.</p>
+<p><i>E</i>.&nbsp; Have you done, little folks?&nbsp; Then say grace,
+Hilda, and run out till the lesson bell rings.&nbsp; Yes, poor Mary,
+I am afraid she thinks all that Cecilia decrees is right; or if she
+does not naturally believe so, she is made to.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; Come, come, Phrasie, I always thought Mary a
+model mother.</p>
+<p><i>E</i>.&nbsp; So did I, and so she was while the children were
+small, except that they were more free and easy with her than was the
+way in our time.&nbsp; And I think she is all that is to be desired
+to her son; but when last I was in London, I cannot say I was satisfied,
+I thought Cissy had got beyond her.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; For want of a father?</p>
+<p><i>E</i>.&nbsp; Not entirely.&nbsp; You know I could not think Charles
+Moldwarp quite worthy of Mary, though she never saw it.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; Latterly we saw so little of him!&nbsp; He liked
+to spend his holiday in mountain climbing, and Mary made her visits
+here alone.</p>
+<p><i>E</i>.&nbsp; Exactly so.&nbsp; Sympathy faded out between them,
+though she, poor dear, never betrayed it, if she realised it, which
+I doubt.&nbsp; And as Cissy took after her father, this may have weakened
+her allegiance to her mother.&nbsp; At any rate, as soon as she was
+thought to have outgrown her mother&rsquo;s teaching, those greater
+things, mother&rsquo;s influence and culture, were not thought of, and
+she went to school and had her companions and interests apart; while
+Mary, good soul, filled up the vacancy with good works, and if once
+you get into the swing of that sort of thing in town, there&rsquo;s
+no end to the demands upon your time.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t think she
+ever let them bore her husband.&nbsp; He was out all day, and didn&rsquo;t
+want her; but I am afraid they do bore her daughter, and absorb attention
+and time, so as to hinder full companionship, till Cissy has grown up
+an extraneous creature, not formed by her.&nbsp; Mary thinks, in her
+humility, dear old thing, that it is a much superior creature; but I
+don&rsquo;t like it as well as the old sort.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; The old barndoor hen hatched her eggs and bred
+up her chicks better than the fine prize fowl.&nbsp; Eh?</p>
+<p><i>E</i>.&nbsp; So that incubator-hatched chicks, with a hot-bed
+instead of a hovering wing and tender cluck-cluck, are the fashion!&nbsp;
+I was in hopes that coming down to the old coop, with no professors
+to run after, and you to lead them both, all would right itself, but
+it seems my young lady wants more improving.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; Well, my dear, it must be mortifying to a clever
+girl to have her studies cut short.</p>
+<p><i>E</i>.&nbsp; Certainly; but in my time we held that studies were
+subordinate to duties; and that there were other kinds of improvement
+than in model-drawing and all the rest of it.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; It will not be for long, and Cissy will find
+the people, or has found them, and Mary will accept them.</p>
+<p><i>E</i>.&nbsp; If her native instinct objects, she will be cajoled
+or bullied into seeing with Cissy&rsquo;s eyes.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; Well, Euphrasia, my dear, let us trust that people
+are the best judges of their own affairs, and remember that the world
+has got beyond us.&nbsp; Mary was always a sensible, right-minded girl,
+and I cannot believe her as blind as you would make out.</p>
+<p><i>E</i>.&nbsp; At any rate, dear papa, you never have to say to
+her as to me, &lsquo;Judge not, that ye be not judged.&rsquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>IV.&nbsp; MOTHER AND DAUGHTER</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>SCENE.&mdash;<i>Darkglade Vicarage drawing-room.</i></p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; So, my dear, you think it impossible to be happy
+here?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Little Mamsey, why <i>will</i> you never understand?&nbsp;
+It is not a question of happiness, but of duty to myself.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; And that is&mdash;</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Not to throw away all my chances of self-improvement
+by burrowing into this hole.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; Oh, my dear, I don&rsquo;t like to hear you
+call it so.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Yes, I know you care for it.&nbsp; You were bred
+up here, and know nothing better, poor old Mamsey, and pottering suits
+you exactly; but it is too much to ask me to sacrifice my wider fields
+of culture and usefulness.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; Grandpapa would enjoy nothing so much as reading
+with you.&nbsp; He said so.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Oxford half a century old and wearing off ever since.&nbsp;
+No, I thank you!&nbsp; Besides, it is not only physical science, but
+art.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s the School of Art at Holbrook.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; My dear mother, I am far past country schools of
+art!</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; It is not as if you intended to take up art
+as a profession.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Mother! will nothing ever make you understand?&nbsp;
+Nothing ought to be half-studied, merely to pass away the time as an
+<i>accomplishment</i> (<i>uttered with infinite scorn, accentuated on
+the second syllable</i>), just to do things to sell at bazaars.&nbsp;
+No!&nbsp; Art with me means work worthy of exhibition, with a market-price,
+and founded on a thorough knowledge of the secrets of the human frame.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; Those classes!&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t like all
+I hear of them, or their attendants.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; If you <i>will</i> listen to all the gossip of all
+the old women of both sexes, I can&rsquo;t help it!&nbsp; Can&rsquo;t
+you trust to innocence and earnestness?</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; I wish it was the Art College at Wimbledon.&nbsp;
+Then I should be quite comfortable about you.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Have not we gone into all that already?&nbsp; You
+know I must go to the fountain-head, and not be put off with mere feminine,
+lady-like studies!&nbsp; Pah!&nbsp; Besides, in lodgings I can be useful.&nbsp;
+I shall give two evenings in the week to the East End, to the Society
+for the Diversion and Civilisation of the Poor.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; Surely there is room for usefulness here!&nbsp;
+Think of the children!&nbsp; And for diversion and civilisation, how
+glad we should be of your fresh life and brightness among poor people!</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Such poor!&nbsp; Why, even if grandpapa would let
+me give a lecture on geology, or a reading from Dickens, old Prudence
+Blake would go about saying it hadn&rsquo;t done nothing for her poor
+soul.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; Grandpapa wanted last winter to have penny readings,
+only there was nobody to do it.&nbsp; He would give you full scope for
+that, or for lectures.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Yes; about vaccination and fresh air! or a reading
+of John Gilpin or the Pied Piper.&nbsp; Mamsey, you know a model parish
+stifles me.&nbsp; I can&rsquo;t stand your prim school-children, drilled
+in the Catechism, and your old women who get out the Bible and the clean
+apron when they see you a quarter of a mile off.&nbsp; Free air and
+open minds for me!&nbsp; No, I won&rsquo;t have you sighing, mother.&nbsp;
+You have returned to your native element, and you must let me return
+to mine.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; Very well, my dear.&nbsp; Perhaps a year or
+two of study in town may be due to you, though this is a great disappointment
+to grandpapa and me.&nbsp; I know Mrs. Payne will make a pleasant and
+safe home for you, if you must be boarded.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Too late for that.&nbsp; I always meant to be with
+Betty Thurston at Mrs. Kaye&rsquo;s.&nbsp; In fact, I have written to
+engage my room.&nbsp; So there&rsquo;s an end of it.&nbsp; Come, come,
+don&rsquo;t look vexed.&nbsp; It is better to make an end of it at once.&nbsp;
+There are things that one must decide for oneself.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>V.&nbsp; TWO FRIENDS</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>SCENE&mdash;<i>Over the fire in Mrs. Kaye&rsquo;s boarding-house.&nbsp;
+Cecilia Moldwarp and Betty Thurston</i>.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; So I settled the matter at once.</p>
+<p><i>B</i>.&nbsp; Quite right, too, Cis.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; The dear woman was torn every way.&nbsp; Grandpapa
+and Aunt Phrasie wanted her to pin me down into the native stodge; and
+Lucius, like a true man, went in for subjection: so there was nothing
+for it but to put my foot down.&nbsp; And though little mother might
+moan a little to me, I knew she would stand up stoutly for me to all
+the rest, and vindicate my liberty.</p>
+<p><i>B</i>.&nbsp; To keep you down there.&nbsp; Such a place is very
+well to breathe in occasionally, like a whale; but as to living in them&mdash;</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Just hear how they spend the day.&nbsp; First, 7.30,
+prayers in church.&nbsp; The dear old man has hammered on at them these
+forty years, with a congregation averaging 4 to 2.5.</p>
+<p><i>B</i>.&nbsp; You are surely not expected to attend at that primitive
+Christian hour!&nbsp; Cruelty to animals!</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; If I don&rsquo;t, the absence of such an important
+unit hurts folks&rsquo; feelings, and I am driven to the fabrication
+of excuses.&nbsp; After breakfast, whatever is available trots off to
+din the Catechism and Genesis into the school-children&rsquo;s heads&mdash;the
+only things my respected forefather cares about teaching them.&nbsp;
+Of course back again to the children&rsquo;s lessons.</p>
+<p><i>B</i>.&nbsp; What children?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Didn&rsquo;t I explain?&nbsp; Three Indian orphans
+of my uncle&rsquo;s, turned upon my grandfather&mdash;jolly little kids
+enough, as long as one hasn&rsquo;t to teach them.</p>
+<p><i>B</i>.&nbsp; Are governesses unknown in those parts?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Too costly; and besides, my mother was designed by
+nature for a nursery-governess.&nbsp; She has taught the two elder ones
+to be wonderfully good when she is called off.&nbsp; &lsquo;The butcher,
+ma&rsquo;am&rsquo;; or, &lsquo;Mrs. Tyler wants to speak to you, ma&rsquo;am&rsquo;;
+or, &lsquo;Jane Cox is come for a hospital paper, ma&rsquo;am.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Then early dinner, of all things detestable, succeeded by school needlework,
+mothers&rsquo; meeting, and children&rsquo;s walk, combined with district
+visiting, or reading to old women.&nbsp; Church again, high tea, and
+evenings again pleasingly varied by choir practices, night schools,
+or silence, while grandpapa concocts his sermon.</p>
+<p><i>B</i>.&nbsp; Is this the easy life to which Mrs. Moldwarp has
+retired?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; It is her native element.&nbsp; People of her generation
+think it their vocation to be ladies-of-all-work to the parish of Stickinthemud
+cum-Humdrum.</p>
+<p><i>B</i>.&nbsp; All-work indeed!</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; I did not include Sundays, which are one rush of
+meals, schools, and services, including harmonium.</p>
+<p><i>B</i>.&nbsp; No society or rational conversation, of course?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Adjacent clergy and clergy woman rather less capable
+of aught but shop than the natives themselves!&nbsp; You see, even if
+I did offer myself as a victim, I couldn&rsquo;t do the thing!&nbsp;
+Fancy my going on about the six Mosaic days, and Jonah&rsquo;s whale,
+and Jael&rsquo;s nail, and doing their duty in that state of life where
+it <i>has</i> pleased Heaven to place them.</p>
+<p><i>B</i>.&nbsp; Impossible, my dear!&nbsp; Those things can&rsquo;t
+be taught&mdash;if they are to be taught&mdash;except by those who accept
+them as entirely as ever; and it is absurd to think of keeping you where
+you would be totally devoid of all intellectual food!</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>SCENE.&mdash;<i>Art Student and distinguished Professor a year later.&nbsp;
+Soir&eacute;e in a London drawing-room.&nbsp; Professor Dunlop and Cecilia</i>.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; Miss Moldwarp?&nbsp; Is your mother here?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; No; she is not in town.</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; Not living there?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; She lives with my grandfather at Darkglade.</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; Indeed!&nbsp; I hope Mr. and Mrs. Aveland are
+well?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Thank you, <i>he</i> is well; but my grandmother
+is dead.</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; Oh, I am sorry!&nbsp; I had not heard of his
+loss.&nbsp; How long ago did it happen?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Last January twelvemonth.&nbsp; My aunt is married,
+and my mother has taken her place at home.</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; Then you are here on a visit.&nbsp; Where are
+you staying?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; No, I live here.&nbsp; I am studying in the Slade
+schools.</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; This must have greatly changed my dear old
+friend&rsquo;s life!</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; I did not know that you were acquainted with my grandfather.</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; I was one of his pupils.&nbsp; I may say that
+I owe everything to him.&nbsp; It is long since I have been at Darkglade,
+but it always seemed to me an ideal place.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Rather out of the world.</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; Of one sort of world perhaps; but what a beautiful
+combination is to be seen there of the highest powers with the lowliest
+work!&nbsp; So entirely has he dedicated himself that he really feels
+the guidance of a ploughman&rsquo;s soul a higher task than the grandest
+achievement in science or literature.&nbsp; By the bye, I hope he will
+take up his pen again.&nbsp; It is really wanted.&nbsp; Will you give
+him a message from me?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; How strange!&nbsp; I never knew that he was an author.</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; Ah! you are a young thing, and these are abstruse
+subjects.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Oh! the Fathers and Ritual, I suppose?</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; No doubt he is a great authority there, as
+a man of his ability must be; but I was thinking of a course of scientific
+papers he put forth ten years ago, taking up the arguments against materialism
+as no one could do who is not as thoroughly at home as he is in the
+latest discoveries and hypotheses.&nbsp; He ought to answer that paper
+in the <i>Critical World.</i></p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; I was so much interested in that paper.</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; It has just the speciousness that runs away
+with young people.&nbsp; I should like to talk it over with him.&nbsp;
+Do you think I should be in the way if I ran down?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; I should think a visit from you would be an immense
+pleasure to him; and I am sure it would be good for the place to be
+stirred up.</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; You have not learnt to prize that atmosphere
+in which things always seem to assume their true proportion, and to
+prompt the cry of St. Bernard&rsquo;s brother&mdash;&lsquo;All earth
+for me, all heaven for you.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; That was surely an outcome of the time when people
+used to sacrifice certainties to uncertainties, and spoil life for the
+sake of they knew not what.</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; For eye hath not seen, nor ear heard.</p>
+<p><i>Stranger</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Dunlop!&nbsp; This is an unexpected pleasure!</p>
+<p><i>C</i>. (<i>alone</i>).&nbsp; Well, wonders will never cease.&nbsp;
+The great Professor Dunlop talking to me quite preachy and goody; and
+of all people in the world, the old man at Darkglade turning out to
+be a great physiologist!</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>VII.&nbsp; TWO OLD FRIENDS</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>SCENE.&mdash;<i>Darkglade Vicarage study.&nbsp; Mr. Aveland and Professor
+Dunlop</i>.</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; Thank you, sir.&nbsp; It has been a great pleasure
+to talk over these matters with you; I hope a great benefit.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; I am sure it is a great benefit to us to have
+a breath from the outer world.&nbsp; I hope you will never let so long
+a time go by without our meeting.&nbsp; Remember, as iron sharpeneth
+iron, so doth a man&rsquo;s countenance that of his friend.</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; I shall be only too thankful.&nbsp; I rejoice
+in the having met your grand-daughter, who encouraged me to offer myself.&nbsp;
+Is she permanently in town?</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; She shows no inclination to return.&nbsp; I hoped
+she would do so after the last competition; but there is always another
+stage to be mounted.&nbsp; I wish she would come back, for her mother
+ought not to be left single-handed; but young people seem to require
+so much external education in these days, instead of being content to
+work on at home, that I sometimes question which is more effectual,
+learning or being taught.</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; Being poured-upon versus imbibing?</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; It may depend on what amount there is to imbibe;
+and I imagine that the child views this region as an arid waste; as
+of course we are considerably out of date.</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; The supply would be a good deal fresher and
+purer!</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; Do you know anything of her present surroundings?</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; I confess that I was surprised to meet her
+with Mrs. Eyeless, a lady who is active in disseminating Positivism,
+and all tending that way.&nbsp; She rather startled me by some of her
+remarks; but probably it was only jargon and desire to show off.&nbsp;
+Have you seen her lately?</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; At Christmas, but only for a short time, when
+it struck me that she treated us with the patronage of precocious youth;
+and I thought she made the most of a cold when church or parish was
+concerned.&nbsp; I hinted as much; but her mother seemed quite satisfied.&nbsp;
+Poor girl!&nbsp; Have I been blind?&nbsp; I did not like her going to
+live at one of those boarding-houses for lady students.&nbsp; Do you
+know anything of them?</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; Of course all depends on the individual lady
+at the head, and the responsibility she undertakes, as well as on the
+tone of the inmates.&nbsp; With some, it would be only staying in a
+safe and guarded home.&nbsp; In others, there is a great amount of liberty,
+the girls going out without inquiry whether, with whom, or when they
+return.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; American fashion!&nbsp; Well, they say young
+women are equal to taking care of themselves.&nbsp; I wonder whether
+my daughter understands this, or whether it is so at Cecilia&rsquo;s
+abode.&nbsp; Do you know?</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; I am afraid I do.&nbsp; The niece of a friend
+of mine was there, and left it, much distressed and confused by the
+agnostic opinions that were freely broached there.&nbsp; How did your
+grand-daughter come to choose it?</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; For the sake of being with a friend.&nbsp; I
+think Thurston is the name.</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; I know something of that family; clever people,
+but bred up&mdash;on principle, if it can be so called, with their minds
+a blank as to religion.&nbsp; I remember seeing one of the daughters
+at the party where I met Miss Moldwarp.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; So this is the society into which we have allowed
+our poor child to run!&nbsp; I blame myself exceedingly for not having
+made more inquiries.&nbsp; Grief made me selfishly passive, or I should
+have opened my eyes and theirs to the danger.&nbsp; My poor Mary, what
+a shock it will be to her!</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; Was not she on the spot?</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; True; but, poor dear, she is of a gentle nature,
+easily led, and seeing only what her affection lets her perceive.&nbsp;
+And now, she is not strong.</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; She is not looking well.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; You think so!&nbsp; I wonder whether I have been
+blind, and let her undertake too much.</p>
+<p><i>Prof. D</i>.&nbsp; Suppose you were to bring her to town for a
+few days.&nbsp; We should be delighted to have you, and she could see
+the doctor to whom she is accustomed.&nbsp; Then you can judge for yourself
+about her daughter.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; Thank you, Dunlop!&nbsp; It will be a great comfort
+if it can be managed.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>VIII.&nbsp; AUNT AND NIECE</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>SCENE.&mdash;<i>In a hansom cab.&nbsp; Mrs. Holland and Cecilia</i>.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; I wanted to speak to you, Cissy.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; I thought so!</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; What do you think of your mother?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Poor old darling.&nbsp; They have been worrying her
+till she has got hipped and nervous about herself.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; Do you know what spasms she has been having?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Oh! mother has had spasms as long as I can remember;
+and the more she thinks of them the worse they are.&nbsp; I have often
+heard her say so.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; Yes; she has gone on much too long overworking
+herself, and not letting your grandfather suspect anything amiss.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Nerves.&nbsp; That is what it always is.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; Dr. Brownlow says there is failure of heart,
+not dangerous or advanced at present, but that there is an overstrain
+of all the powers, and that unless she keeps fairly quiet, and free
+from hurry and worry, there may be very serious, if not fatal attacks.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; I never did think much of Dr. Brownlow.&nbsp; He
+told me my palpitations were nothing but indigestion, and I am sure
+they were not!</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; Well, Cissy, something must be done to relieve
+your mother of some of her burthens.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; I see what you are driving at, Aunt Phrasie; but
+I cannot go back till I have finished these courses.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s
+my picture, there&rsquo;s the cookery school, the ambulance lectures,
+and our sketching tour in August.&nbsp; Ever so many engagements.&nbsp;
+I shall be free in the autumn, and then I will go down and see about
+it.&nbsp; I told mother so.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; All the hot trying months of summer without
+help!</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; I never can understand why they don&rsquo;t have
+a governess.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; Can&rsquo;t you?&nbsp; Is there not a considerable
+outgoing on your behalf?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; That is my own.&nbsp; I am not bound to educate my
+uncle&rsquo;s children at my expense.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; No; but if you contributed your share to the
+housekeeping, you would make a difference, and surely you cannot leave
+your mother to break down her health by overworking herself in this
+manner.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Why does grandpapa let her do so?</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; Partly he does not see, partly he cannot help
+it.&nbsp; He has been so entirely accustomed to have all those family
+and parish details taken off his hands, and borne easily as they were
+when your dear grandmamma and I were both there at home, that he cannot
+understand that they can be over much&mdash;especially as they are so
+small in themselves.&nbsp; Besides, he is not so young as he was, and
+your dear mother cannot bear to trouble him.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Well, I shall go there in September and see about
+it.&nbsp; It is impossible before.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; In the hopping holidays, when the stress of
+work is over!&nbsp; Cannot you see with your own eyes how fagged and
+ill your mother looks, and how much she wants help?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Oh! she will be all right again after this rest.&nbsp;
+I tell you, Aunt Phrasie, it is <i>impossible</i> at present&mdash;(<i>cab
+stops</i>)<i>.</i></p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>IX.&nbsp; THE TWO SISTERS</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>SCENE.&mdash;<i>A room in Professor Dunlop&rsquo;s house.&nbsp; Mrs.
+Moldwarp and Mrs. Holland.</i></p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; I have done my best, but I can&rsquo;t move
+her an inch.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; Poor dear girl!&nbsp; Yet it seems hardly fair
+to make my health the lever, when really there is nothing serious the
+matter.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; I can&rsquo;t understand the infatuation.&nbsp;
+Can there be any love affair?</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; Oh no, Phrasie; it is worse!</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; Worse!&nbsp; Mary, what can you mean?</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; Yes, it <i>is</i> worse.&nbsp; I got at the
+whole truth yesterday.&nbsp; My poor child&rsquo;s faith has gone!&nbsp;
+Oh, how could I let her go and let her mingle among all those people,
+all unguarded!</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; Do you mean that this is the real reason that
+she will not come home?</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; Yes; she told me plainly at last that she could
+not stand our round of services.&nbsp; They seem empty and obsolete
+to her, and she could not feign to attend them or vex us, and cause
+remarks by staying away, and of course she neither could nor would teach
+anything but secular matters.&nbsp; &lsquo;My coming would be nothing
+but pain to everybody,&rsquo; she said.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs H</i>.&nbsp; You did not tell me this before my drive with
+her.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; No, I never saw you alone; besides, I thought
+you would speak more freely without the knowledge.&nbsp; And, to tell
+the truth, I did think it possible that consideration for me might bring
+my poor Cissy down to us, and that when once under my father&rsquo;s
+influence, all these mists might clear away.&nbsp; But I do not deserve
+it.&nbsp; I have been an unfaithful parent, shutting my eyes in feeble
+indulgence, and letting her drift into these quicksands.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; Fashion and imitation, my dear Mary; it will
+pass away.&nbsp; Now, you are not to talk any more.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. M</i>.&nbsp; I can&rsquo;t&mdash; (<i>A spasm comes on</i>.)</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>X.&nbsp; AUNT AND NEPHEW</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>SCENE.&mdash;<i>Six months later, Darkglade Vicarage, a darkened
+room.&nbsp; Mrs. Holland and Lucius</i>.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; Yes, Lucius, we have all much to reproach ourselves
+with; even poor grandpapa is heart-broken at having been too much absorbed
+to perceive how your dear mother was overtasked.</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; You did all you could, aunt; you took home one child,
+and caused the other to be sent to school.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; Yes, too late to be of any use.</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; And after all, I don&rsquo;t think it was overwork
+that broke the poor dear one down, so much as grief at that wretched
+sister of mine.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t speak of her in that way, Lucius.</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; How can I help it?&nbsp; I could say worse!</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; She is broken-hearted, poor thing.</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; Well she may be.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; Ah, the special point of sorrow to your dear
+mother was that she blamed herself, for&mdash;</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; How could she?&nbsp; How can you say so, aunt?</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; Wait a moment, Lucius.&nbsp; What grieved her
+was the giving in to Cissy&rsquo;s determination, seeing with her eyes,
+and not allowing herself to perceive that what she wished might not
+be good for her.</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; Cissy always did domineer over mother.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; Yes; and your mother was so used to thinking
+Cissy&rsquo;s judgment right that she never could or would see when
+it was time to make a stand, and prevent her own first impressions from
+being talked down as old-fashioned,&mdash;letting her eyes be bandaged,
+in fact.</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; So she vexed herself over Cissy&rsquo;s fault; but
+did not you try to make Cissy see what she was about?</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; True; but if love had blinded my dear sister,
+Cissy was doubly blinded&mdash;</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; By conceit and self-will.</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; Poor girl, I am too sorry for her now to use
+those hard words, but I am afraid it is true.&nbsp; First she could
+or would not see either that her companions might be undesirable guides,
+or that her duty lay here, and then nothing would show her that her
+mother&rsquo;s health was failing.&nbsp; Indeed, by that time the sort
+of blindness had come upon her which really broke your mother&rsquo;s
+heart.</p>
+<p><i>L</i>.&nbsp; You mean her unbelief, agnosticism, or whatever she
+chooses to call it.&nbsp; I thought at least women were safe from that
+style of thing.&nbsp; It is all fashion and bad company, I suppose?</p>
+<p><i>Mrs. H</i>.&nbsp; I hope and pray that it may be so; but I am
+afraid that it goes deeper than you imagine.&nbsp; Still, I see hope
+in her extreme unhappiness, and in the remembrance of your dear mother&rsquo;s
+last words and prayers.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>XI.&nbsp; GRANDFATHER AND GRAND-DAUGHTER</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p><i>A month later.&nbsp; Mr. Aveland and Cecilia</i>.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; My dear child, I wish I could do anything for
+you.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; You had better let me go back to London, grandpapa.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; Do you really wish it?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t know.&nbsp; I hate it all; but if I
+were in the midst of everything again, it might stifle the pain a little.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; I am afraid that is not the right way of curing
+it.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Oh, I suppose it will wear down in time.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; Is that well?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t know.&nbsp; It is only unbearable as
+it is; and yet when I think of my life in town, the din and the chatter
+and the bustle, and the nobody caring, seem doubly intolerable; but
+I shall work off that.&nbsp; You had better let me go, grandpapa.&nbsp;
+The sight of me can be nothing but a grief and pain to you.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; No; it gives me hope.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Hope of what?</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; That away from the whirl you will find your way
+to peace.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t see how.&nbsp; Quiet only makes me
+more miserable.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; My poor child, if you can speak out and tell
+me exactly how it is with you, I think it might be comfortable to you.&nbsp;
+If it is the missing your mother, and blaming yourself for having allowed
+her to overdo herself, I may well share with you in that.&nbsp; I feel
+most grievously that I never perceived how much she was undertaking,
+nor how she flagged under it.&nbsp; Unselfish people want others to
+think for them, and I did not.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Dear grandpapa, it would not have been too much if
+I had come and helped.&nbsp; I know that; but it is not the worst.&nbsp;
+You can&rsquo;t feel as I do&mdash;that if my desertion led to her overworking
+herself, Aunt Phrasie and Lucius say that what really broke her down
+was the opinions I cannot help having.&nbsp; Say it was not, grandpapa.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; I wish I could, my dear; but I cannot conceal
+that unhappiness about you, and regret for having let you expose yourself
+to those unfortunate arguments, broke her spirits so that her energies
+were unequal to the strain that I allowed to be laid on her.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Poor dear mother!&nbsp; And you and she can feel
+in that way about the importance of what to me seems&mdash;pardon me,
+grandpapa&mdash;utterly unproved.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; You hold everything unproved that you cannot
+work out like a mathematical demonstration.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; I can&rsquo;t help it, grandpapa.&nbsp; I read and
+read, till all the premises become lost in the cloud of myths that belong
+to all nations.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t want to think such things.&nbsp;
+I saw dear mother rest on her belief, and grow peaceful.&nbsp; They
+were perfect realities to her; but I cannot unthink.&nbsp; I would give
+anything to think that she is in perfect happiness now, and that we
+shall meet again; but nothing seems certain to me.&nbsp; All is extinguished.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; How do you mean?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; They&mdash;Betty and her set, I mean&mdash;laughed
+at and argued one thing after another, till they showed me that there
+were no positive grounds to go on.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; No material grounds.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; And what else is certain?</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; Do you think your mother was not certain?</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; I saw she was; I see you are certain.&nbsp; But what
+am I to do?&nbsp; I cannot unthink.</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; Poor child, they have loosed you from the shore,
+because you could not see it, and left you to flounder in the waves.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Well, so I feel it sometimes; but if I could only
+feel that there was a shore, I would try to get my foothold.&nbsp; Oh,
+with all my heart!</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; Will you take my word, dear child&mdash;the word
+of one who can dare humbly to say he has proved it, so as to be as sure
+as of the floor we are standing on, that that Rock exists; and God grant
+that you may, in prayer and patience, be brought to rest on it once
+more.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Once more!&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t think I ever did so
+really.&nbsp; I only did not think, and kept away from what was dull
+and tiresome.&nbsp; Didn&rsquo;t you read something about &lsquo;If
+thou hadst known&mdash;&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; &lsquo;If thou hadst known, even thou, at least
+in this thy day, the things that belong unto thy peace! but now they
+are hid from thine eyes.&rsquo;&nbsp; But oh, my dear girl, it is my
+hope and prayer, not for ever.&nbsp; If you will endure to walk in darkness
+for a while, till the light be again revealed to you.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; At any rate, dear grandfather, I will do what mother
+entreated, and not leave you alone.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>XII.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p><i>Two years later.&nbsp; St. Thomas</i>&rsquo;<i>s Day.</i></p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; Grandpapa, may I come with you on Christmas morning?</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; You make me a truly happy Christmas, dear child.</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; I think I feel somewhat as St. Thomas did, in to-day&rsquo;s
+Gospel.&nbsp; It went home to my heart</p>
+<p><i>Mr. A</i>.&nbsp; Ah, child, to us that &lsquo;Blessed are they
+who have not seen and yet have believed,&rsquo; must mean those who
+are ready to know by faith instead of material tangible proof.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHOPS</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>You ask me why I call that old great-grandmother black cat Chops?&nbsp;
+Well, thereby hangs a tale.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t mean the black tail
+which is standing upright and quivering at your caresses, but a story
+that there will be time to tell you before Charlie gets home from market.</p>
+<p>Seven years ago, Charlie had just finished his training both at an
+agricultural college and under a farmer, and was thinking of going out
+to Texas or to Canada, and sending for me when he should have been able
+to make a new home for me, when his godfather, Mr. Newton, offered to
+let him come down and look after the draining and otherwise reclaiming
+of this great piece of waste land.&nbsp; It had come to Mr. Newton through
+some mortgages, I believe, and he thought something might be made of
+it by an active agent.&nbsp; It was the first time Mr. Newton had shown
+the least interest in us, though he was a cousin of our poor mother&rsquo;s;
+and Charlie was very much gratified, more especially as when he had
+&pound;150 a year and a house, he thought I might leave the school where
+I was working as a teacher, and make a home with him.</p>
+<p>Yes, this is the house; but it has grown a good deal since we settled
+down, and will grow more before you come to it for good.&nbsp; Then
+it was only meant for a superior sort of gamekeeper, and had only six
+rooms in it&mdash;parlour, kitchen, and back kitchen, and three bedrooms
+above them; but this we agreed would be ample for ourselves and Betsey,
+an old servant of our mother&rsquo;s, who could turn her hand to anything,
+and on the break-up of our home had begged to join us again whenever
+or wherever we should have a house of our own once more.</p>
+<p>We have half a dozen cottages near us now; but then it seemed to
+us like a lodge in a vast wilderness&mdash;three miles away from everything,
+shop, house, or church.&nbsp; Betsey fairly sat down and cried when
+she heard how far away was the butcher, and it really seemed as if we
+were to have the inconveniences of colonisation without the honour of
+it.&nbsp; However, contrivances made us merry; we made our rooms pretty
+and pleasant, and as a pony and trap were essential to Charlie in his
+work, we were able to fetch and carry easily.&nbsp; Moreover, we had
+already a fair kitchen garden laid out, and there were outhouses for
+pigs and poultry, so that even while draining and fencing were going
+on, we raised a good proportion of our own provisions, and very proud
+of them we were; our own mustard and cress, which we sowed in our initials,
+tasted doubly sweet when we reaped them as our earliest crop.</p>
+<p>Mr. Newton had always said that some day he should drop down and
+see how Charles was getting on, but as he hardly ever stirred from his
+office in London, and only answered letters in the briefest and most
+business-like way, we had pretty well left off expecting him.</p>
+<p>We had been here about six months, and had killed our first pig&mdash;&lsquo;a
+pretty little porker as ever was seen,&rsquo; as Betsey said.&nbsp;
+It was hard to understand, after all the petting, admiration, and back-scratching
+Betsey had bestowed on him, how ready she was to sentence him, and triumph
+in his death; while I, feeble-minded creature, delayed rising in the
+morning that I might cower under the bedclothes and stop my ears against
+his dying squeals.&nbsp; However, when he was no more, the housekeeping
+spirit triumphed in our independence of the butcher, while his fry and
+other delicacies lasted, and Betsey was supremely happy over the saltings
+of the legs, etc., with a view to the more distant future.</p>
+<p>It was a cold day of early spring.&nbsp; I had been down the lanes
+and brought in five tiny starved primroses with short stems, for which
+Betsey scolded me soundly, telling me that the first brood of chickens
+was always the same in number as the first primroses brought into the
+house.&nbsp; I eked them out with moss in a saucer, and then, how well
+I remember the foolish, weary feeling that I wished something would
+happen to break the quiet.&nbsp; We were out of the reach of new books,
+and the two magazines we took in would not be due for ten long days.&nbsp;
+I did not feel sensible or energetic enough to turn to one of the standard
+well-bound volumes that had been Charlie&rsquo;s school prizes, and
+at the moment I hated my needlework, both steady sewing and fancy work.&nbsp;
+It was the same with my piano.&nbsp; I had no new fashionable music,
+and I was in a mood to disdain what was good and classical.&nbsp; So,
+as the twilight came on, I sat drearily by the fire, fondling the cat&mdash;yes,
+this same black cat&mdash;and thinking that my life at the ladies&rsquo;
+college had been a good deal livelier, and that if I had given it up
+for the sake of my brother&rsquo;s society, I had very little of that.</p>
+<p>The hunt had gone by last week&mdash;what a treat it would be if
+some one would meet with a little accident and be carried in here!</p>
+<p>Behold, I heard a step at the back door, and the loud call of &lsquo;Kitty!&nbsp;
+Kitty!&rsquo;&nbsp; There stood Charlie, as usual covered with clay
+nearly up to the top of his gaiters&mdash;clay either pale yellow, or
+horrid light blue, according to the direction of his walk.&nbsp; He
+was beginning frantically to unbutton them, and as he beheld me he cried
+out, &lsquo;Kitty! he&rsquo;s coming!&rsquo; and before I could say,
+&lsquo;Who?&rsquo; he went on, &lsquo;Old Newton.&nbsp; His fly is working
+through the mud in Draggletail Lane.&nbsp; The driver hailed me to ask
+the way, and when I saw who it was, I cut across to give you notice.&nbsp;
+He&rsquo;ll stay the night to a dead certainty.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>What was to be done?&nbsp; A wild hope seized me that, at sight of
+the place, he would retain his fly and go off elsewhere for better accommodation.</p>
+<p>Only, where would he find it?&nbsp; The nearest town, where the only
+railway station then was, was eight miles off, and he was not likely
+to plod back thither again, and the village inn, five miles away, was
+little more than a pot-house.</p>
+<p>No, we must rise to the occasion, Betsey and I, while Charlie was
+making himself respectable to receive the guest.&nbsp; Where was he
+to sleep?&nbsp; What was he to eat?&nbsp; A daintily fed, rather hypochrondriacal
+old bachelor, who seldom stirred out of his comfortable house in London.&nbsp;
+What a guest for us!</p>
+<p>The council was held while the gaiters were being unbuttoned.&nbsp;
+He must have my room, and I would sleep with Betsey.&nbsp; As to food,
+it was impossible to send to the butcher; and even if I could have sacrificed
+my precious Dorking fowls, there would have been scant time to prepare
+them.</p>
+<p>There was nothing for it but to give him the pork chops, intended
+for our to-morrow&rsquo;s dinner, and if he did not like them, he might
+fall back upon poached eggs and rashers.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Mind,&rsquo; called Charlie, as I dashed into my room to remove
+my properties and light the fire, so that it might get over its first
+smoking fit,&mdash;&lsquo;mind you lock up the cat.&nbsp; He hates them
+like poison.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>It was so long before the carriage appeared, that I began half to
+hope, half to fear, it was a false alarm; but at last, just as it was
+perfectly dark, we heard it stop at the garden gate, and Charlie dashed
+out to open the fly door, and bring in the guest, who was panting, nervous&mdash;almost
+terrified, at a wild drive, so contrary to all his experiences.&nbsp;
+When the flyman&rsquo;s demands had been appeased, and we had got the
+poor old gentleman out of his wraps, he turned out to be a neat, little,
+prim-looking London lawyer, clean-shaved, and with an indoor complexion.&nbsp;
+I daresay Charlie, with his big frame, sunburnt face, curly beard, and
+loud hearty voice, seemed to him like a kind of savage, and he thought
+he had got among the Aborigines.</p>
+<p>After all, he had written to announce his coming.&nbsp; But he had
+not calculated on our never getting our letters unless we sent for them.&nbsp;
+He was the very pink of politeness to me, and mourned so much over putting
+me to inconvenience that we could only profess our delight and desire
+to make him comfortable.</p>
+<p>On the whole, it went off very well.&nbsp; I gave him a cup of tea
+to warm and occupy him while the upstairs&rsquo; chimney was coming
+to its senses; and then Charles took him upstairs.&nbsp; He reappeared
+in precise evening dress, putting us to shame; for Charles had not a
+dress-coat big enough for him to get into, and I had forgotten to secure
+my black silk before abandoning my room.&nbsp; We could not ask him
+to eat in the best kitchen, as was our practice, and he showed himself
+rather dismayed at our having only one sitting-room, saying he had not
+thought the cottage such a dog-hole, or known that it would be inhabited
+by a lady; and then he paid some pretty compliment on the feminine hand
+evident in the room.&nbsp; We had laid the table before he came down,
+but the waiting was managed by ourselves, or rather, by Charles, for
+Mr. Newton&rsquo;s politeness made him jump up whenever I moved; so
+that I had to sit still and do the lady hostess, while my brother changed
+plates and brought in relays of the chops from the kitchen.&nbsp; They
+were a great success.&nbsp; Mr. Newton eyed them for a moment distrustfully,
+but Betsey had turned them out beautifully&mdash;all fair and delicate
+with transparent fat, and a brown stripe telling of the gridiron.&nbsp;
+He refused the egg alternative, and greatly enjoyed them and our Brussels
+sprouts, speaking highly of the pleasure of country fare, and apologising
+about the good appetising effects of a journey, when Charlie tempted
+him with a third chop, the hottest and most perfect of all.</p>
+<p>I think we also produced a rhubarb tart, and I know he commended
+our prudence in having no wine, and though he refused my brother&rsquo;s
+ale, seemed highly satisfied with a tumbler of brandy and water, when
+I quitted the gentlemen to see to the coffee, while they talked over
+the scheme for farm-buildings, which Charlie had sent up to him.</p>
+<p>When I bade him good-night, a couple of hours later, he was evidently
+in a serene state of mind, regarding us as very superior young people.</p>
+<p>In the middle of the night, Betsey and I were appalled by a tremendous
+knocking on the wall.&nbsp; I threw on a dressing-gown and made for
+the door, while Betsey felt for the matches.&nbsp; As I opened a crack
+of the door, Charlie&rsquo;s voice was to be heard, &lsquo;Yes, yes;
+I&rsquo;ll get you some, sir.&nbsp; You&rsquo;ll be better presently,&rsquo;
+interspersed with heavy groans; then, seeing me wide awake, he begged
+that Betsey would go down and get some hot water&mdash;&lsquo;and mustard,&rsquo;
+called out a suffering voice.&nbsp; &lsquo;Oh, those chops!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Poor Mr. Newton had, it appeared, wakened with a horrible oppression
+on his chest, and at once attributing it to his unwonted meal of pork
+chops, he had begun, in the dark, knocking and calling with great energy.&nbsp;
+Charlie had stumbled in in the dark, not waiting to light a candle,
+and indeed ours were chiefly lamps, which took time to light.&nbsp;
+Betsey had hers, however, and had bustled into some clothes, tumbling
+downstairs to see whether any water were still hot in the copper, Charlie
+running down to help her, while I fumbled about for a lamp and listened
+with awe to the groans from within, wondering which of us would have
+to go for the doctor.</p>
+<p>Up came Charlie, in his shirt sleeves, with a steaming jug in one
+hand and a lamp in the other.&nbsp; Up came Betsey, in a scarlet petticoat
+and plaid shawl, her gray locks in curl-papers, and a tallow-candle
+in hand.&nbsp; The door was thrown open, Charlie observing,</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Now, sir,&rsquo; then breaking out into &lsquo;Thunder and
+turf&rsquo; (his favourite Hibernian ejaculation); &lsquo;Ssssssss!&rsquo;
+and therewith, her green eyes all one glare, out burst this cat!&nbsp;
+She was the nightmare!&nbsp; She had been sitting on the unfortunate
+man&rsquo;s chest, and all her weight had been laid to the score of
+the chops!</p>
+<p>No doubt she had been attracted by the fire, stolen up in the confusion
+of the house, remained hidden whilst Mr. Newton was going to bed, and
+when the fire went out, settled herself on his chest, as it seems he
+slept on his back, and it was a warm position.</p>
+<p>Probably his knockings on the wall dislodged her; but if so, imagination
+carried on the sense of oppression, and with feline pertinacity she
+had returned as soon as he was still again.</p>
+<p>Poor old gentleman!&nbsp; I am afraid he heard some irrepressible
+laughter, and it was very sore to him to be ridiculous.&nbsp; His grave
+dignity and politeness when he came down very late the next morning
+were something awful, and it must have been very dreadful to him that
+he could not get away till half the day was over.</p>
+<p>So dry and short was he over matters of business that Charles actually
+thought we might begin to pack up and make our arrangements for emigrating.&nbsp;
+Grave, dry, and civil as ever, he departed, and I never saw him more,
+nor do I think he ever entirely forgave me.&nbsp; There did not, however,
+come any dismissal, and when Charlie had occasion to go up to his office
+and see him, he was just the same as ever, and acceded to the various
+arrangements which have made this a civilised, though still rather remote
+place.</p>
+<p>And when he died, a year ago, to our surprise we found that this
+same reclaimed property was left to my brother.&nbsp; The consequence
+whereof you well know, my dear little sister that is to be.&nbsp; Poor
+old Chops! you had nearly marred our fortunes; and now, will you go
+with me to my home at the Rectory, or do you prefer your old abode to
+your old mistress?</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>Footnotes:</p>
+<p><a name="footnote127"></a><a href="#citation127">{127}</a>&nbsp;
+[In the book this genealogy is a diagram.&nbsp; It is rendered as text
+here.&mdash;DP]&nbsp; John Fulford: sons: John Fulford <a name="citation127a"></a><a href="#footnote127a">{127a}</a>
+(married Margaret Lacy) and Henry <a name="citation127b"></a><a href="#footnote127b">{127b}</a>.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote127a"></a><a href="#citation127a">{127a}</a>&nbsp;
+John Fulford and Margaret Lacy: Sir Edward Fulford (married Avice Lee&mdash;died
+after two years), Arthur, Q.C. (married Edith Ganler) <a name="citation127c"></a><a href="#footnote127c">{127c}</a>,
+Martyn (Professor, married Mary Alwyn) <a name="citation127d"></a><a href="#footnote127d">{127d}</a>,
+Charlotte, Emily, Margaret (married Rev. H. Druce) <a name="citation127e"></a><a href="#footnote127e">{127e}</a>.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote127b"></a><a href="#citation127b">{127b}</a>&nbsp;
+Henry had a son called Henry&mdash;whose son was also Henry&mdash;whose
+daughter was Isabel.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote127c"></a><a href="#citation127c">{127c}</a>&nbsp;
+Arthur, Q.C. and Edith Ganler: Margaret called Metelill, Charlotte called
+Charley, Sons not at New Cove.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote127d"></a><a href="#citation127d">{127d}</a>&nbsp;
+Martyn (Professor) and Mary Alwyn: Margaret called Pica, Avice and Uchtred.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote127e"></a><a href="#citation127e">{127e}</a>&nbsp;
+Margaret and Rev. H. Druce: Jane and large family.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines3"><br /><br /><br /></div>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MORE BYWORDS***</p>
+<pre>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, More Bywords, by Charlotte M. Yonge
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: More Bywords
+
+Author: Charlotte M. Yonge
+
+Release Date: April 20, 2004 [eBook #12095]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MORE BYWORDS***
+
+
+Transcribed by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
+
+
+
+
+MORE BYWORDS
+
+
+
+
+Contents:
+
+ The Price of Blood
+ The Cat of Cat Copse
+ De Facto and De Jure
+ Sigbert's Guerdon
+ The Beggar's Legacy
+ A Review of the Nieces
+ Come to Her Kingdom
+ Mrs. Batseyes
+ Chops
+
+
+
+THE PRICE OF BLOOD
+
+
+
+Ab ira et odio, et omni mala voluntate,
+ Libera nos, Domine.
+A fulgure et tempestate,
+ Libera nos, Domine.
+A morte perpetua,
+ Libera nos, Domine.
+
+So rang forth the supplication, echoing from rock and fell, as the
+people of Claudiodunum streamed forth in the May sunshine to invoke
+a blessing on the cornlands, olives, and vineyards that won vantage-
+ground on the terraces carefully kept up on the slopes of the
+wonderful needle-shaped hills of Auvergne.
+
+Very recently had the Church of Gaul commenced the custom of going
+forth, on the days preceding the Ascension feast, to chant Litanies,
+calling down the Divine protection on field and fold, corn and wine,
+basket and store. It had been begun in a time of deadly peril from
+famine and earthquake, wild beast and wilder foes, and it had been
+adopted in the neighbouring dioceses as a regular habit, as indeed
+it continued throughout the Western Church during the fourteen
+subsequent centuries.
+
+One great procession was formed by different bands. The children
+were in two troops, a motley collection of all shades; the deep
+olive and the rolling black eye betraying Ethiopian or Moorish slave
+ancestry, the soft dark complexion and deep brown eye showing the
+Roman, and the rufous hair and freckled skin the lower grade of
+Cymric Kelt, while a few had the more stately pose, violet eye, and
+black hair of the Gael. The boys were marshalled with extreme
+difficulty by two or three young monks; their sisters walked far
+more orderly, under the care of some consecrated virgin of mature
+age. The men formed another troop, the hardy mountaineers still
+wearing the Gallic trousers and plaid, though the artisans and
+mechanics from the town were clad in the tunic and cloak that were
+the later Roman dress, and such as could claim the right folded over
+them the white, purple-edged scarf to which the toga had dwindled.
+
+Among the women there was the same scale of decreasing nationality
+of costume according to rank, though the culmination was in
+resemblance to the graceful classic robe of Rome instead of the last
+Parisian mode. The poorer women wore bright, dark crimson, or blue
+in gown or wrapping veil; the ladies were mostly in white or black,
+as were also the clergy, excepting such as had officiated at the
+previous Eucharist, and who wore their brilliant priestly vestments,
+heavy with gold and embroidery.
+
+Beautiful alike to eye and ear was the procession, above all from a
+distance, now filing round a delicate young green wheatfield, now
+lost behind a rising hill, now glancing through a vineyard, or
+contrasting with the gray tints of the olive, all that was
+incongruous or disorderly unseen, and all that was discordant
+unheard, as only the harmonious cadence of the united response was
+wafted fitfully on the breeze to the two elderly men who, unable to
+scale the wild mountain paths in the procession, had, after the
+previous service in the basilica and the blessing of the nearer
+lands, returned to the villa, where they sat watching its progress.
+
+It was as entirely a Roman villa as the form of the ground and the
+need of security would permit. Lying on the slope of a steep hill,
+which ran up above into a fantastic column or needle piercing the
+sky, the courts of the villa were necessarily a succession of
+terraces, levelled and paved with steps of stone or marble leading
+from one to the other. A strong stone wall enclosed the whole,
+cloistered, as a protection from sun and storm. The lowest court
+had a gateway strongly protected, and thence a broad walk with box-
+trees on either side, trimmed into fantastic shapes, led through a
+lawn laid out in regular flower-beds to the second court, which was
+paved with polished marble, and had a fountain in the midst, with
+vases of flowers, and seats around. Above was another broad flight
+of stone steps, leading to a portico running along the whole front
+of the house, with the principal chambers opening into it. Behind
+lay another court, serving as stables for the horses and mules, as
+farmyard, and with the quarters of the slaves around it, and higher
+up there stretched a dense pine forest protecting the whole
+establishment from avalanches and torrents of stones from the
+mountain peak above.
+
+Under the portico, whose pillars were cut from the richly-coloured
+native marbles, reposed the two friends on low couches.
+
+One was a fine-looking man, with a grand bald forehead, encircled
+with a wreath of oak, showing that in his time he had rescued a
+Roman's life. He also wore a richly-embroidered purple toga, the
+token of high civic rank, for he had put on his full insignia as a
+senator and of consular rank to do honour to the ceremonial. Indeed
+he would not have abstained from accompanying the procession, but
+that his guest, though no more aged than himself, was manifestly
+unequal to the rugged expedition, begun fasting in the morning chill
+and concluded, likewise fasting, in the noonday heat. Still, it
+would scarcely have distressed those sturdy limbs, well developed
+and preserved by Roman training, never permitted by him to
+degenerate into effeminacy. And as his fine countenance and well-
+knit frame testified, Marcus AEmilius Victorinus inherited no small
+share of genuine Roman blood. His noble name might be derived
+through clientela, and his lineage had a Gallic intermixture; but
+the true Quirite predominated in his character and temperament. The
+citizenship of his family dated back beyond the first establishment
+of the colony, and rank, property, and personal qualities alike
+rendered him the first man in the district, its chief magistrate,
+and protector from the Visigoths, who claimed it as part of their
+kingdom of Aquitania.
+
+So much of the spirit of Vercingetorix survived among the remnant of
+his tribe that Arvernia had never been overrun and conquered, but
+had held out until actually ceded by one of the degenerate Augusti
+at Ravenna, and then favourable terms had been negotiated, partly by
+AEmilius the Senator, as he was commonly called, and partly by the
+honoured friend who sat beside him, another relic of the good old
+times when Southern Gaul enjoyed perfect peace as a favoured
+province of the Empire. This guest was a man of less personal
+beauty than the Senator, and more bowed and aged, but with care and
+ill-health more than years, for the two had been comrades in school,
+fellow-soldiers and magistrates, working simultaneously, and with
+firm, mutual trust all their days.
+
+The dress of the visitor was shaped like that of the senator, but of
+somewhat richer and finer texture. He too wore the TOGA
+PRAETEXTATA, but he had a large gold cross hanging on his breast and
+an episcopal ring on his finger; and instead of the wreath of bay he
+might have worn, and which encircled his bust in the Capitol, the
+scanty hair on his finely-moulded head showed the marks of the
+tonsure. His brow was a grand and expansive one; his gray eyes were
+full of varied expression, keen humour, and sagacity; a lofty
+devotion sometimes changing his countenance in a wonderful manner,
+even in the present wreck of his former self, when the cheeks showed
+furrows worn by care and suffering, and the once flexible and
+resolute mouth had fallen in from loss of teeth. For this was the
+scholar, soldier, poet, gentleman, letter-writer, statesman,
+Sidonius Apollinaris, who had stood on the steps of the Imperial
+throne of the West, had been crowned as an orator in the Capitol,
+and then had been called by the exigences of his country to give up
+his learned ease and become the protector of the Arvernii as a
+patriot Bishop, where he had well and nobly served his God and his
+country, and had won the respect, not only of the Catholic Gauls but
+of the Arian Goths. Jealousy and evil tongues had, however,
+prevailed to cause his banishment from his beloved hills, and when
+he repaired to the court of King Euric to solicit permission to
+return, he was long detained there, and had only just obtained
+license to go back to his See. He had arrived only a day or two
+previously at the villa, exhausted by his journey, and though
+declaring that his dear mountain breezes must needs restore him, and
+that it was a joy to inhale them, yet, as he heard of the
+oppressions that were coming on his people, the mountain gales could
+only 'a momentary bliss bestow,' and AEmilius justly feared that the
+decay of his health had gone too far for even the breezes and baths
+of Arvernia to reinvigorate him.
+
+His own mountain estate, where dwelt his son, was of difficult
+access early in the year, and AEmilius hoped to persuade him to rest
+in the villa till after Pentecost, and then to bless the nuptials of
+Columba AEmilia, the last unwedded daughter of the house, with Titus
+Julius Verronax, a young Arvernian chief of the lineage of
+Vercingetorix, highly educated in all Latin and Greek culture, and a
+Roman citizen much as a Highland chieftain is an Englishman. His
+home was on an almost inaccessible peak, or PUY, which the Senator
+pointed out to the Bishop, saying--
+
+"I would fain secure such a refuge for my family in case the tyranny
+of the barbarians should increase."
+
+"Are there any within the city?" asked the Bishop. "I rejoice to
+see that thou art free from the indignity of having any quartered
+upon thee."
+
+"For which I thank Heaven," responded the Senator. "The nearest are
+on the farm of Deodatus, in the valley. There is a stout old
+warrior named Meinhard who calls himself of the King's Trust; not a
+bad old fellow in himself to deal with, but with endless sons,
+followers, and guests, whom poor Deodatus and Julitta have to keep
+supplied with whatever they choose to call for, being forced to
+witness their riotous orgies night after night."
+
+"Even so, we are far better off than our countrymen who have the
+heathen Franks for their lords."
+
+"That Heaven forbid!" said AEmilius. "These Goths are at least
+Christians, though heretics, yet I shall be heartily glad when the
+circuit of Deodatus's fields is over. The good man would not have
+them left unblest, but the heretical barbarians make it a point of
+honour not to hear the Blessed Name invoked without mockery, such as
+our youths may hardly brook."
+
+"They are unarmed," said the Bishop.
+
+"True; but, as none knows better than thou dost, dear father and
+friend, the Arvernian blood has not cooled since the days of Caius
+Julius Caesar, and offences are frequent among the young men. So
+often has our community had to pay 'wehrgeld,' as the barbarians
+call the price they lay upon blood, that I swore at last that I
+would never pay it again, were my own son the culprit."
+
+"Such oaths are perilous," said Sidonius. "Hast thou never had
+cause to regret this?"
+
+"My father, thou wouldst have thought it time to take strong
+measures to check the swaggering of our young men and the foolish
+provocations that cost more than one life. One would stick a
+peacock's feather in his cap and go strutting along with folded arms
+and swelling breast, and when the Goths scowled at him and called
+him by well-deserved names, a challenge would lead to a deadly
+combat. Another such fight was caused by no greater offence than
+the treading on a dog's tail; but in that it was the Roman, or more
+truly the Gaul, who was slain, and I must say the 'wehrgeld' was
+honourably paid. It is time, however, that such groundless
+conflicts should cease; and, in truth, only a barbarian could be
+satisfied to let gold atone for life."
+
+"It is certainly neither Divine law nor human equity," said the
+Bishop. "Yet where no distinction can be made between the
+deliberate murder and the hasty blow, I have seen cause to be
+thankful for the means of escaping the utmost penalty. Has this
+oath had the desired effect?"
+
+"There has been only one case since it was taken," replied AEmilius.
+"That was a veritable murder. A vicious, dissolute lad stabbed a
+wounded Goth in a lonely place, out of vengeful spite. I readily
+delivered him up to the kinsfolk for justice, and as this proved me
+to be in earnest, these wanton outrages have become much more rare.
+Unfortunately, however, the fellow was son to one of the widows of
+the Church--a holy woman, and a favourite of my little Columba, who
+daily feeds and tends the poor thing, and thinks her old father very
+cruel."
+
+"Alas! from the beginning the doom of the guilty has struck the
+innocent," said the Bishop.
+
+"In due retribution, as even the heathen knew." Perfect
+familiarity with the great Greek tragedians was still the mark of a
+gentleman, and then Sidonius quoted from Sophocles--
+
+
+ Compass'd with dazzling light,
+ Throned on Olympus's height,
+His front the Eternal God uprears
+By toils unwearied, and unaged by years;
+ Far back, through ages past,
+ Far on, through time to come,
+ Hath been, and still must last,
+ Sin's never-changing doom.
+
+
+AEmilius capped it from AEschylus--
+
+
+But Justice holds her equal scales
+ With ever-waking eye;
+O'er some her vengeful might prevails
+ When their life's sun is high;
+ On some her vigorous judgments light
+ In that dread pause 'twixt day and night,
+ Life's closing, twilight hour.
+But soon as once the genial plain
+Has drunk the life-blood of the slain,
+Indelible the spots remain,
+ And aye for vengeance call.
+
+
+"Yea," said the Bishop, "such was the universal law given to Noah
+ere the parting of the nations--blood for blood! And yet, where
+should we be did not Mercy rejoice against Justice, and the Blood of
+Sprinkling speak better things than the blood of Abel? Nay, think
+not that I blame thee, my dear brother. Thou art the judge of thy
+people, and well do I know that one act of stern justice often, as
+in this instance, prevents innumerable deeds of senseless violence."
+
+"Moreover," returned the Senator, "it was by the relaxing of the
+ancient Roman sternness of discipline and resolution that the
+horrors of the Triumvirate began, and that, later on, spirit decayed
+and brought us to our present fallen state."
+
+By this time the procession, which had long since passed from their
+sight, was beginning to break up and disperse. A flock of little
+children first appeared, all of whom went aside to the slaves'
+quarters except one, who came running up the path between the box-
+trees. He was the eldest grandson and namesake of the Senator, a
+dark-eyed, brown-haired boy of seven, with the golden bulla hanging
+round his neck. Up he came to the old man's knee, proud to tell how
+he had scaled every rock, and never needed any help from the
+pedagogue slave who had watched over him.
+
+"Sawest thou any barbarians, my Victorinus?" asked his grandfather.
+
+"They stood thickly about Deodatus's door, and Publius said they
+were going to mock; but we looked so bold and sang so loud that they
+durst not. And Verronax is come down, papa, with Celer; and Celer
+wanted to sing too, but they would not let him, and he was so good
+that he was silent the moment his master showed him the leash."
+
+"Then is Celer a hound?" asked the Bishop, amused.
+
+"A hound of the old stock that used to fight battles for Bituitus,"
+returned the child. "Oh, papa, I am so hungry."
+
+He really did say 'papa,' the fond domestic name which passed from
+the patriarch of the household to the Father of the Roman Church.
+
+"Thy mother is watching for thee. Run to her, and she will give
+thee a cake--aye, and a bath before thy dinner. So Verronax is
+come. I am glad thou wilt see him, my father. The youth has grown
+up with my own children, and is as dear to me as my own son. Ah,
+here comes my Columba!"
+
+For the maidens were by this time returning, and Columba, robed in
+white, with a black veil, worn mantilla fashion over her raven hair,
+so as to shade her soft, liquid, dark eyes, came up the steps, and
+with a graceful obeisance to her father and the Bishop, took the
+seat to which the former drew her beside them.
+
+"Has all gone well, my little dove?" asked her father.
+
+"Perfectly well so far, my father," she replied; but there was
+anxiety in her eyes until the gate again opened and admitted the
+male contingent of the procession. No sooner had she seen them
+safely advancing up the box avenue than she murmured something about
+preparing for the meal, and, desiring a dismissal from her father,
+disappeared into the women's apartments, while the old man smiled at
+her pretty maidenly modesty.
+
+Of the three men who were advancing, one, Marcus AEmilius, about
+seven or eight and twenty years of age, was much what the Senator
+must have been at his age--sturdy, resolute, with keen eyes, and
+crisp, curled, short black hair. His younger brother, Lucius, was
+taller, slighter, more delicately made, with the same pensive
+Italian eyes as his sister, and a gentle, thoughtful countenance.
+The tonsure had not yet touched his soft, dark brown locks; but it
+was the last time he would march among the laity, for, both by his
+own desire and that of his dead mother, he was destined to the
+priesthood. Beside these two brothers came a much taller figure.
+The Arvernii seem to have been Gael rather than Cymri, and the
+mountain chief, Titus Julius Verronax, as the Romans rendered his
+name of Fearnagh, was of the purest descent. He had thick, wavy
+chestnut hair, not cut so short as that of the Romans, though kept
+with the same care. His eyebrows were dark, his eyes, both in hue
+and brightness, like a hawk's, his features nobly moulded, and his
+tall form, though large and stately, was in perfect symmetry, and
+had the free bearing and light springiness befitting a mountaineer.
+He wore the toga as an official scarf, but was in his national garb
+of the loose trousers and short coat, and the gold torq round his
+neck had come to him from prehistoric ages. He had the short Roman
+sword in his belt, and carried in his hand a long hunting-spear,
+without which he seldom stirred abroad, as it served him both as
+alpenstock and as defence against the wolves and bears of the
+mountains. Behind him stalked a magnificent dog, of a kind
+approaching the Irish wolfhound, a perfect picture of graceful
+outline and of strength, swiftness, and dignity, slightly shaggy,
+and of tawny colouring--in all respects curiously like his master.
+
+In language, learning, and manners Verronax the Arvernian was,
+however, a highly cultivated Roman, as Sidonius perceived in the
+first word of respectful welcome that he spoke when presented to the
+Bishop.
+
+All had gone off well. Old Meinhard had been on the watch, and had
+restrained any insult, if such had been intended, by the other
+Goths, who had stood watching in silence the blessing of the fields
+and vineyards of Deodatus.
+
+The peril over, the AEmilian household partook cheerfully of the
+social meal. Marina, the wife of Marcus, and Columba sat on carved
+chairs, the men of the family reclining on the couches constructed
+to hold three. The bright wit of Sidonius, an eminent
+conversationalist, shone the more brightly for his rejoicing at his
+return to his beloved country and flock, and to the friend of his
+youth. There were such gleams in the storms that were overwhelming
+the tottering Empire, to which indeed these men belonged only in
+heart and in name.
+
+The meal was for a fast day, and consisted of preparations of eggs,
+milk, flour, and fish from the mountain streams, but daintily
+cooked, for the traditions of the old Roman gastronomy survived, and
+Marina, though half a Gaul, was anxious that her housekeeping should
+shine in the eyes of the Bishop, who in his secular days had been
+known to have a full appreciation of the refinements of the table.
+
+When the family rose and the benediction had been pronounced,
+Columba was seen collecting some of the remnants in a basket.
+
+"Thou surely dost not intend going to that widow of thine to-day,"
+exclaimed her sister-in-law, Marina, "after such a walk on the
+mountain?"
+
+"Indeed I must, sister," replied Columba; "she was in much pain and
+weakness yesterday, and needs me more than usual."
+
+"And it is close to the farm of Deodatus," Marina continued to
+object, "where, the slaves tell me, there are I know not how many
+fresh barbarian guests!"
+
+"I shall of course take Stentor and Athenais," said Columba.
+
+"A pair of slaves can be of no use. Marcus, dost thou hear? Forbid
+thy sister's folly."
+
+"I will guard my sister," said Lucius, becoming aware of what was
+passing.
+
+"Who should escort her save myself?" said the graceful Verronax,
+turning at the same moment from replying to some inquiries from the
+Bishop.
+
+"I doubt whether his escort be not the most perilous thing of all,"
+sighed Marina.
+
+"Come, Marina," said her husband good-humouredly, "be not always a
+boder of ill. Thou deemest a Goth worse than a gorgon or hydra,
+whereas, I assure you, they are very good fellows after all, if you
+stand up to them like a man, and trust their word. Old Meinhard is
+a capital hunting comrade."
+
+Wherewith the worthy Marcus went off with his little son at his
+heels to inspect the doings of the slaves in the farm-court in the
+rear, having no taste for the occupation of his father and the
+Bishop, who composed themselves to listen to a MS. of the letters of
+S. Gregory Nazianzen, which Sidonius had lately acquired, and which
+was read aloud to them by a secretary slave.
+
+Some time had thus passed when a confused sound made the Senator
+start up. He beheld his daughter and her escort within the lower
+court, but the slaves were hastily barring the gates behind them,
+and loud cries of "Justice! Vengeance!" in the Gothic tongue,
+struck his only too well-accustomed ears.
+
+Columba flung herself before him, crying--
+
+"O father, have pity! It was for our holy faith."
+
+"He blasphemed," was all that was uttered by Verronax, on whose
+dress there was blood.
+
+"Open the gates," called out the Senator, as the cry outside waxed
+louder. "None shall cry for justice in vain at the gate of an
+AEmilius. Go, Marcus, admit such as have a right to enter and be
+heard. Rise, my daughter, show thyself a true Roman and Christian
+maiden before these barbarians. And thou, my son, alas, what hast
+thou done?" he added, turning to Verronax, and taking his arm while
+walking towards the tribunal, where he did justice as chief
+magistrate of the Roman settlement.
+
+A few words told all. While Columba was engaged with her sick
+widow, a young stranger Goth strolled up, one who had stood combing
+his long fair hair, and making contemptuous gestures as the Rogation
+procession passed in the morning. He and his comrades began
+offensively to scoff at the two young men for having taken part in
+the procession, uttering the blasphemies which the invocation of our
+Blessed Lord was wont to call forth.
+
+Verronax turned wrathfully round, a hasty challenge passed, a rapid
+exchange of blows; and while the Arvernian received only a slight
+scratch, the Goth fell slain before the hovel. His comrades were
+unarmed and intimidated. They rushed back to fetch weapons from the
+house of Deodatus, and there had been full time to take Columba
+safely home, Verronax and his dog stalking statelily in the rear as
+her guardians.
+
+"Thou shouldst have sought thine impregnable crag, my son," said the
+Senator sadly.
+
+"To bring the barbarian vengeance upon this house?" responded
+Verronax.
+
+"Alas, my son, thou know'st mine oath."
+
+"I know it, my father."
+
+"It forbids not thy ransoming thyself."
+
+Verronax smiled slightly, and touched the collar at his throat.
+
+"This is all the gold that I possess."
+
+The Senator rapidly appraised it with his eye. There was a regular
+tariff on the lives of free Romans, free Goths, guests, and trusted
+men of the King; and if the deceased were merely a LITE, or freeman
+of the lowest rank, it was just possible that the gold collar might
+purchase its master's life, provided he were not too proud to part
+with the ancestral badge.
+
+By this time the tribunal had been reached--a special portion of the
+peristyle, with a curule chair, inlaid with ivory, placed on a
+tesselated pavement, as in the old days of the Republic, and a
+servant on each side held the lictor's axe and bundle of rods, which
+betokened stern Roman justice, wellnigh a mockery now. The forum of
+the city would have been the regular place, but since an earthquake
+had done much damage there, and some tumults had taken place among
+the citizens, the seat of judgment had by general consent been
+placed in the AEmilian household as the place of chief security, and
+as he was the accredited magistrate with their Gothic masters, as
+Sidonius had been before his banishment.
+
+As Sidonius looked at the grave face of the Senator, set like a
+rock, but deadly pale, he thought it was no unworthy representative
+of Brutus or Manlius of old who sat on that seat.
+
+Alas! would he not be bound by his fatal oath to be only too true a
+representative of their relentless justice?
+
+On one side of the judgment-seat stood Verronax, towering above all
+around; behind him Marina and Columba, clinging together, trembling
+and tearful, but their weeping restrained by the looks of the
+Senator, and by a certain remnant of hope.
+
+To the other side advanced the Goths, all much larger and taller men
+than any one except the young Gaulish chieftain. The foremost was a
+rugged-looking veteran, with grizzled locks and beard, and a
+sunburnt face. This was Meinhard, the head of the garrison on
+Deodatus's farm, a man well known to AEmilius, and able to speak
+Latin enough to hold communication with the Romans. Several younger
+men pressed rudely behind him, but they were evidently impressed by
+the dignity of the tribunal, though it was with a loud and fierce
+shout that they recognised Verronax standing so still and unmoved.
+
+"Silence!" exclaimed the Senator, lifting his ivory staff.
+
+Meinhard likewise made gestures to hush them, and they ceased, while
+the Senator, greeting Meinhard and inviting him to share his seat of
+authority, demanded what they asked.
+
+"Right!" was their cry. "Right on the slayer of Odorik, the son of
+Odo, of the lineage of Odin, our guest, and of the King's trust."
+
+"Right shall ye have, O Goths," returned AEmilius. "A Roman never
+flinches from justice. Who are witnesses to the deed? Didst thou
+behold it, O Meinhard, son of Thorulf?"
+
+"No, noble AEmilius. It had not been wrought had I been present;
+but here are those who can avouch it. Stand forth, Egilulf, son of
+Amalrik."
+
+"It needs not," said Verronax. "I acknowledge the deed. The Goth
+scoffed at us for invoking a created Man. I could not stand by to
+hear my Master insulted, and I smote him, but in open fight, whereof
+I bear the token."
+
+"That is true," said Meinhard. "I know that Verronax, the
+Arvernian, would strike no coward blow. Therefore did I withhold
+these comrades of Odorik from rushing on thee in their fury; but
+none the less art thou in feud with Odo, the father of Odorik, who
+will require of thee either thy blood or the wehrgeld."
+
+"Wehrgeld I have none to pay," returned Verronax, in the same calm
+voice.
+
+"I have sworn!" said AEmilius in a clear low voice, steady but full
+of suppressed anguish. A shriek was heard among the women, and
+Sidonius stepped forth and demanded the amount of wehrgeld.
+
+"That must be for King Euric to decide," returned Meinhard. "He
+will fix the amount, and it will be for Odo to choose whether he
+will accept it. The mulct will be high, for the youth was of high
+Baltic blood, and had but lately arrived with his father from the
+north!"
+
+"Enough," said Verronax. "Listen, Meinhard. Thou knowest me, and
+the Arvernian faith. Leave me this night to make my peace with
+Heaven and my parting with man. At the hour of six to-morrow
+morning, I swear that I will surrender myself into thine hands to be
+dealt with as it may please the father of this young man."
+
+"So let it be, Meinhard," said AEmilius, in a stifled voice.
+
+"I know AEmilius, and I know Verronax," returned the Goth.
+
+They grasped hands, and then Meinhard drew off his followers,
+leaving two, at the request of Marcus, to act as sentinels at the
+gate.
+
+The Senator sat with his hands clasped over his face in unutterable
+grief, Columba threw herself into the arms of her betrothed, Marina
+tore her hair, and shrieked out--
+
+"I will not hold my peace! It is cruel! It is wicked! It is
+barbarous!"
+
+"Silence, Marina," said Verronax. "It is just! I am no ignorant
+child. I knew the penalty when I incurred it! My Columba,
+remember, though it was a hasty blow, it was in defence of our
+Master's Name."
+
+The thought might comfort her by and by; as yet it could not.
+
+The Senator rose and took his hand.
+
+"Thou dost forgive me, my son?" he said.
+
+"I should find it hard to forgive one who lessened my respect for
+the AEmilian constancy," returned Verronax.
+
+Then he led Marcus aside to make arrangements with him respecting
+his small mountain estate and the remnant of his tribe, since Marina
+was his nearest relative, and her little son would, if he were cut
+off, be the sole heir to the ancestral glories of Vercingetorix.
+
+"And I cannot stir to save such a youth as that!" cried the Senator
+in a tone of agony as he wrung the hand of Sidonius. "I have bound
+mine own hands, when I would sell all I have to save him. O my
+friend and father, well mightest thou blame my rashness, and doubt
+the justice that could be stern where the heart was not touched."
+
+"But I am not bound by thine oath, my friend," said Sidonius. "True
+it is that the Master would not be served by the temporal sword, yet
+such zeal as that of this youth merits that we should strive to
+deliver him. Utmost justice would here be utmost wrong. May I send
+one of your slaves as a messenger to my son to see what he can
+raise? Though I fear me gold and silver is more scarce than it was
+in our younger days."
+
+This was done, and young Lucius also took a summons from the Bishop
+to the deacons of the Church in the town, authorising the use of the
+sacred vessels to raise the ransom, but almost all of these had been
+already parted with in the time of a terrible famine which had
+ravaged Arvernia a few years previously, and had denuded all the
+wealthy and charitable families of their plate and jewels. Indeed
+Verronax shrank from the treasure of the Church being thus applied.
+Columba might indeed weep for him exultingly as a martyr, but, as he
+well knew, martyrs do not begin as murderers, and passion,
+pugnacity, and national hatred had been uppermost with him. It was
+the hap of war, and he was ready to take it patiently, and prepare
+himself for death as a brave Christian man, but not a hero or a
+martyr; and there was little hope either that a ransom so
+considerable as the rank of the parties would require could be
+raised without the aid of the AEmilii, or that, even if it were, the
+fierce old father would accept it. The more civilised Goths, whose
+families had ranged Italy, Spain, and Aquitaine for two or three
+generations, made murder the matter of bargain that had shocked
+AEmilius; but this was an old man from the mountain cradle of the
+race, unsophisticated, and but lately converted.
+
+In the dawn of the summer morning Bishop Sidonius celebrated the
+Holy Eucharist for the mournful family in the oratory, a vaulted
+chamber underground, which had served the same purpose in the days
+of persecution, and had the ashes of two tortured martyrs of the
+AEmilian household, mistress and slave, enshrined together beneath
+the altar, which had since been richly inlaid with coloured marble.
+
+Afterwards a morning meal was served for Verronax and for the elder
+AEmilius, who intended to accompany him on his sad journey to
+Bordigala, where the King and the father of Odorik were known to be
+at the time. Sidonius, who knew himself to have some interest with
+Euric, would fain have gone with them, but his broken health
+rendered a rapid journey impossible, and he hoped to serve the
+friends better by remaining to console the two women, and to
+endeavour to collect the wehrgeld in case it should be accepted.
+
+The farewells, owing to the Roman dignity of AEmilius and the proud
+self-respect of the Arvernian, were more calm than had been feared.
+Even thus, thought Sidonius, must Vercingetorix have looked when he
+mounted his horse and rode from his lines at Alesia to save his
+people, by swelling Caesar's triumph and dying beneath the Capitol.
+Oh, ABSIT OMEN! Columba was borne up by hopes which Verronax would
+not dash to the ground, and she received his embrace with steadfast,
+though brimming eyes, and an assurance that she would pray without
+ceasing.
+
+Lucius was not to be found, having no doubt gone forward, intending
+to direct his friend on his journey, and there part with him; but
+the saddest part of the whole was the passionate wailings and
+bemoanings of the remnants of his clan. One of his attendants had
+carried the tidings; wild Keltic men and women had come down for one
+last sight of their Fearnagh MacFearccadorigh, as they called him by
+his true Gaulish name--passionately kissing his hands and the hem of
+his mantle, beating their breasts amid howls of lamentation, and
+throwing themselves in his path, as, with the high spirit which
+could not brook to be fetched as a criminal, he made his way to the
+gate.
+
+Mounted on two strong mules, the only animals serviceable in the
+mountain paths, the Senator and Verronax passed the gate, Marcus
+walking beside them.
+
+"We are beforehand with the Goth," said Verronax, as he came out.
+
+"Lazy hounds!" said Marcus. "Their sentinels have vanished. It
+would serve them right if thou didst speed over the border to the
+Burgundians!"
+
+"I shall have a laugh at old Meinhard," said Verronax. "Little he
+knows of discipline."
+
+"No doubt they have had a great lyke wake, as they barbarously call
+their obsequies," said the Senator, "and are sleeping off their
+liquor."
+
+"We will rouse them," said the Arvernian; "it will be better than
+startling poor Columba."
+
+So on they moved, the wildly-clad, barefooted Gauls, with locks
+streaming in the wind, still keeping in the rear. They reached the
+long, low farm-buildings belonging to Deodatus, a half-bred Roman
+Gaul, with a large vineyard and numerous herds of cattle. The place
+was wonderfully quiet. The Goths seemed to be indulging in very
+sound slumbers after their carouse, for nothing was to be seen but
+the slaves coming in with bowls of milk from the cattle. Some of
+them must have given notice of the approach of the Senator, for
+Deodatus came to his door with the salutation, "AVE CLARISSIME!" and
+then stood staring at Verronax, apparently petrified with wonder;
+and as the young chief demanded where was Meinhard, he broke forth--
+
+"Does his nobility ask me? It is two hours since every Goth quitted
+the place, except the dead man in the house of the widow Dubhina,
+and we are breathing freely for once in our lives. Up they went
+towards the AEmilian villa with clamour and threats enough to make
+one's blood run cold, and they must be far on their way to Bordigala
+Gergovia by this time."
+
+"His nobility must have passed through their midst unseen and
+unheard!" cried old Julitta, a hardworking, dried-up woman, clasping
+her sinewy, wrinkled hands; "a miracle, and no wonder, since our
+holy Bishop has returned."
+
+The excitable household was on the point of breaking out into
+acclamation, but Verronax exclaimed: "Silence, children! Miracles
+are not for the bloodguilty. If it be, as I fear, they have met
+Lucius and seized him in my stead, we must push on at once to save
+him."
+
+"Meinhard could not mistake your persons," returned AEmilius; but
+while he was speaking, a messenger came up and put into his hand one
+of the waxen tablets on which notes were written--
+
+
+L. AEM. VIC. TO M. AEM. VIC. S. Q.,--Pardon and bless thy son.
+Meinhard assures me that I shall be accepted as equal in birth and
+accessory to the deed. Remember Columba and the value of Verronax's
+life, and let me save him. Consent and hold him back. Greet all
+the dear ones.--VALE.
+
+
+The little tablet could hold no more than this--almost every word
+curtailed. The Senator's firm lip quivered at last as he exclaimed,
+"My brave son. Thus does he redeem his father's rash oath!"
+
+Verronax, whose Roman breeding had held his impulsive Keltic nature
+in check as long as it was only himself that was in danger, now
+broke into loud weeping--
+
+"My Lucius! my brother beloved! and didst thou deem Arvernian honour
+fallen so low that I could brook such a sacrifice? Let us hasten on
+instantly, my father, while yet it is time!"
+
+It would have been impossible to withhold him, and Marcus returned
+with the strange tidings, while his father and Verronax set forth
+with a few servants, mounted like themselves on mules, to reach the
+broad Roman road that led from Gergovia to Bordigala. Three wild,
+barefooted Gauls of Verronax's clan shook their heads at all his
+attempts to send them home, and went running along after him with
+the same fidelity as poor Celer, whom he had left tied up at the
+villa as his parting gift to little Victorinus, but who had broken
+loose, and came bounding to his master, caressing him with nose and
+tongue at their first halt.
+
+There had been, as in all Roman roads, regular posting stations at
+intervals along the way, where horses and mules could be hired, but
+the troubles of the Empire, invasion, and scarcity had greatly
+disturbed the system. Many of the stations were deserted, and at
+others either the whole of the animals, or all the fleeter ones, had
+been taken up by Meinhard and his convoy. Indeed it almost seemed
+that not only Lucius was anxious not to be overtaken, but that
+Meinhard was forwarding his endeavours to consummate his sacrifice
+before the Arvernian could prevent it.
+
+Hotly did Verronax chafe at each hindrance. He would have dashed
+onwards with feverish head-long speed, using his own fleet limbs
+when he could not obtain a horse, but AEmilius feared to trust him
+alone, lest, coming too late to rescue Lucius, he should bring on
+himself the fury of the Goths, strike perhaps in revenge, and not
+only lose his own life and render the sacrifice vain, but imperil
+many more.
+
+So, while making all possible speed, he bound the young Arvernian,
+by all the ties of paternal guardianship and authority, to give his
+word not to use his lighter weight and youthful vigour to outstrip
+the rest of the party.
+
+The Senator himself hardly knew what was his own wish, for if his
+fatherly affection yearned over his gentle, dutiful, studious
+Lucius, yet Columba's desolation, and the importance of Verronax as
+a protector for his family, so weighed down the other scale, that he
+could only take refuge in 'committing his way unto the Lord.'
+
+The last halting-place was at a villa belonging to a Roman, where
+they heard that an assembly was being held in the fields near
+Bordigala for judgment on the slaughter of a young Goth of high
+rank. On learning how deeply they were concerned, their host lent
+them two horses, and rode with them himself, as they hastened on in
+speechless anxiety.
+
+These early Teutonic nations all had their solemn assemblies in the
+open air, and the Goths had not yet abandoned the custom, so that as
+the Senator and the chieftain turned the summit of the last low hill
+they could see the plain beneath swarming like an ant-hill with
+people, and as they pressed onward they could see a glittering tent,
+woven with cloth of gold, a throne erected in front, and around it a
+space cleared and guarded by a huge circle of warriors (LITES),
+whose shields joined so as to form a wall.
+
+Near the throne stood the men of higher degree, all alike to join
+the King in his judgment, like the Homeric warriors of old, as
+indeed Sidonius had often said that there was no better comment on
+the ILIAD than the meetings of the barbarians.
+
+By the time AEmilius and Verronax had reached the spot, and gained
+an entrance in virtue of their rank and concern in the matter, Euric
+sat enthroned in the midst of the assembly. He was far removed from
+being a savage, though he had won his crown by the murder of his
+brother. He and the counts (comrades) around him wore the Roman
+garb, and used by preference the Latin speech, learning, arms, and
+habits, just as European civilisation is adopted by the Egyptian or
+Japanese of the present day. He understood Roman jurisprudence, and
+was the author of a code for the Goths, but in a case like this he
+was obliged to conform to national customs.
+
+There he sat, a small, light-complexioned man, of slighter make than
+those around him, holding in his hand a scroll. It was a letter
+from Sidonius, sent beforehand by a swift-footed mountaineer, and
+containing a guarantee for 1200 soldi, twice the price for a Goth of
+ordinary rank. On the one side stood, unbound and unguarded, the
+slender form of Lucius; on the other a gigantic old Visigoth, blind,
+and with long streaming snowy hair and beard, his face stern with
+grief and passion, and both his knotted hands crossed upon the
+handle of a mighty battle-axe.
+
+The King had evidently been explaining to him the terms of the
+Bishop's letter, for the first words that met the ear of AEmilius
+were--
+
+"Nay, I say nay, King Euric. Were I to receive treble the weight of
+gold, how should that enable me to face my son in the halls of Odin,
+with his blood unavenged?"
+
+There was a murmur, and the King exclaimed--
+
+"Now, now, Odo, we know no more of Odin."
+
+"Odin knows us no more," retorted the old man, "since we have washed
+ourselves in the Name of another than the mighty Thor, and taken up
+the weakly worship of the conquered. So my son would have it! He
+talked of a new Valhal of the Christian; but let him meet me where
+he will, he shall not reproach me that he only of all his brethren
+died unavenged. Where is the slayer? Set him before me that I may
+strike him dead with one blow!"
+
+Lucius crossed himself, looked upwards, and was stepping forwards,
+when Verronax with a shout of 'Hold!' leapt into the midst, full
+before the avenger's uplifted weapon, crying--
+
+"Slay me, old man! It was I who killed thy son, I, Fearnagh the
+Arvernian!"
+
+"Ho!" said Odo. "Give me thine hand. Let me feel thee. Yea, these
+be sinews! It is well. I marvelled how my Odorik should have
+fallen by the soft Roman hand of yonder stripling; but thou art a
+worthy foe. What made the priestling thrust himself between me and
+my prey?"
+
+"His generous love," returned Verronax, as Lucius flung himself on
+his neck, crying--
+
+"O my Verronax, why hast thou come? The bitterness of death was
+past! The gates were opening."
+
+Meanwhile AEmilius had reached Euric, and had made him understand
+the substitution. Old Odo knew no Latin, and it was the King, an
+able orator in both tongues, who expounded all in Gothic, showing
+how Lucius AEmilius had offered his life in the stead of his friend,
+and how Verronax had hurried to prevent the sacrifice, reiterating,
+almost in a tone of command, the alternative of the wehrgeld.
+
+The lites all burst into acclamations at the nobility of the two
+young men, and some muttered that they had not thought these Romans
+had so much spirit.
+
+Euric made no decision. He did full justice to the courage and
+friendship of the youths, and likewise to the fact that Odorik had
+provoked the quarrel, and had been slain in fair fight; but the
+choice lay with the father, and perhaps in his heart the politic
+Visigoth could not regret that Arvernia should lose a champion sure
+to stand up for Roman or national claims.
+
+Odo listened in silence, leaning on his axe. Then he turned his
+face to the bystanders, and demanded of them--
+
+"Which of them is the bolder? Which of them flinched at my axe?"
+
+The spectators were unanimous that neither had blenched. The
+slender lad had presented himself as resolutely as the stately
+warrior.
+
+"It is well," said Odo. "Either way my son will be worthily
+avenged. I leave the choice to you, young men."
+
+A brief debate ended in an appeal to the Senator, who, in spite of
+all his fortitude, could not restrain himself from groaning aloud,
+hiding his face in his hands, and hoarsely saying, "Draw lots."
+
+"Yes," said Euric; "commit the judgment to Heaven."
+
+It was hailed as a relief; but Lucius stipulated that the lots
+should be blessed by a Catholic priest, and Verronax muttered
+impatiently--
+
+"What matters it? Let us make an end as quickly as may be!"
+
+He had scarcely spoken when shouts were heard, the throng made way,
+the circle of lites opened, as, waving an olive branch, a wearied,
+exhausted rider and horse appeared, and staggering to the foot of
+the throne, there went down entirely spent, the words being just
+audible, "He lives! Odorik lives!"
+
+It was Marcus AEmilius, covered with dust, and at first unable to
+utter another word, as he sat on the ground, supported by his
+brother, while his father made haste to administer the wine handed
+to him by an attendant.
+
+"Am I in time?" he asked.
+
+"In time, my son," replied his father, repeating his announcement in
+Gothic. "Odorik lives!"
+
+"He lives, he will live," repeated Marcus, reviving. "I came not
+away till his life was secure."
+
+"Is it truth?" demanded the old Goth. "Romans have slippery ways."
+
+Meinhard was quick to bear testimony that no man in Arvernia doubted
+the word of an AEmilius; but Marcus, taking a small dagger from his
+belt, held it out, saying--
+
+"His son said that he would know this token."
+
+Odo felt it. "It is my son's knife," he said, still cautiously;
+"but it cannot speak to say how it was taken from him."
+
+"The old barbarian heathen," quoth Verronax, under his breath; "he
+would rather lose his son than his vengeance."
+
+Marcus had gathered breath and memory to add, "Tell him Odorik said
+he would know the token of the red-breast that nested in the winged
+helm of Helgund."
+
+"I own the token," said Odo. "My son lives. He needs no
+vengeance." He turned the handle of his axe downwards, passed it to
+his left hand, and stretched the right to Verronax, saying, "Young
+man, thou art brave. There is no blood feud between us. Odo, son
+of Helgund, would swear friendship with you, though ye be Romans."
+
+"Compensation is still due according to the amount of the injury,"
+said the Senator scrupulously. "Is it not so, O King?"
+
+Euric assented, but Odo exclaimed--
+
+"No gold for me! When Odo, son of Helgund, forgives, he forgives
+outright. Where is my son?"
+
+Food had by this time been brought by the King's order, and after
+swallowing a few mouthfuls Marcus could stand and speak.
+
+Odorik, apparently dead, had been dragged by the Goths into the hut
+of the widow Dubhina to await his father's decision as to the
+burial, and the poor woman had been sheltered by her neighbour,
+Julitta, leaving the hovel deserted.
+
+Columba, not allowing her grief and suspense to interfere with her
+visits of mercy to the poor woman, had come down as usual on the
+evening of the day on which her father and her betrothed had started
+on their sad journey. Groans, not likely to be emitted by her
+regular patient, had startled her, and she had found the floor
+occupied by the huge figure of a young Goth, his face and hair
+covered with blood from a deep wound on his head, insensible, but
+his moans and the motion of his limbs betraying life.
+
+Knowing the bitter hatred in Claudiodunum for everything Gothic, the
+brave girl would not seek for aid nearer than the villa. Thither
+she despatched her male slave, while with her old nurse she did all
+in her power for the relief of the wounded man, with no
+inconsiderable skill. Marcus had brought the Greek physician of the
+place, but he had done nothing but declare the patient a dead man by
+all the laws of Galen and Hippocrates. However, the skull and
+constitution of a vigorous young Goth, fresh from the mountains,
+were tougher than could be imagined by a member of one of the
+exhausted races of the Levant. Bishop Sidonius had brought his
+science and sagacity to the rescue, and under his treatment Odorik
+had been restored to his senses, and was on the fair way to
+recovery.
+
+On the first gleam of hope, Marcus had sent off a messenger, but so
+many of his household and dependents were absent that he had no
+great choice; so that as soon as hope had become security, he had
+set forth himself; and it was well he had done so, for he had
+overtaken the messenger at what was reckoned as three days' journey
+from Bordigala. He had ridden ever since without rest, only
+dismounting to change his steed, scarcely snatching even then a
+morsel of food, and that morning neither he nor the horse he rode
+had relaxed for a moment the desperate speed with which he rode
+against time; so that he had no cause for the shame and vexation
+that he felt at his utter collapse before the barbarians. King
+Euric himself declared that he wished he had a Goth who could
+perform such a feat of endurance.
+
+While Marcus slept, AEmilius and the two young men offered their
+heartfelt thanks in the Catholic church of Bordigala, and then Euric
+would not be refused their presence at a great feast of
+reconciliation on the following day, two of Verronax's speedy-footed
+followers having been sent off at once to bear home tidings that his
+intelligence had been in time.
+
+The feast was served in the old proconsular house, with the Roman
+paraphernalia, arranged with the amount of correct imitation that is
+to be found at an English dinner-party in the abode of an Indian
+Rajah. It began with Roman etiquette, but ended in a Gothic revel,
+which the sober and refined AEmilii could hardly endure.
+
+They were to set off on their return early on the morrow, Meinhard
+and Odo with them; but when they at length escaped from the
+barbarian orgies, they had little expectation that their companions
+would join them in the morning.
+
+However, the two Goths and their followers were on the alert as soon
+as they, and as cool-headed as if they had touched no drop of wine.
+
+Old Odo disdained a mule, and would let no hand save his own guide
+his horse. Verronax and Lucius constituted themselves his guides,
+and whenever he permitted the slightest assistance, it was always
+from the Arvernian, whom he seemed to regard as a sort of adopted
+son.
+
+He felt over his weapons, and told him long stories, of which
+Verronax understood only a word or two here and there, though the
+old man seemed little concerned thereat. Now and then he rode along
+chanting to himself an extemporary song, which ran somewhat thus--
+
+
+Maids who choose the slain,
+Disappointed now.
+The Hawk of the Mountain,
+The Wolf of the West,
+Meet in fierce combat.
+Sinks the bold Wolf-cub,
+Folds his wing the Falcon!
+Shall the soft priestling
+Step before him to Valhal,
+Cheating Lok's daughter
+Of weak-hearted prey?
+Lo! the Wolf wakens.
+Valkyr relaxes,
+Waits for a battlefield,
+Wolf-cub to claim.
+Friendly the Falcon,
+Friendly the Gray-Wolf.
+
+
+So it ran on, to the great scandal of Lucius, who longed for better
+knowledge of the Gothic tongue to convince the old man of the folly
+of his heathen dreams. Meinhard, who was likewise rather shocked,
+explained that the father and son had been recent arrivals, who had
+been baptized because Euric required his followers to embrace his
+faith, but with little real knowledge or acceptance on the part of
+the father. Young Odorik had been a far more ardent convert; and,
+after the fashion of many a believer, had taken up the distinctions
+of sect rather than of religion, and, zealous in the faith he knew,
+had thought it incumbent on him to insult the Catholics where they
+seemed to him idolatrous.
+
+A message on the road informed the travellers that they would find
+Odorik at the villa. Thither then they went, and soon saw the whole
+household on the steps in eager anticipation. A tall young figure,
+with a bandage still round his fair flowing locks, came down the
+steps as Verronax helped the blind man to dismount; and Odo, with a
+cry of 'My son!' with a ring of ecstasy in the sound, held the youth
+to his breast and felt him all over.
+
+"Are we friends?" said Odorik, turning to Verronax, when his father
+released him.
+
+"That is as thou wiliest," returned the Arvernian gravely.
+
+"Know then," said Odorik, "that I know that I erred. I knew not thy
+Lord when I mocked thine honour to Him. Father, we had but half
+learnt the Christian's God. I have seen it now. It was not thy
+blow, O Arvernian! that taught me; but the Master who inspired
+yonder youth to offer his life, and who sent the maiden there to
+wait upon her foe. He is more than man. I own in him the Eternal
+Creator, Redeemer, and Lord!"
+
+"Yea," said Sidonius to his friend AEmilius, "a great work hath been
+wrought out. Thus hath the parable of actual life led this zealous
+but half-taught youth to enter into the higher truth. Lucius will
+be none the worse priest for having trodden in the steps of Him who
+was High-priest and Victim. Who may abide strict Divine Justice,
+had not One stood between the sinner and the Judge? Thus 'Mercy and
+Truth have met together; Righteousness and Peace have kissed each
+other.'"
+
+
+
+THE CAT OF CAT COPSE
+
+
+
+A HAMPSHIRE TRADITION
+
+I
+
+The Dane! the Dane! The heathen Dane
+Is wasting Hampshire's coast again--
+From ravaged church and plundered farm
+Flash the dread beacons of alarm--
+ Fly, helpless peasants, fly!
+Ytene's green banks and forest shades,
+Her heathery slopes and gorse-clad glades
+ Re-echo to the cry--
+Where is the King, whose strong right hand
+Hath oft from danger freed the land?
+Nor fleet nor covenant avails
+To drive aloof those pirate sails,
+ In vain is Alfred's sword;
+Vain seems in every sacred fane
+The chant--'From fury of the Dane,
+ Deliver us, good Lord.'
+
+II
+
+The long keels have the Needles past,
+Wight's fairest bowers are flaming fast;
+From Solent's waves rise many a mast,
+With swelling sails of gold and red,
+Dragon and serpent at each head,
+Havoc and slaughter breathing forth,
+Steer on these locusts of the north.
+Each vessel bears a deadly freight;
+Each Viking, fired with greed and hate,
+His axe is whetting for the strife,
+And counting how each Christian life
+Shall win him fame in Skaldic lays,
+And in Valhalla endless praise.
+For Hamble's river straight they steer;
+Prayer is in vain, no aid is near--
+Hopeless and helpless all must die.
+Oh, fainting heart and failing eye,
+Look forth upon the foe once more!
+Why leap they not upon the shore?
+Why pause their keels upon the strand,
+As checked by some resistless hand?
+The sail they spread, the oars they ply,
+Yet neither may advance nor fly.
+
+III
+
+Who is it holds them helpless there?
+'Tis He Who hears the anguished prayer;
+ 'Tis He Who to the wave
+Hath fixed the bound--mud, rock, or sand--
+To mark how far upon the strand
+ Its foaming sweep may rave.
+What is it, but the ebbing tide,
+That leaves them here, by Hamble's side,
+So firm embedded in the mud
+No force of stream, nor storm, nor flood,
+Shall ever these five ships bear forth
+To fiords and islets of the north;
+A thousand years shall pass away,
+And leave those keels in Hamble's bay.
+
+IV
+
+Ill were it in my rhyme to tell
+The work of slaughter that befell;
+In sooth it was a savage time--
+Crime ever will engender crime.
+Each Viking, as he swam to land,
+Fell by a Saxon's vengeful hand;
+Turn we from all that vengeance wild--
+Where on the deck there cowered a child,
+And, closely to his bosom prest,
+A snow-white kitten found a nest.
+That tender boy, with tresses fair,
+Was Edric, Egbert's cherished heir;
+The plaything of the homestead he,
+Now fondled on his grandame's knee;
+Or as beside the hearth he sat,
+Oft sporting with his snow-white cat;
+Now by the chaplain taught to read,
+And lisp his Pater and his Creed;
+Well nurtured at his mother's side,
+And by his father trained to ride,
+To speak the truth, to draw the bow,
+And all an English Thane should know,
+His days had been as one bright dream--
+As smooth as his own river's stream!
+Until, at good King Alfred's call,
+Thane Egbert left his native hall.
+
+V
+
+Then, five days later, shout and yell,
+And shrieks and howls of slaughter fell,
+Upon the peaceful homestead came.
+'Mid flashing sword, and axe, and flame,
+Snatched by a Viking's iron grasp,
+From his slain mother's dying clasp,
+Saved from the household's flaming grave,
+Edric was dragged, a destined slave,
+Some northern dame to serve, or heed
+The flocks that on the Saeter feed.
+Still, with scarce conscious hold he clung
+To the white cat, that closely hung
+Seeking her refuge in his arm,
+Her shelter in the wild alarm--
+And who can tell how oft his moan
+Was soothed by her soft purring tone?
+Time keeping with retracted claw,
+Or patting with her velvet paw;
+Although of home and friends bereft,
+Still this one comforter was left,
+So lithe, so swift, so soft, so white,
+She might have seemed his guardian sprite.
+ The rude Danes deemed her such;
+And whispered tales of 'disir' bound
+To human lords, as bird or hound.
+Nor one 'mid all the fleet was found
+ To hurt one tender paw.
+And when the captive knelt to pray
+None would his orisons gainsay;
+For as they marked him day by day,
+ Increased their wondering awe.
+
+VI
+
+Crouched by the mast, the child and cat,
+Through the dire time of slaughter sat,
+ By terror both spellbound;
+But when night came, a silence drear
+Fell on the coast; and far or near,
+No voice caught Edric's wakeful ear,
+ Save water's lapping sound.
+He wandered from the stern to prow,
+Ate of the stores, and marvelled how
+ He yet might reach the ground;
+Till low and lower sank the tide,
+Dark banks of mud spread far and wide
+ Around that fast-bound wreck.
+Then the lone boy climbed down the ship,
+To cross the mud by bound and skip,
+ His cat upon his neck.
+Light was his weight and swift his leap,
+Now would he softly tread, now creep,
+For treacherous was the mud, and deep
+From stone to weed, from weed to plank,
+Leaving a hole where'er he sank;
+With panting breath and sore taxed strength
+The solid earth he felt at length.
+Sheltered within the copse he lay,
+When dawn had brightened into day,
+For when one moment there was seen,
+His red cap glancing 'mid the green,
+ A fearful cry arose--
+"Here lurks a Dane!" "The Dane seek out"
+With knife and axe, the rabble rout
+Made the copse ring with yell and shout
+ To find their dreaded foes.
+And Edric feared to meet a stroke,
+Before they knew the tongue he spoke.
+Hid 'mid the branches of an oak,
+ He heard their calls and blows.
+Of food he had a simple store,
+And when the churls the chase gave o'er,
+And evening sunk upon the vale,
+With rubbing head and upright tail,
+Pacing before him to and fro,
+Puss lured him on the way to go--
+Coaxing him on, with tender wile,
+O'er heath and down for many a mile.
+Ask me not how her course she knows.
+He from Whom every instinct flows
+Hath breathed into His creatures power,
+Giving to each its needful dower;
+And strive and question as we will,
+We cannot trace the inborn skill,
+Nor fathom how, where'er she roam,
+The cat ne'er fails to find her home.
+
+VII
+
+What pen may dare to paint the woe,
+When Egbert saw his home laid low?
+Where, by the desolated hearth,
+The mother lay who gave him birth,
+And, close beside, his fair young wife,
+And servants, slain in bootless strife--
+ Mournful the King stood near.
+Alfred, who came to be his guest,
+And deeply rued that his behest
+Had all unguarded left that nest,
+ To meet such ruin drear.
+With hand, and heart, and lip, he gave
+All king or friend, both true and brave,
+Could give, one pang of grief to save,
+ To comfort, or to cheer--
+As from the blackened walls they drew
+Each corpse, and laid with reverence due;
+And then it was that Egbert knew
+ All save the child were here.
+King Alfred's noble head was bent,
+A monarch's pain his bosom rent;
+Kindly he wrung Thane Egbert's hand--
+"Lo! these have won the blissful land,
+Where foeman's shout is heard no more,
+Nor wild waves beat upon the shore;
+Brief was the pang, the strife is o'er--
+ They are at peace, my friend!
+Safe, where the weary are at rest;
+Safe, where the banish'd and opprest
+ Find joys that never end."
+Thane Egbert groaned, and scarce might speak
+For tears that ploughed his hardy cheek,
+ As his dread task was done.
+And for the slain, from monk and priest
+Rose requiems that never ceased,
+ While still he sought his son.
+"Oh, would to Heaven!" that father said,
+"There lay my darling calmly dead,
+Rather than as a thrall be bred--
+ His Christian faith undone."
+"Nay, life is hope!" bespake the King,
+"God o'er the child can spread His wing
+And shield him in the Northman's power
+Safe as in Alswyth's guarded bower;
+Treaty and ransom may be found
+To win him back to English ground."
+
+VIII
+
+The funeral obsequies were o'er,
+ But lingered still the Thane,
+Hanging around his home once more,
+ Feeding his bitter pain.
+The King would fain with friendly force
+Urge him anew to mount his horse,
+Turn from the piteous sight away,
+And fresh begin life's saddened day,
+His loved ones looking yet to greet,
+Where ne'er shall part the blest who meet.
+Just then a voice that well he knew,
+A sound that mixed the purr and mew,
+ Went to the father's heart.
+On a large stone King Alfred sat
+Against his buskin rubbed a cat,
+ Snow-white in every part,
+Though drenched and soiled from head to tail.
+The poor Thane's tears poured down like hail--
+"Poor puss, in vain thy loving wail,"
+ Then came a joyful start!
+A little hand was on his cloak--
+"Father!" a voice beside him spoke,
+ Emerging from the wood.
+All travel-stained, and marked with mire,
+With trace of blood, and toil, and fire,
+Yet safe and sound beside his sire,
+ Edric before them stood.
+And as his father wept for joy,
+King Alfred blessed the rescued boy,
+ And thanked his Maker good!
+Who doth the captive's prayer fulfil,
+Making His creatures work His will
+ By means not understood.
+
+NOTE.--The remains of the five Danish vessels still lie embedded in
+the mud of the Hamble River near Southampton, though parts have been
+carried off and used as wood for furniture in the farm-houses. The
+neighbouring wood is known as Cat Copse, and a tradition has been
+handed down that a cat, and a boy in a red cap, escaped from the
+Danish ships, took refuge there.
+
+
+
+DE FACTO AND DE JURE
+
+
+
+I. DE FACTO
+
+The later summer sunbeams lay on an expanse of slightly broken
+ground where purple and crimson heather were relieved by the golden
+blossoms of the dwarf gorse, interspersed with white stars of
+stitch-wort. Here and there, on the slopes, grew stunted oaks and
+hollies, whose polished leaves gleamed white with the reflection of
+the light; but there was not a trace of human habitation save a
+track, as if trodden by horses' feet, clear of the furze and heath,
+and bordered by soft bent grass, beginning to grow brown.
+
+Near this track--for path it could hardly be called--stood a slender
+lad waiting and watching, a little round cap covering his short-cut
+brown hair, a crimson tunic reaching to his knee, leggings and shoes
+of deerhide, and a sword at his side, fastened by a belt of the like
+skin, guarded and clasped with silver. His features were delicate,
+though sunburnt, and his eyes were riveted on the distance, where
+the path had disappeared amid the luxuriant spires of ling.
+
+A hunting-horn sounded, and the youth drew himself together into an
+attitude of eager attention; the baying of hounds and trampling of
+horses' hoofs came nearer and nearer, and by and by there came in
+view the ends of boar-spears, the tall points of bows, a cluster of
+heads of men and horses--strong, sturdy, shaggy, sure-footed
+creatures, almost ponies, but the only steeds fit to pursue the
+chase on this rough and encumbered ground.
+
+Foremost rode, with ivory and gold hunting-horn slung in a rich
+Spanish baldrick, and a slender gilt circlet round his green
+hunting-cap, a stout figure, with a face tanned to a fiery colour,
+keen eyes of a dark auburn tint, and a shock of hair of the same
+deep red.
+
+At sight of him, the lad flung himself on his knees on the path,
+with the cry, "Haro! Haro! Justice, Sir King!"
+
+"Out of my way, English hound!" cried the King. "This is no time
+for thy Haro."
+
+"Nay, but one word, good fair King! I am French--French by my
+father's side!" cried the lad, as there was a halt, more from the
+instinct of the horse than the will of the King. 'Bertram de
+Maisonforte! My father married the Lady of Boyatt, and her
+inheritance was confirmed to him by your father, brave King William,
+my Lord; but now he is dead, and his kinsman, Roger de Maisonforte,
+hath ousted her and me, her son and lawful heir, from house and
+home, and we pray for justice, Sir King?'
+
+'Ha, Roger, thou there! What say'st thou to this bold beggar!'
+shouted the Red King.
+
+'I say,' returned a black, bronzed hunter, pressing to the front,
+'that what I hold of thee, King William, on tenure of homage, and of
+two good horses and staunch hounds yearly, I yield to no English
+mongrel churl, who dares to meddle with me.'
+
+'Thou hear'st, lad,' said Rufus, with his accustomed oath, 'homage
+hath been done to us for the land, nor may it be taken back. Out of
+our way, or--'
+
+'Sir! sir!' entreated the lad, grasping the bridle, 'if no more
+might be, we would be content if Sir Roger would but leave my mother
+enough for her maintenance among the nuns of Romsey, and give me a
+horse and suit of mail to go on the Holy War with Duke Robert.'
+
+'Ho! ho! a modest request for a beggarly English clown!' cried the
+King, aiming a blow at the lad with his whip, and pushing on his
+horse, so as almost to throw him back on the heath. 'Ho! ho! fit
+him out for a fool's errand!'
+
+'We'll fit him! We'll teach him to take the cross at other men's
+expense!' shouted the followers, seizing on the boy.
+
+'Nay; we'll bestow his cross on him for a free gift!' exclaimed
+Roger de Maisonforte.
+
+And Bertram, struggling desperately in vain among the band of
+ruffians, found his left arm bared, and two long and painful
+slashes, in the form of the Crusader's cross, inflicted, amid loud
+laughter, as the blood sprang forth.
+
+'There, Sir Crusader,' said Roger, grinding his teeth over him. 'Go
+on thy way now--as a horse-boy, if so please thee, and know better
+than to throw thy mean false English pretension in the face of a
+gentle Norman.'
+
+Men, horses, dogs, all seemed to trample and scoff at Bertram as he
+fell back on the elastic stems of the heath and gorse, whose
+prickles seemed to renew the insults by scratching his face. When
+the King's horn, the calls, the brutal laughter, and the baying of
+the dogs had begun to die away in the distance, he gathered himself
+together, sat up, and tried to find some means of stanching the
+blood. Not only was the wound in a place hard to reach, but it had
+been ploughed with the point of a boar-spear, and was grievously
+torn. He could do nothing with it, and, as he perceived, he had
+further been robbed of his sword, his last possession, his father's
+sword.
+
+The large tears of mingled rage, grief, and pain might well spring
+from the poor boy's eyes in his utter loneliness, as he clenched his
+hand with powerless wrath, and regained his feet, to retrace, as
+best he might, his way to where his widowed mother had found a
+temporary shelter in a small religious house.
+
+The sun grew hotter and hotter, Bertram's wound bled, though not
+profusely, the smart grew upon him, his tongue was parched with
+thirst, and though he kept resolutely on, his breath came panting,
+his head grew dizzy, his eyes dim, his feet faltered, and at last,
+just as he attained a wider and more trodden way, he dropped
+insensible by the side of the path, his dry lips trying to utter the
+cry, "Lord, have mercy on me!"
+
+
+II. DE JURE
+
+
+When Bertram de Maisonforte opened his eyes again cold waters were
+on his face, wine was moistening his lips, the burning of his wound
+was assuaged by cooling oil, while a bandage was being applied, and
+he was supported on a breast and in arms, clad indeed in a hauberk,
+but as tenderly kind as the full deep voice that spoke in English,
+"He comes round. How now, my child?"
+
+"Father," murmured Bertram, with dreamy senses.
+
+"Better now; another sup from the flask, David," again said the kind
+voice, and looking up, he became aware of the beautiful benignant
+face, deep blue eyes, and long light locks of the man in early
+middle age who had laid him on his knee, while a priest was binding
+his arm, and a fair and graceful boy, a little younger than himself,
+was standing by with the flask of wine in his hand, and a face of
+such girlish beauty that as he knelt to hold the wine to his lips,
+Bertram asked--
+
+"Am I among the Angels?"
+
+"Not yet," said the elder man. "Art thou near thine home?"
+
+"Alack! I have no home, kind sir," said Bertram, now able to raise
+himself and to perceive that he was in the midst of a small hand of
+armed men, such as every knight or noble necessarily carried about
+with him for protection. There was a standard with a dragon, and
+their leader himself was armed, all save his head, and, as Bertram
+saw, was a man of massive strength, noble stature, and kingly
+appearance.
+
+"What shall we do for thee?" he asked. "Who hath put thee in this
+evil case?"
+
+Bertram gave his name, and at its Norman sound there was a start of
+repulsion from the boy. "French after all!" he exclaimed.
+
+"Nay, David," said the leader, "if I mind me rightly, the Lady
+Elftrud of Boyatt wedded a brave Norman of that name. Art thou her
+son? I see something of her face, and thou hast an English tongue."
+
+"I am; I am her only son!" exclaimed Bertram; and as he told of his
+wrongs and the usage he had met with, young David cried out with
+indignation--
+
+"Uncle, uncle, how canst thou suffer that these things should be?
+Here are our faithful cnihts. Let us ride to the forest. Wherefore
+should it not be with Red William and his ruffians as with Scottish
+Duncan and Donald?"
+
+"Hush thee, David, my nephew. Thou knowest that may not be. But
+for thee, young Bertram, we will see what can be done. Canst sit a
+horse now?"
+
+"Yea, my lord, full well. I know not what came over me, even now,"
+said Bertram, much ashamed of the condition in which he had been
+found.
+
+A sumpter horse was found for him, the leader of the party saying
+that they would go on to his own home, where the youth's wound
+should be looked to, and they could then decide what could be done
+for him.
+
+Bertram was still so far faint, suffering, weak, and weary, that he
+was hardly awake to curiosity as to his surroundings, and had quite
+enough to do to keep his seat in the saddle, and follow in the wake
+of the leader's tall white horse, above which shone his bright chain
+mail and his still brighter golden locks, so that the exhausted boy
+began in some measure to feel as if he were following St. Michael on
+his way to some better world.
+
+Now and then the tall figure turned to see how it was with him, and
+as he drooped more with fatigue and pain, bade one of the retainers
+keep beside him and support him.
+
+Thus at length the cavalcade left the heathery expanse and reached a
+valley, green with meadow-land and waving corn, with silvery beards
+of barley rippling in the evening light, and cows and sheep being
+gathered for the night towards a dwelling where the river had been
+trained to form a moat round low green ramparts enclosing a number
+of one-storied thatched houses and barns, with one round tower, a
+strong embattled gateway, and at a little distance a square church
+tower, and other cottages standing outside.
+
+A shout of ecstasy broke out from the village as the advancing party
+was seen and recognised. Men, women, and children, rudely but
+substantially clad, and many wearing the collar of the thrall, ran
+out from their houses, baring their heads, bowing low, and each in
+turn receiving some kind word or nod of greeting from the lord whom
+they welcomed, while one after another of his armed followers turned
+aside, and was absorbed into a happy family by wife or parent. A
+drawbridge crossed the moat, and there was a throng of joyful
+servants in the archway--foremost a priest, stretching out his hands
+in blessing, and a foreign-looking old woman, gray-haired and dark-
+eyed, who gathered young David into her embrace as he sprang from
+his horse, calling him her heart's darling and her sunshine, and
+demanding, with a certain alarm, where were his brothers.
+
+"In Scotland, dear Nurse Agnes--even where they should be," was
+David's answer. "We are conquerors, do you see! Edgar is a crowned
+and anointed King--seated on the holy stone of Scone, and Alexander
+is beside him to fight for him!"
+
+"It is even so, nurse," said the elder man, turning from the priest,
+to whom he had more briefly spoken; "God hath blessed our arms, and
+young Edgar has his right. God shield him in it! And now, nurse,
+here is a poor youth who needs thy care, after one of Red William's
+rough jests."
+
+
+III. KING AT HOME
+
+
+Weary, faint, and feverish as Bertram de Maisonforte was, he was
+past caring for anything but the relief of rest, cool drink, and the
+dressing of his wound; nor did he even ask where he was until he
+awoke in broad daylight the next morning, to the sound of church
+bells, to the sight of a low but spacious chamber, with stone walls,
+deerskins laid on the floor, and the old nurse standing by him with
+a cup of refreshing drink, and ready to attend to his wound.
+
+It was then that, feeling greatly refreshed, he ventured upon asking
+her in whose house he was, and who was the good lord who had taken
+pity on him.
+
+"Who should it be save him who should be the good lord of every
+Englishman," she replied, "mine own dear foster-son, the princely
+Atheling--he who takes up the cause of every injured man save his
+own?"
+
+Bertram was amazed, for he had only heard Normans speak of Edgar
+Atheling, the heir of the ancient race, as a poor, tame-spirited,
+wretched creature, unable to assert himself, and therefore left
+unmolested by the conquerors out of contempt. He proceeded to ask
+what the journey was from which the Atheling was returning, and the
+nurse, nothing loth, beguiled the tendance on his arm by explaining
+how she had long ago travelled from Hungary with her charges, Edgar,
+Margaret, and Christina; how it had come about that the crown, which
+should have been her darling's, had been seized by the fierce duke
+from beyond the sea; how Edgar, then a mere child, had been forced
+to swear oaths of fealty by which he held himself still bound; how
+her sweetest pearl of ladies, her jewel Margaret, had been wedded to
+the rude wild King of Scots, and how her gentle sweetness and
+holiness had tamed and softened him, so that she had been the
+blessing of his kingdom till he and his eldest son had fallen at
+Alnwick while she lay a-dying; how the fierce savage Scots had risen
+and driven forth her young children; and how their uncle the
+Atheling had ridden forth, taken them to his home, bred them in all
+holiness and uprightness and good and knightly courage, and when
+Edgar and Alexander, the two eldest, were full grown, had gone
+northward with them once more, and had won back, in fair field, the
+throne of their father Malcolm.
+
+Truly there might well be rejoicing and triumph on the estate where
+the Atheling ruled as a father and had been sorely missed. He was
+at his early mass of thanksgiving at present, and Bertram was so
+much better that Nurse Agnes did not withstand his desire to rise
+and join the household and villagers, who were all collected in the
+building, low and massive, but on which Edgar Atheling had lavished
+the rich ornamental work introduced by the Normans. The round
+arched doorway was set in a succession of elaborate zigzags, birds'
+heads, lions' faces, twists and knots; and within, the altar-
+hangings and the priest's robes were stiff with the exquisite and
+elaborate embroidery for which the English nunneries were famed.
+
+The whole building, with its low-browed roof, circular chancel arch
+still more richly adorned, and stout short columns, was filled with
+kneeling figures in rough homespun or sheepskin garments, and with
+shaggy heads, above which towered the shining golden locks of the
+Atheling, which were allowed to grow to a much greater length than
+was the Norman fashion, and beside him was the still fairer head of
+his young nephew, David of Scotland. It was a thanksgiving service
+for their victory and safe return; and Bertram was just in time for
+the TE DEUM that followed the mass.
+
+The Atheling, after all was over, came forth, exchanging greetings
+with one after another of his franklins, cnihts, and thralls, all of
+whom seemed to be equally delighted to see him back again, and whom
+he bade to a feast in the hall, which would be prepared in the
+course of the day. Some, meantime, went to their homes near at
+hand, others would amuse themselves with games at ball, archery,
+singlestick, and the like, in an open space within the moat--where
+others fished.
+
+Bertram was not neglected. The Atheling inquired after his health,
+heard his story in more detail, and after musing on it, said that
+after setting affairs in order at home, he meant to visit his sister
+and niece in the Abbey at Romsey, and would then make some
+arrangement for the Lady of Maisonforte; also he would endeavour to
+see the King on his return to Winchester, and endeavour to plead
+with him.
+
+"William will at times hearken to an old comrade," he said; "but it
+is an ill time to take him when he is hot upon the chase. Meantime,
+thou art scarce yet fit to ride, and needest more of good Agnes's
+leech-craft."
+
+Bertram was indeed stiff and weary enough to be quite content to lie
+on a bearskin in the wide hall of the dwelling, or under the eaves
+without, and watch the doings with some amusement.
+
+He had been bred in some contempt of the Saxons. His father's
+marriage had been viewed as a MESALLIANCE, and though the knight of
+Maisonforte had been honourable and kindly, and the Lady Elftrud had
+fared better than many a Saxon bride, still the French and the
+Breton dames of the neighbourhood had looked down on her, and the
+retainers had taught her son to look on the English race as swine,
+boors, and churls, ignorant of all gentle arts, of skill and grace.
+
+But here was young David among youths of his own age, tilting as
+gracefully and well as any young Norman could--making Bertram long
+that his arm should cease to be so heavy and burning, so that he
+might show his prowess.
+
+Here was a contention with bow and arrow that would not have
+disgraced the best men-at-arms of Maisonforte--here again, later in
+the day, was minstrelsy of a higher order than his father's ears had
+cared for, but of which his mother had whispered her traditions.
+
+Here, again, was the chaplain showing his brother-priests with the
+greatest pride and delight a scroll of Latin, copied from a MS.
+Psalter of the holy and Venerable Beda by the hand of his own dear
+pupil, young David.
+
+Bertram, who could neither read nor write, and knew no more Latin
+than his Paternoster, Credo, and Ave, absolutely did not believe his
+eyes and ears till he had asked the question, whether this were
+indeed the youth's work. How could it be possible to wield pen as
+well as lance?
+
+But the wonder of all was the Atheling. After an absence of more
+than a year, there was much to be adjusted, and his authority on his
+own lands was thoroughly judicial even for life or death, since even
+under Norman sway he held the power of an earl.
+
+Seated in a high-backed, cross-legged chair--his majestic form
+commanding honour and respect--he heard one after another causes
+that came before him, reserved for his judgment, questions of
+heirship, disputes about cattle, complaints of thievery,
+encroachments on land; and Bertram, listening with the interest that
+judgment never fails to excite, was deeply impressed with the clear-
+headedness, the ready thought, and the justice of the decision, even
+when the dispute lay between Saxon and Norman, always with reference
+to the laws of Alfred and Edward which he seemed to carry in his
+head.
+
+Indeed, ere long, two Norman knights, hearing of the Atheling's
+return, came to congratulate him, and lay before him a dispute of
+boundaries which they declared they would rather entrust to him than
+to any other. And they treated him far more as a prince than as a
+Saxon churl.
+
+They willingly accepted his invitation to go in to the feast of
+welcome, and a noble one it was, with music and minstrelsy,
+hospitality to all around, plenty and joy, wassail bowls going
+round, and the Atheling presiding over it, and with a strange and
+quiet influence, breaking up the entertainment in all good will, by
+the memory of his sweet sister Margaret's grace-cup, ere mirth had
+become madness, or the English could incur their reproach of coarse
+revelry.
+
+"And," as the Norman knight who had prevailed said to Bertram, "Sir
+Edgar the Atheling had thus shown himself truly an uncrowned King."
+
+
+IV. WHO SHALL BE KING?
+
+
+The noble cloisters of Romsey, with the grand church rising in their
+midst, had a lodging-place, strictly cut off from the nunnery, for
+male visitors.
+
+Into this Edgar Atheling rode with his armed train, and as they
+entered, some strange expression in the faces of the porters and
+guards met them.
+
+"Had my lord heard the news?" demanded a priest, who hastened
+forward, bowing low.
+
+"No, Holy Father. No ill of my sister?" anxiously inquired the
+Prince.
+
+"The Mother Abbess is well, my Lord Atheling; but the King--William
+the Red--is gone to his account. He was found two eves ago pierced
+to the heart with an arrow beneath an oak in Malwood Chace."
+
+"God have mercy on his poor soul!" ejaculated Edgar, crossing
+himself. "No moment vouchsafed for penitence! Alas! Who did the
+deed, Father Dunstan?"
+
+"That is not known," returned the priest, "save that Walter Tyrrel
+is fled like a hunted felon beyond seas, and my Lord Henry to
+Winchester."
+
+Young David pressed up to his uncle's side.
+
+"Sir, sir," he said, "what a time is this! Duke Robert absent, none
+know where; our men used to war, all ready to gather round you.
+This rule will be ended, the old race restored. Say but the word,
+and I will ride back and raise our franklins as one man. Thou wilt,
+too, Bertram!"
+
+"With all mine heart!" cried Bertram. "Let me be the first to do
+mine homage."
+
+And as Edgar Atheling stood in the outer court, with lofty head and
+noble thoughtful face, pure-complexioned and high-browed, each who
+beheld him felt that there stood a king of men. A shout of "King
+Edgar! Edgar, King of England," echoed through the buildings; and
+priests, men-at-arms, and peasants began to press forward to do him
+homage. But he raised his hand--
+
+"Hold, children," he said. "I thank you all; but much must come ere
+ye imperil yourselves by making oaths to me that ye might soon have
+to break! Let me pass on and see my sister."
+
+Abbeys were not strictly cloistered then, and the Abbess Christina
+was at the door, a tall woman, older than her brother, and somewhat
+hard-featured, and beside her was a lovely fair girl, with peach-
+like cheeks and bright blue eyes, who threw herself into David's
+arms, full of delight.
+
+"Brother," said Christina, "did I hear aright? And have they hailed
+thee King? Are the years of cruel wrong ended at last? Victor for
+others, wilt thou be victor for thyself?"
+
+"What is consistent with God's will, and with mine oaths, that I
+hope to do," was Edgar's reply.
+
+But even as he stood beside the Abbess in the porch, without having
+yet entered, there was a clattering and trampling of horse, and
+through the gate came hastily a young man in a hauberk, with a ring
+of gold about his helmet, holding out his hands as he saw the
+Atheling.
+
+"Sire Edgar," he said, "I knew not I should find you here, when I
+came to pay my first DEVOIRS as a King to the Lady Mother Abbess"
+(he kissed her unwilling hand) "and the Lady Edith."
+
+Edith turned away a blushing face, and the Abbess faltered--
+
+"As a King?"
+
+"Yea, lady. As such have I been owned by all at Winchester. I
+should be at Westminster for my Coronation, save that I turned from
+my course to win her who shall share my crown."
+
+"Is it even thus, Henry?" said Edgar. "Hast not thought of other
+rights?"
+
+"Of that crazed fellow Robert's?" demanded Henry. "Trouble not
+thine head for him! Even if he came back living from this Holy War
+in the East, my father had too much mercy on England to leave it to
+the like of him."
+
+"There be other and older rights, Sir Henry," said the Abbess.
+
+Henry looked up for a moment in some consternation. "Ho! Sir
+Edgar, thou hast been so long a peaceful man that I had forgotten.
+Thou knowest thy day went by with Hereward le Wake. See, fair Edith
+and I know one another--she shall be my Queen."
+
+"Veiled and vowed," began the Abbess.
+
+"Oh, not yet! Tell her not yet!" whispered Edith in David's ear.
+
+"Thou little traitress! Wed thy house's foe, who takes thine
+uncle's place? Nay! I will none of thee," said David, shaking her
+off roughly; but her uncle threw his arm round her kindly.
+
+At that moment a Norman knight spurred up to Henry with some
+communication that made him look uneasy, and Christina, laying her
+hand on Edgar's arm, said: "Brother, we have vaults. Thy troop
+outnumbers his. The people of good old Wessex are with thee! Now
+is thy time! Save thy country. Restore the line and laws of Alfred
+and Edward."
+
+"Thou know'st not what thou wouldst have, Christina," said Edgar.
+"One sea of blood wherever a Norman castle rises! I love my people
+too well to lead them to a fruitless struggle with all the might of
+Normandy unless I saw better hope than lies before me now! Mind
+thee, I swore to Duke William that I would withstand neither him nor
+any son of his whom the English duly hailed. Yet, I will see how it
+is with this young man," he added, as she fell back muttering,
+"Craven! Who ever won throne without blood?"
+
+Henry had an anxious face when he turned from his knight, who, no
+doubt, had told him how completely he was in the Atheling's power.
+
+"Sir Edgar," he said, "a word with you. Winchester is not far off--
+nor Porchester--nor my brother William's Free companies, and his
+treasure. Normans will scarce see Duke William's son tampered with,
+nor bow their heads to the English!"
+
+"Belike, Henry of Normandy," said Edgar, rising above him in his
+grave majesty. "Yet have I a question or two to put to thee. Thou
+art a graver, more scholarly man than thy brother, less like to be
+led away by furies. Have the people of England and Normandy sworn
+to thee willingly as their King?"
+
+"Even so, in the Minster," Henry began, and would have said more,
+but Edgar again made his gesture of authority.
+
+"Wilt thou grant them the charter of Alfred and Edward, with copies
+spread throughout the land?"
+
+"I will."
+
+"Wilt thou do equal justice between English and Norman?"
+
+"To the best of my power."
+
+"Wilt thou bring home the Archbishop, fill up the dioceses, do thy
+part by the Church?"
+
+"So help me God, I will."
+
+"Then, Henry of Normandy, I, Edgar Atheling, kiss thine hand, and
+become thy man; and may God deal with thee, as thou dost with
+England."
+
+The noble form of Edgar bent before the slighter younger figure of
+Henry, who burst into tears, genuine at the moment, and vowed most
+earnestly to be a good King to the entire people. No doubt, he
+meant it--then.
+
+And now--far more humbly, he made his suit to the Atheling for the
+hand of his niece.
+
+Edgar took her apart. "Edith, canst thou brook this man?"
+
+"Uncle, he was good to me when we were children together at the old
+King's Court. I have made no vows, I tore the veil mine aunt threw
+over me from mine head. Methinks with me beside him he would never
+be hard to our people."
+
+"So be it then, Edith. If he holds to this purpose when he hath
+been crowned at Westminster, he shall have thee, though I fear thou
+hast chosen a hard lot, and wilt rue the day when thou didst quit
+these peaceful walls."
+
+And one more stipulation was made by Edgar the Atheling, ere he rode
+to own Henry as King in the face of the English people at
+Westminster--namely, that Boyatt should be restored to the true
+heiress the Lady Elftrud. And to Roger, compensation was secretly
+made at the Atheling's expense, ere departing with Bertram in his
+train for the Holy War. For Bertram could not look at the scar
+without feeling himself a Crusader; and Edgar judged it better for
+England to remove himself for awhile, while he laid all earthly
+aspirations at the Feet of the King of kings.
+
+The little English troop arrived just in time to share in the
+capture of the Holy City, to join in the eager procession of
+conquerors to the Holy Sepulchre, and to hear Godfrey de Bouillon
+elected to defend the sacred possession, refusing to wear a crown
+where the King of Saints and Lord of Heaven and Earth had worn a
+Crown of Thorns.
+
+
+
+SIGBERT'S GUERDON
+
+
+
+A feudal castle, of massive stone, with donjon keep and high
+crenellated wall, gateway tower, moat and drawbridge, was a strange,
+incongruous sight in one of the purple-red stony slopes of
+Palestine, with Hermon's snowy peak rising high above. It was
+accounted for, however, by the golden crosses of the kingdom of
+Jerusalem waving above the watch-tower, that rose like a pointing
+finger above the keep, in company with a lesser ensign bearing a
+couchant hound, sable.
+
+It was a narrow rocky pass that the Castle of Gebel-Aroun guarded,
+overlooking a winding ravine between the spurs of the hills,
+descending into the fertile plain of Esdraelon from the heights of
+Galilee Hills, noted in many an Israelite battle, and now held by
+the Crusaders.
+
+Bare, hard, and rocky were the hills around--the slopes and the
+valley itself, which in the earlier season had been filled with rich
+grass, Calvary clover, blood-red anemones, and pale yellow
+amaryllis, only showed their arid brown or gray remnants. The moat
+had become a deep waterless cleft; and beneath, on the accessible
+sides towards the glen, clustered a collection of black horsehair
+tents, the foremost surmounted by the ill-omened crescent.
+
+The burning sun had driven every creature under shelter, and no one
+was visible; but well was it known that watch and ward was closely
+kept from beneath those dark tents, that to the eyes within had the
+air of couching beasts of prey. Yes, couching to devour what could
+not fail to be theirs, in spite of the mighty walls of rock and
+impregnable keep, for those deadly and insidious foes, hunger and
+thirst, were within, gaining the battle for the Saracens without,
+who had merely to wait in patience for the result.
+
+Some years previously, Sir William de Hundberg, a Norman knight, had
+been expelled from his English castle by the partisans of Stephen,
+and with wife and children had followed Count Fulk of Anjou to his
+kingdom of Palestine, and had been endowed by him with one of the
+fortresses which guarded the passes of Galilee, under that
+exaggeration of the feudal system which prevailed in the crusading
+kingdom of Jerusalem.
+
+Climate speedily did its work with the lady, warfare with two of her
+sons, and there only remained of the family a youth of seventeen,
+Walter, and his sister Mabel, fourteen, who was already betrothed to
+the young Baron of Courtwood, then about to return to England. The
+treaty with Stephen and the success of young Henry of Anjou gave Sir
+William hopes of restitution; but just as he was about to conduct
+her to Jerusalem for the wedding, before going back to England, he
+fell sick of one of the recurring fevers of the country; and almost
+at the same time the castle was beleaguered by a troop of Arabs,
+under the command of a much-dreaded Sheik.
+
+His constitution was already much shaken, and Sir William, after a
+few days of alternate torpor and delirium, passed away, without
+having been conscious enough to leave any counsel to his children,
+or any directions to Father Philip, the chaplain, or Sigbert, his
+English squire.
+
+At the moment, sorrow was not disturbed by any great alarm, for the
+castle was well victualled, and had a good well, supplied by springs
+from the mountains; and Father Philip, after performing the funeral
+rites for his lord, undertook to make his way to Tiberias, or to
+Jerusalem, with tidings of their need; and it was fully anticipated
+that succour would arrive long before the stores in the castle had
+been exhausted.
+
+But time went on, and, though food was not absolutely lacking, the
+spring of water which had hitherto supplied the garrison began to
+fail. Whether through summer heats, or whether the wily enemy had
+succeeded in cutting off the source, where once there had been a
+clear crystal pool in the rock, cold as the snow from which it came,
+there only dribbled a few scanty drops, caught with difficulty, and
+only imbibed from utter necessity, so great was the suspicion of
+their being poisoned by the enemy.
+
+The wine was entirely gone, and the salted provision, which alone
+remained, made the misery of thirst almost unbearable.
+
+On the cushions, richly embroidered in dainty Eastern colouring, lay
+Mabel de Hundberg, with dry lips half opened and panting, too weary
+to move, yet listening all intent.
+
+Another moment, and in chamois leather coat, his helmet in hand,
+entered her brother from the turret stair, and threw himself down
+hopelessly, answering her gesture.
+
+"No, no, of course no. The dust was only from another swarm of
+those hateful Saracens. I knew it would be so. Pah! it has made my
+tongue more like old boot leather than ever. Have no more drops
+been squeezed from the well? It's time the cup was filled!"
+
+"It was Roger's turn. Sigbert said he should have the next," said
+Mabel.
+
+Walter uttered an imprecation upon Roger, and a still stronger one
+on Sigbert's meddling. But instantly the cry was, "Where is
+Sigbert?"
+
+Walter even took the trouble to shout up and down the stair for
+Sigbert, and to demand hotly of the weary, dejected men-at-arms
+where Sigbert was; but no one could tell.
+
+"Gone over to the enemy, the old traitor," said Walter, again
+dropping on the divan.
+
+"Never! Sigbert is no traitor," returned his sister.
+
+"He is an English churl, and all churls are traitors," responded
+Walter.
+
+The old nurse, who was fitfully fanning Mabel with a dried palm-
+leaf, made a growl of utter dissent, and Mabel exclaimed, "None was
+ever so faithful as good old Sigbert."
+
+It was a promising quarrel, but their lips were too dry to keep it
+up for more than a snarl or two. Walter cast himself down, and bade
+old Tata fan him; why should Mabel have it all to herself?
+
+Then sounds of wrangling were heard below, and Walter roused himself
+to go down and interfere. The men were disputing over some
+miserable dregs of wine at the bottom of a skin. Walter shouted to
+call them to order, but they paid little heed.
+
+"Do not meddle and make, young sir," said a low-browed, swarthy
+fellow. "There's plenty of cool drink of the right sort out there."
+
+"Traitor!" cried Walter; "better die than yield."
+
+"If one have no mind for dying like an old crab in a rock," said the
+man.
+
+"They would think nought of making an end of us out there," said
+another.
+
+"I'd as lief be choked at once by a cord as by thirst," was the
+answer.
+
+"That you are like to be, if you talk such treason," threatened
+Walter. "Seize him, Richard--Martin."
+
+Richard and Martin, however, hung back, one muttering that Gil had
+done nothing, and the other that he might be in the right of it; and
+when Walter burst out in angry threats he was answered in a gruff
+voice that he had better take care what he said, "There was no
+standing not only wasting with thirst and hunger, but besides being
+blustered at by a hot-headed lad, that scarce knew a hauberk from a
+helmet."
+
+Walter, in his rage, threw himself with drawn sword on the mutineer,
+but was seized and dragged back by half a dozen stalwart arms, such
+as he had no power to resist, and he was held fast amid rude laughs
+and brutal questions whether he should thus be carried to the
+Saracens, and his sister with him.
+
+"The old Sheik would give a round sum for a fair young damsel like
+her!" were the words that maddened her brother into a desperate
+struggle, baffled with a hoarse laugh by the men-at-arms, who were
+keeping him down, hand and foot, when a new voice sounded: "How
+now, fellows! What's this?"
+
+In one moment Walter was released and on his feet, and the men fell
+back, ashamed and gloomy, as a sturdy figure, with sun-browned face,
+light locks worn away by the helmet, and slightly grizzled, stood
+among them, in a much-rubbed and soiled chamois leather garment.
+
+Walter broke out into passionate exclamations; the men, evidently
+ashamed, met them with murmurs and growls. "Bad enough, bad
+enough!" broke in Sigbert; "but there's no need to make it worse.
+Better to waste with hunger and thirst than be a nidering fellow--
+rising against your lord in his distress."
+
+"We would never have done it if he would have kept a civil tongue."
+
+"Civility's hard to a tongue dried up," returned Sigbert. "But look
+you here, comrades, leave me a word with my young lord here, and I
+plight my faith that you shall have enow to quench your thirst
+within six hours at the least."
+
+There was an attempt at a cheer, broken by the murmur, "We have
+heard enough of that! It is always six hours and six hours."
+
+"And the Saracen hounds outside would at least give us a draught of
+water ere they made away with us," said another.
+
+"Saracens, forsooth!" said Sigbert. "You shall leave the Saracens
+far behind you. A few words first with my lord, and you shall hear.
+Meanwhile, you, John Cook, take all the beef remaining; make it in
+small fardels, such as a man may easily carry."
+
+"That's soon done," muttered the cook. "The entire weight would
+scarce bow a lad's shoulders."
+
+"The rest of you put together what you would save from the enemy,
+and is not too heavy to carry." One man made some attempt at
+growling at a mere lad being consulted, while the stout warriors
+were kept in ignorance; but the spirit of discipline and confidence
+had returned with Sigbert, and no one heeded the murmur. Meantime,
+Sigbert followed the young Lord Walter up the rough winding stairs
+to the chamber where Mabel lay on her cushions. "What! what!"
+demanded the boy, pausing to enter. Sigbert, by way of answer,
+quietly produced from some hidden pouch two figs. Walter snatched
+at one with a cry of joy. Mabel held out her hand, then, with a
+gasp, drew it back. "Has Roger had one?"
+
+Sigbert signed in the affirmative, and Mabel took a bite of the
+luscious fruit with a gasp of pleasure, yet paused once more to hold
+the remainder to her nurse.
+
+"The Saints bless you, my sweet lamb!" exclaimed the old woman;
+"finish it yourself. I could not."
+
+"If you don't want it, give it to me," put in Walter.
+
+"For shame, my lord," Sigbert did not scruple to say, nor could the
+thirsty girl help finishing the refreshing morsel, while Walter,
+with some scanty murmur of excuse, demanded where it came from, and
+what Sigbert had meant by promises of safety.
+
+"Sir," said Sigbert, "you may remember how some time back your
+honoured father threw one of the fellaheen into the dungeon for
+maiming old Leo."
+
+"The villain! I remember. I thought he was hanged."
+
+"No, sir. He escaped. I went to take him food, and he was gone! I
+then found an opening in the vault, of which I spoke to none, save
+your father, for fear of mischief; but I built it up with stones.
+Now, in our extremity, I bethought me of it, and resolved to try
+whether the prisoner had truly escaped, for where he went, we might
+go. Long and darksome is the way underground, but it opens at last
+through one of the old burial-places of the Jews into the thickets
+upon the bank of the Jordan."
+
+"The Jordan! Little short of a league!" exclaimed Walter.
+
+"A league, underground, and in the dark," sighed Mabel.
+
+"Better than starving here like a rat in a trap," returned her
+brother.
+
+"Ah yes; oh yes! I will think of the cool river and the trees at
+the end."
+
+"You will find chill enough, lady, long ere you reach the river,"
+said Sigbert. "You must wrap yourself well. 'Tis an ugsome
+passage; but your heart must not fail you, for it is the only hope
+left us."
+
+The two young people were far too glad to hear of any prospect of
+release, to think much of the dangers or discomforts of the mode.
+Walter danced for joy up and down the room like a young colt, as he
+thought of being in a few hours more in the free open air, with the
+sound of water rippling below, and the shade of trees above him.
+Mabel threw herself on her knees before her rude crucifix, partly in
+thankfulness, partly in dread of the passage that was to come first.
+
+"Like going through the grave to life," she murmured to her nurse.
+
+And when the scanty garrison was gathered together, as many as
+possible provided with brands that might serve as torches, and
+Sigbert led them, lower and lower, down rugged steps hewn in the
+rock, through vaults where only a gleam came from above, and then
+through deeper cavernous places, intensely dark, there was a shudder
+perceptible by the clank and rattle of the armour which each had
+donned. In the midst, Walter paused and exclaimed--
+
+"Our banner! How leave it to the Paynim dogs?"
+
+"It's here, sir," said Sigbert, showing a bundle on his back.
+
+"Warning to the foe to break in and seek us," grumbled Gilbert.
+
+"Not so," replied Sigbert. "I borrowed an old wrapper of nurse's
+that will cheat their eyes till we shall be far beyond their ken."
+
+In the last dungeon a black opening lay before them, just seen by
+the light of the lamp Sigbert carried, but so low that there was no
+entrance save on hands and knees.
+
+"That den!" exclaimed Walter. "'Tis a rat-hole. Never can we go
+that way."
+
+"I have tried it, sir," quoth Sigbert. "Where I can go, you can go.
+Your sister quails not."
+
+"It is fearful," said Mabel, unable to repress a shiver; "but,
+Walter, think what is before us if we stay here! The Saints will
+guard us."
+
+"The worst and lowest part only lasts for a few rods," explained
+Sigbert. "Now, sir, give your orders. Torches and lanterns, save
+Hubert's and nurse's, to be extinguished. We cannot waste them too
+soon, but beware of loosing hold on them."
+
+Walter repeated the orders thus dictated to him, and Sigbert
+arranged the file. It was absolutely needful that Sigbert should go
+first to lead the way. Mabel was to follow him for the sake of his
+help, then her brother, next nurse, happily the only other female.
+Between two stout and trustworthy men the wounded Roger came. Then
+one after another the rest of the men-at-arms and servants, five-
+and-twenty in number. The last of the file was Hubert, with a lamp;
+the others had to move in darkness. There had been no horse of any
+value in the castle, for the knight's charger had been mortally hurt
+in his last expedition, and there had been no opportunity of
+procuring another. A deerhound, however, pushed and scrambled to
+the front, and Sigbert observed that he might be of great use in
+running before them. Before entering, however, Sigbert gave the
+caution that no word nor cry must be uttered aloud, hap what might,
+until permission was given, for they would pass under the Saracen
+camp, and there was no knowing whether the sounds would reach the
+ears above ground.
+
+A strange plunge it was into the utter darkness, crawling on hands
+and knees, with the chill cavernous gloom and rock seeming to press
+in upon those who slowly crept along, the dim light of Sigbert's
+lamp barely showing as he slowly moved on before. One of the two in
+the rear was dropped and extinguished in the dismal passage, a loss
+proclaimed by a suppressed groan passing along the line, and a
+louder exclamation from Walter, causing Sigbert to utter a sharp
+'Hush!' enforced by a thud and tramp above, as if the rock were
+coming down on them, but which probably was the trampling of horses
+in the camp above.
+
+The smoke of the lamp in front drifted back, and the air was more
+and more oppressive. Mabel, with set teeth and compressed lips,
+struggled on, clinging tight to the end of the cord which Sigbert
+had tied to his body for her to hold by, while in like manner
+Walter's hand was upon her dress. It became more and more difficult
+to breathe, or crawl on, till at last, just as there was a sense
+that it was unbearable, and that it would be easier to lie still and
+die than be dragged an inch farther, the air became freer, the roof
+seemed to be farther away, the cavern wider, and the motion freer.
+
+Sigbert helped his young lady to stand upright, and one by one all
+the train regained their feet. The lamp was passed along to be
+rekindled, speech was permitted, crevices above sometimes admitted
+air, sometimes dripped with water. The worst was over--probably the
+first part had been excavated, the farther portion was one of the
+many natural 'dens and caves of the earth,' in which Palestine
+abounds. There was still a considerable distance to be traversed,
+the lamps burnt out, and had to be succeeded by torches carefully
+husbanded, for the way was rough and rocky, and a stumble might end
+in a fall into an abyss. In time, however, openings of side
+galleries were seen, niches in the wall, and tokens that the outer
+portion of the cavern had been once a burial-place of the ancient
+Israelites--'the dog Jews,' as the Crusaders called them, with a
+shudder of loathing and contempt.
+
+And joy infinite--clear daylight and a waving tree were perceptible
+beyond. It was daylight, was it? but the sun was low. Five hours
+at least had been spent in that dismal transit, before the
+exhausted, soiled, and chilled company stepped forth into a green
+thicket with the Jordan rushing far below. Five weeks' siege in a
+narrow fortress, then the two miles of subterranean struggle--these
+might well make the grass beneath the wild sycamore, the cork-tree,
+the long reeds, the willows, above all, the sound of the flowing
+water, absolute ecstasy. There was an instant rush for the river,
+impeded by many a thorn-bush and creeper; but almost anything green
+was welcome at the moment, and the only disappointment was at the
+height and steepness of the banks of rock. However, at last one
+happy man found a place where it was possible to climb down to the
+shingly bed of the river, close to a great mass of the branching
+headed papyrus reed. Into the muddy but eminently sweet water most
+of them waded; helmets became cups, hands scooped up the water,
+there were gasps of joy and refreshment and blessing on the cool
+wave so long needed.
+
+Sigbert and Walter between them helped down Mabel and her nurse, and
+found a secure spot for them, where weary faces, feet, and hands
+might be laved in the pool beneath a rock.
+
+Then, taking up a bow and arrows laid down by one of the men,
+Sigbert applied himself to the endeavour to shoot some of the water-
+fowl which were flying wildly about over the reeds in the unwonted
+disturbance caused by the bathers. He brought down two or three of
+the duck kind, and another of the party had bethought him of angling
+with a string and one of the only too numerous insects, and had
+caught sundry of the unsuspecting and excellent fish. He had also
+carefully preserved a little fire, and, setting his boy to collect
+fuel, he produced embers enough to cook both fish and birds
+sufficiently to form an appetising meal for those who had been
+reduced to scraps of salt food for full a fortnight.
+
+"All is well so far," said Walter, with his little lordly air. "We
+have arranged our retreat with great skill. The only regret is that
+I have been forced to leave the castle to the enemy! the castle we
+were bound to defend."
+
+"Nay, sir, if it be your will," said Sigbert, "the tables might yet
+be turned on the Saracen."
+
+With great eagerness Walter asked how this could be, and Sigbert
+reminded him that many a time it had been observed from the tower
+that, though the Saracens kept careful watch on the gates of the
+besieged so as to prevent a sally, they left the rear of their camp
+absolutely undefended, after the ordinary Eastern fashion, and
+Sigbert, with some dim recollection of rhymed chronicles of Gideon
+and of Jonathan, believed that these enemies might be surprised
+after the same fashion as theirs. Walter leapt up for joy, but
+Sigbert had to remind him that the sun was scarcely set, and that
+time must be given for the Saracens to fall asleep before the
+attack; besides that, his own men needed repose.
+
+"There is all the distance to be traversed," said Walter.
+
+"Barely a league, sir."
+
+It was hard to believe that the space, so endless underground, was
+so short above, and Walter was utterly incredulous, till, climbing
+the side of the ravine so high as to be above the trees, Sigbert
+showed him the familiar landmarks known in hunting excursions with
+his father. He was all eagerness; but Sigbert insisted on waiting
+till past midnight before moving, that the men might have time to
+regain their vigour by sleep, and also that there might be time for
+the Saracens to fall into the deepest of all slumbers in full
+security.
+
+The moon was low in the West when Sigbert roused the party, having
+calculated that it would light them on the way, but would be set by
+the time the attack was to be made.
+
+For Mabel's security it was arranged that a small and most unwilling
+guard should remain with her, near enough to be able to perceive how
+matters went; and if there appeared to be defeat and danger for her
+brother, there would probably be full time to reach Tiberias even on
+foot.
+
+However, the men of the party had little fear that flight would be
+needed, for, though perhaps no one would have thought of the scheme
+for himself, there was a general sense that what Sigbert devised was
+prudent, and that he would not imperil his young lord and lady upon
+a desperate venture.
+
+Keeping well and compactly together, the little band moved on, along
+arid, rocky paths, starting now and then at the howls of the jackals
+which gradually gathered into a pack, and began to follow, as if--
+some one whispered--they scented prey, "On whom?" was the question.
+
+On a cliff looking down on the Arab camp, and above it on the dark
+mass of the castle, where, in the watch-tower, Sigbert had left a
+lamp burning, they halted just as the half-moon was dipping below
+the heights towards the Mediterranean. Here the Lady Mabel and her
+guard were to wait until they heard the sounds which to their
+practised ears would show how the fight went.
+
+The Arab shout of victory they knew only too well, and it was to be
+the signal of flight towards Tiberias; but if success was with the
+assailants, the war-cry 'Deus vult,' and 'St. Hubert for Hundberg,'
+were to be followed by the hymn of victory as the token that it was
+safe to descend.
+
+All was dark, save for the magnificent stars of an Eastern night, as
+Mabel, her nurse, and the five men, commanded by the wounded Roger,
+stood silently praying while listening intently to the muffled tramp
+of their own people, descending on the blacker mass denoting the
+Saracen tents.
+
+The sounds of feet died away, only the jackal's whine and moan, were
+heard. Then suddenly came a flash of lights in different
+directions, and shouts here, there, everywhere, cries, yells,
+darkness, an undistinguishable medley of noise, the shrill shriek of
+the Moslem, and the exulting war-cry of the Christian ringing
+farther and farther off, in the long valley leading towards the
+Jordan fords.
+
+Dawn began to break--overthrown tents could be seen. Mabel had time
+to wonder whether she was forgotten, when the hymn began to sound,
+pealing on her ears up the pass, and she had not had time for more
+than an earnest thanksgiving, and a few steps down the rocky
+pathway, before a horse's tread was heard, and a man-at-arms came
+towards her leading a slender, beautiful Arab horse. "All well! the
+young lord and all. The Saracens, surprised, fled without ever
+guessing the number of their foes. The Sheik made prisoner in his
+tent. Ay, and a greater still, the Emir Hussein Bey, who had
+arrived to take possession of the castle only that very evening.
+What a ransom he would pay! Horses and all were taken, the spoil of
+the country round, and Master Sigbert had sent this palfrey for Lady
+Mabel to ride down."
+
+Perhaps Sigbert, in all his haste and occupation, had been able to
+discern that the gentle little mare was not likely to display the
+Arab steed's perilous attachment to a master, for Mabel was safely
+mounted, and ere sunrise was greeted by her joyous and victorious
+brother. "Is not this noble, sister? Down went the Pagan dogs
+before my good sword! There are a score of them dragged off to the
+dead man's hollow for the jackals and vultures; but I kept one
+fellow uppermost to show you the gash I made! Come and see."
+
+Roger here observed that the horse might grow restive at the
+carcase, and Mabel was excused the sight, though Walter continued to
+relate his exploits, and demand whether he had not won his spurs by
+so grand a ruse and victory.
+
+"Truly I think Sigbert has," said his sister. "It was all his
+doing."
+
+"Sigbert, an English churl! What are you thinking of, Mabel?"
+
+"I am thinking to whom the honour is due."
+
+"You are a mere child, sister, or you would know better. Sigbert is
+a very fair squire; but what is a squire's business but to put his
+master in the way of honour? Do not talk such folly."
+
+Mabel was silenced, and after being conducted across the bare
+trampled ground among the tents of the Arabs, she re-entered the
+castle, where in the court groups of disarmed Arabs stood, their
+bournouses pulled over their brows, their long lances heaped in a
+corner, grim and disconsolate at their discomfiture and captivity.
+
+A repast of stewed kid, fruit, and sherbet was prepared for her and
+her brother from the spoil, after which both were weary enough to
+throw themselves on their cushions for a long sound sleep.
+
+Mabel slept the longer, and when she awoke, she found that the sun
+was setting, and that supper was nearly ready.
+
+Walter met her just as she had arranged her dress, to bid nurse make
+ready her bales, for they were to start at dawn on the morrow for
+Tiberias. It was quite possible that the enemy might return in
+force to deliver their Emir. A small garrison, freshly provisioned,
+could hold out the castle until relief could be sent; but it would
+be best to conduct the two important prisoners direct to the King,
+to say nothing of Walter's desire to present them and to display
+these testimonies of his prowess before the Court of Jerusalem.
+
+The Emir was a tall, slim, courteous Arab, with the exquisite
+manners of the desert. Both he and the Sheik were invited to the
+meal. Both looked startled and shocked at the entrance of the fair-
+haired damsel, and the Sheik crouched in a corner, with a savage
+glare in his eye like a freshly caught wild beast, though the Emir
+sat cross-legged on the couch eating, and talking in the LINGUA
+FRANCA, which was almost a native tongue, to the son and daughter of
+the Crusader. From him Walter learnt that King Fulk was probably at
+Tiberias, and this quickened the eagerness of all for a start. It
+took place in the earliest morning, so as to avoid the heat of the
+day. How different from the departure in the dark underground
+passage!
+
+Horses enough had been captured to afford the Emir and the Sheik
+each his own beautiful steed (the more readily that the creatures
+could hardly have been ridden by any one else), and their parole was
+trusted not to attempt to escape. Walter, Mabel, Sigbert, and Roger
+were also mounted, and asses were found in the camp for the nurse,
+and the men who had been hurt in the night's surprise.
+
+The only mischance on the way was that in the noontide halt, just as
+the shimmer of the Lake of Galilee met their eyes, under a huge
+terebinth-tree, growing on a rock, when all, except Sigbert, had
+composed themselves to a siesta, there was a sudden sound of loud
+and angry altercation, and, as the sleepers started up, the Emir was
+seen grasping the bridle of the horse on which the Sheik sat
+downcast and abject under the storm of fierce indignant words hurled
+at him for thus degrading his tribe and all Islam by breaking his
+plighted word to the Christian.
+
+This was in Arabic, and the Emir further insisted on his prostrating
+himself to ask pardon, while he himself in LINGUA FRANCA explained
+that the man was of a low and savage tribe of Bedouins, who knew not
+how to keep faith.
+
+Walter broke out in loud threats, declaring that the traitor dog
+ought to be hung up at once on the tree, or dragged along with hands
+tied behind him; but Sigbert contented himself with placing a man at
+each side of his horse's head, as they proceeded on their way to the
+strongly fortified town of the ancient Herods, perched at the head
+of the dark gray Lake of Galilee, shut in by mountain peaks. The
+second part of the journey was necessarily begun in glowing heat,
+for it was most undesirable to have to spend a night in the open
+country, and it was needful to push on to a fortified hospice or
+monastery of St. John, which formed a half-way house.
+
+Weary, dusty, athirst, they came in sight of it in the evening; and
+Walter and Roger rode forward to request admittance. The porter
+begged them to wait when he heard that the party included women and
+Saracen prisoners; and Walter began to storm. However, a few
+moments more brought a tall old Knight Hospitalier to the gate, and
+he made no difficulties as to lodging the Saracens in a building at
+the end of the Court, where they could be well guarded; and Mabel
+and her nurse were received in a part of the precincts appropriated
+to female pilgrims.
+
+It was a bare and empty place, a round turret over the gateway, with
+a stone floor, and a few mats rolled up in the corner, mats which
+former pilgrims had not left in an inviting condition.
+
+However, the notions of comfort of the twelfth century were not
+exacting. Water to wash away the dust of travel was brought to the
+door, and was followed by a substantial meal on roasted kid and thin
+cakes of bread. Sigbert came up with permission for the women to
+attend compline, though only strictly veiled; and Mabel knelt in the
+little cool cryptlike chapel, almost like the late place of her
+escape, and returned thanks for the deliverance from their recent
+peril.
+
+Then, fresh mats and cushions having been supplied, the damsel and
+her nurse slept profoundly, and were only roused by a bell for a
+mass in the darkness just before dawn, after which they again set
+forth, the commander of the Hospice himself, and three or four
+knights, accompanying them, and conversing familiarly with the Emir
+on the current interests of Palestine.
+
+About half-way onward, the glint and glitter of spears was seen amid
+a cloud of dust on the hill-path opposite. The troop drew together
+on their guard, though, as the Hospitalier observed, from the side
+of Tiberias an enemy could scarcely come. A scout was sent forward
+to reconnoitre; but, even before he came spurring joyously back, the
+golden crosses of Jerusalem had been recognised, and confirmed his
+tidings that it was the rearguard of the army, commanded by King
+Fulk himself, on the way to the relief of the Castle of Gebel-Aroun.
+
+In a brief half-hour more, young Walter de Hundberg, with his sister
+by his side, was kneeling before an alert, slender, wiry figure in
+plain chamois leather, with a worn sunburnt face and keen blue eyes--
+Fulk of Anjou--who had resigned his French county to lead the
+crusading cause in Palestine.
+
+"Stand up, fair youth, and tell thy tale, and how thou hast
+forestalled our succour."
+
+Walter told his tale of the blockaded castle, the underground
+passage, and the dexterous surprise of the besiegers, ending by
+presenting, not ungracefully, his captives to the pleasure of the
+King.
+
+"Why, this is well done!" exclaimed Fulk. "Thou art a youth of
+promise, and wilt well be a prop to our grandson's English throne.
+Thou shalt take knighthood from mine own hand as thy prowess well
+deserveth. And thou, fair damsel, here is one whom we could scarce
+hold back from rushing with single hand to deliver his betrothed.
+Sir Raymond of Courtwood, you are balked of winning thy lady at the
+sword's point, but thou wilt scarce rejoice the less."
+
+A dark-eyed, slender young knight, in bright armour, drew towards
+Mabel, and she let him take her hand; but she was intent on
+something else, and exclaimed--
+
+"Oh, sir, Sir King, let me speak one word! The guerdon should not
+be only my brother's. The device that served us was--our squire's."
+
+The Baron of Courtwood uttered a fierce exclamation. Walter
+muttered, "Mabel, do not be such a meddling fool"; but the King
+asked, "And who may this same squire be?"
+
+"An old English churl," said Walter impatiently. "My father took
+him as his squire for want of a better."
+
+"And he has been like a father to us," added Mabel
+
+"Silence, sister! It is not for you to speak!" petulantly cried
+Walter. "Not that the Baron of Courtwood need be jealous," added
+he, laughing somewhat rudely. "Where is the fellow? Stand forth,
+Sigbert."
+
+Travel and heat-soiled, sunburnt, gray, and ragged, armour rusted,
+leathern garment stained, the rugged figure came forward, footsore
+and lame, for he had given up his horse to an exhausted man-at-arms.
+A laugh went round at the bare idea of the young lady's preferring
+such a form to the splendid young knight, her destined bridegroom.
+
+"Is this the esquire who hath done such good service, according to
+the young lady?" asked the King.
+
+"Ay, sir," returned Walter; "he is true and faithful enough, though
+nothing to be proud of in looks; and he served us well in my sally
+and attack."
+
+"It was his--" Mabel tried to say, but Sigbert hushed her.
+
+"Let be, let be, my sweet lady; it was but my bounden duty."
+
+"What's that? Speak out what passes there," demanded young
+Courtwood, half-jealously still.
+
+"A mere English villein, little better than a valet of the camp!"
+were the exclamations around. "A noble damsel take note of him!
+Fie for shame!"
+
+"He has been true and brave," said the King. "Dost ask a guerdon
+for him, young sir?" he added to Walter.
+
+"What wouldst have, old Sigbert?" asked Walter, in a patronising
+voice.
+
+"I ask nothing, sir," returned the old squire. "To have seen my
+lord's children in safety is all I wish. I have but done my duty."
+
+King Fulk, who saw through the whole more clearly than some of those
+around, yet still had the true Angevin and Norman contempt for a
+Saxon, here said: "Old man, thou art trusty and shrewd, and mayst
+be useful. Wilt thou take service as one of my men-at-arms?"
+
+"Thou mayst," said Walter; "thou art not bound to me. England hath
+enough of Saxon churls without thee, and I shall purvey myself an
+esquire of youthful grace and noble blood."
+
+Mabel looked at her betrothed and began to speak.
+
+"No, no, sweet lady, I will have none of that rough, old masterful
+sort about me."
+
+"Sir King," said Sigbert, "I thank thee heartily. I would still
+serve the Cross; but my vow has been, when my young lord and lady
+should need me no more, to take the Cross of St. John with the
+Hospitaliers."
+
+"As a lay brother? Bethink thee," said Fulk of Anjou. "Noble blood
+is needed for a Knight of the Order."
+
+Sigbert smiled slightly, in spite of all the sadness of his face,
+and the Knight Commander who had ridden with them, a Fleming by
+birth, said--
+
+"For that matter, Sir King, we are satisfied. Sigbert, the son of
+Sigfrid, hath proved his descent from the old English kings of the
+East Saxons, and the Order will rejoice to enrol in the novitiate so
+experienced a warrior."
+
+"Is this indeed so?" asked Fulk. "A good lineage, even if English!"
+
+"But rebel," muttered Courtwood.
+
+"It is so, Sir King," said Sigbert. "My father was disseised of the
+lands of Hundberg, and died in the fens fighting under Hereward le
+Wake. My mother dwelt under the protection of the Abbey of
+Colchester, and, by and by, I served under our Atheling, and, when
+King Henry's wars in Normandy were over, I followed the Lord of
+Hundberg's banner, because the men-at-arms were mine own neighbours,
+and his lady my kinswoman. Roger can testify to my birth and
+lineage."
+
+"So, thou art true heir of Hundberg, if that be the name of thine
+English castle?"
+
+"Ay, sir, save for the Norman! But I would not, if I could, meddle
+with thee, my young lord, though thou dost look at me askance, spite
+of having learnt of me to ride and use thy lance. I am the last of
+the English line of old Sigfrid the Wormbane, and a childless man,
+and I trust the land and the serfs will be well with thee, who art
+English born, and son to Wulfrida of Lexden. And I trust that thou,
+my sweet Lady Mabel, will be a happy bride and wife. All I look for
+is to end my days under the Cross, in the cause of the Holy
+Sepulchre, whether as warrior or lay brother. Yes, dear lady, that
+is enough for old Sigbert."
+
+And Mabel had to acquiesce and believe that her old friend found
+peace and gladness beneath the eight-pointed Cross, when she and her
+brother sailed for England, where she would behold the green fields
+and purple heather of which he had told her amid the rocks of
+Palestine.
+
+Moreover, she thought of him when on her way through France, she
+heard the young monk Bernard, then rising into fame, preach on the
+beleaguered city, saved by the poor wise man; and tell how, when the
+city was safe, none remembered the poor man. True, the preacher
+gave it a mystic meaning, and interpreted it as meaning the
+emphatically Poor Man by Whom Salvation came, and Whom too few bear
+in mind. Yet such a higher meaning did not exclude the thought of
+one whose deserts surpassed his honours here on earth.
+
+
+
+THE BEGGAR'S LEGACY
+
+
+
+An Alderman bold, Henry Smith was enrolled,
+ Of the Silversmiths' Company;
+Highly praised was his name, his skill had high fame,
+ And a prosperous man was he.
+
+Knights drank to his health, and lauded his wealth;
+ Sailors came from the Western Main,
+Their prizes they sold, of ingots of gold,
+ Or plate from the galleys of Spain.
+
+Then beakers full fine, to hold the red wine,
+ Were cast in his furnace's mould,
+Or tankards rich chased, in intricate taste,
+ Gimmal rings of the purest gold.
+
+On each New Year's morn, no man thought it scorn--
+ Whether statesman, or warrior brave--
+The choicest device, of costliest price,
+ For a royal off'ring to crave.
+
+"Bring here such a toy as the most may joy
+ The eyes of our gracious Queen,
+Rows of orient pearls, gold pins for her curls,
+ Silver network, all glistening sheen."
+
+Each buyer who came--lord, squire, or dame--
+ Behaved in most courteous guise,
+Showing honour due, as to one they knew
+ To be at once wealthy and wise.
+
+In London Guild Hall, the citizens all,
+ Esteemed him their future Lord Mayor;
+Not one did he meet, in market or street,
+ But made him a reverence fair.
+
+"Ho," said Master Smith, "I will try the pith
+ Of this smooth-faced courtesy;
+Do they prize myself, do they prize my pelf,
+ Do they value what's mine or me?"
+
+His gold chain of pride he hath laid aside,
+ And furred gown of the scarlet red;
+He set on his back a fardel and pack,
+ And a hood on his grizzled head.
+
+His 'prentices all he hath left in stall,
+ But running right close by his side,
+In spite of his rags, guarding well his bags,
+ His small Messan dog would abide.
+
+So thus, up and down, through village and town,
+ In rain or in sunny weather,
+Through Surrey's fair land, his staff in his hand,
+ Went he and the dog together.
+
+"Good folk, hear my prayer, of your bounty spare,
+ Help a wanderer in his need;
+Better days I have seen, a rich man I have been,
+ Esteemed both in word and deed."
+
+In the first long street, certain forms he did meet,
+ But scarce might behold their faces;
+From matted elf-locks eyes stared like an ox,
+ And shambling were their paces!
+
+Not one gave him cheer, nor would one come near,
+ As he turned him away to go,
+Then a heavy stone at the dog was thrown,
+ To deal a right cowardly blow.
+
+In Mitcham's fair vale, the men 'gan to rail,
+ "Not a vagabond may come near;"
+Each mother's son ran, each boy and each man,
+ To summon the constable here.
+
+The cart's tail behind, the beggar they bind,
+ They flogged him full long and full sore;
+They hunted him out, did that rabble rout,
+ And bade him come thither no more!
+
+All weary and bruised, and scurvily used,
+ He went trudging along his track;
+The lesson was stern he had come to learn,
+ And yet he disdained to turn back.
+
+Where Walton-on-Thames gleams fair through the stems
+ Of its tufted willow palms,
+There were loitering folk who most vilely spoke,
+ Nor would give him one groat in alms.
+
+"Dog Smith," was the cry, "behold him go by,
+ The fool who hath lost all he had!"
+For only to tease can delight and can please
+ The ill-nurtured village lad.
+
+Behold, in Betchworth was a blazing hearth
+ With a hospitable door.
+"Thou art tired and lame," quoth a kindly dame,
+ "Come taste of our humble store.
+
+"Though scant be our fare, thou art welcome to share;
+ We rejoice to give thee our best;
+Come sit by our fire, thou weary old sire,
+ Come in, little doggie, and rest."
+
+And where Mole the slow doth by Cobham go,
+ He beheld a small village maiden;
+Of loose flocks of wool her lap was quite full,
+ With a bundle her arms were laden.
+
+"What seekest thou, child, 'mid the bushes wild,
+ Thy face and thine arms that thus tear?"
+"The wool the sheep leave, to spin and to weave;
+ It makes us our clothes to wear."
+
+Then she led him in, where her mother did spin,
+ And make barley bannocks to eat;
+They gave him enough, though the food was rough--
+ The kindliness made it most sweet.
+
+Many years had past, report ran at last,
+ The rich Alderman Smith was dead.
+Then each knight and dame, and each merchant came,
+ To hear his last testament read.
+
+I, Harry Smith, found of mind clear and sound,
+ Thus make and devise my last will:
+While England shall stand, I bequeath my land,
+ My last legacies to fulfil.
+
+"To the muddy spot, where they cleaned them not,
+ When amongst their fields I did roam;
+To every one there with the unkempt hair
+ I bequeath a small-toothed comb.
+
+"Next, to Mitcham proud, and the gaping crowd,
+ Who for nobody's sorrows grieve;
+With a lash double-thong, plaited firm and strong,
+ A horsewhip full stout do I leave.
+
+"To Walton-on-Thames, where, 'mid willow stems,
+ The lads and the lasses idle;
+To restrain their tongues, and breath of their lungs,
+ I bequeath a bit and a bridle.
+
+"To Betchworth so fair, and the households there
+ Who so well did the stranger cheer,
+I leave as my doles to the pious souls,
+ Full seventy pounds by the year.
+
+"To Cobham the thrifty I leave a good fifty,
+ To be laid out in cloth dyed dark;
+On Sabbath-day to be given away,
+ And known by Smith's badge and mark.
+
+"To Leatherhead too my gratitude's due,
+ For a welcome most freely given;
+Let my bounty remain, for each village to gain,
+ Whence the poor man was never driven."
+
+So in each sweet dale, and bright sunny vale,
+ In the garden of England blest;
+Those have found a friend, whose gifts do not end,
+ Who gave to that stranger a rest!
+
+
+Henry Smith's history is literally true. He was a silversmith of
+immense wealth in London in the latter part of the sixteenth
+century, but in his later years he chose to perambulate the county
+of Surrey as a beggar, and was known as 'Dog Smith.' He met with
+various fortune in different parishes, and at Mitcham was flogged at
+the cart's tail. On his death, apparently in 1627, he was found to
+have left bequests to almost every place in Surrey, according to the
+manners of the inhabitants--to Mitcham a horsewhip, to Walton-on-
+Thames a bridle, to Betchworth, Leatherhead, and many more,
+endowments which produce from 50 to 75 pounds a year, and to Cobham
+a sum to be spent annually in woollen cloth of a uniform colour,
+bearing Smith's badge, to be given away in church to the poor and
+impotent, as the following tablet still records:--
+
+1627
+
+ITEM--That the Gift to the impotent and aged poor people, shall be
+bestowed in Apparell of one Coulour, with some Badge or other Mark,
+that it may be known to be the Gift of the said Henry Smith, or else
+in Bread, flesh, or fish on the Sabbath-day publickly in the Church.
+In Witness whereof the said Henry Smith did put to his Hand and seal
+the Twenty-first day of January in the Second Year of the Reign of
+our most gracious Sovereign Lord King Charles the First.
+
+
+
+A REVIEW OF NIECES
+
+
+
+GENERAL SIR EDWARD FULFORD, K.G.C., TO HIS SISTER MISS FULFORD
+UNITED SERVICE CLUB, 29TH JUNE.
+
+My Dear Charlotte,--I find I shall need at least a month to get
+through the necessary business; so that I shall only have a week at
+last for my dear mother and the party collected at New Cove. You
+will have ample time to decide which of the nieces shall be asked to
+accompany us, but you had better give no hint of the plan till you
+have studied them thoroughly. After all the years that you have
+accompanied me on all my stations, you know how much depends on the
+young lady of our house being one able to make things pleasant to
+the strange varieties who will claim our hospitality in a place like
+Malta, yet not likely to flag if left in solitude with you. She
+must be used enough to society to do the honours genially and
+gracefully, and not have her head turned by being the chief young
+lady in the place. She ought to be well bred, if not high bred,
+enough to give a tone to the society of her contemporaries, and
+above all she must not flirt. If I found flirtation going on with
+the officers, I should send her home on the spot. Of course, all
+this means that she must have the only real spring of good breeding,
+and be a thoroughly good, religious, unselfish, right-minded girl;
+otherwise we should have to rue our scheme. In spite of all you
+would do towards moulding and training a young maiden, there will be
+so many distractions and unavoidable counter-influences that the
+experiment would be too hazardous, unless there were a character and
+manners ready formed. There ought likewise to be cultivation and
+intelligence to profit by the opportunities she will have. I should
+not like Greece and Italy, to say nothing of Egypt and Palestine, to
+be only so much gape seed. You must have an eye likewise to good
+temper, equal to cope with the various emergencies of travelling.
+N.B. You should have more than one in your eye, for probably the
+first choice will be of some one too precious to be attainable.--
+Your affectionate brother,
+
+EDWARD FULFORD.
+
+
+MISS FULFORD TO SIR EDWARD FULFORD
+1 SHINGLE COTTAGES, NEW COVE, S. CLEMENTS, 30TH JUNE.
+
+My Dear Edward,--When Sydney Smith led Perfection to the Pea because
+the Pea would not come to Perfection, he could hardly have had such
+an ideal as yours. Your intended niece is much like the 'not
+impossible she' of a youth under twenty. One comfort is that such
+is the blindness of your kind that you will imagine all these charms
+in whatever good, ladylike, simple-hearted girl I pitch upon, and
+such I am sure I shall find all my nieces. The only difficulty will
+be in deciding, and that will be fixed by details of style, and the
+parents' willingness to spare their child.
+
+This is an excellent plan of yours for bringing the whole family
+together round our dear old mother and her home daughter. This is
+the end house of three on a little promontory, and has a charming
+view--of the sea in the first place, and then on the one side of
+what is called by courtesy the parade, on the top of the sea wall
+where there is a broad walk leading to S. Clements, nearly two miles
+off. There are not above a dozen houses altogether, and the hotel
+is taken for the two families from London and Oxford, while the
+Druces are to be in the house but one next to us, the middle one
+being unluckily let off to various inhabitants. We have one bedroom
+free where we may lodge some of the overflowings, and I believe the
+whole party are to take their chief meals together in the large room
+at the hotel. The houses are mostly scattered, being such as
+fortunate skippers build as an investment, and that their wives may
+amuse themselves with lodgers in their absence. The church is the
+weakest point in this otherwise charming place. The nearest, and
+actually the parish church, is a hideous compo structure, built in
+the worst of times as a chapel of ease to S. Clements. I am afraid
+my mother's loyalty to the parochial system will make her secure a
+pew there, though at the farther end of the town there is a new
+church which is all that can be wished, and about a mile and a half
+inland there is a village church called Hollyford, held, I believe,
+by a former fellow-curate of Horace Druce. Perhaps they will
+exchange duties, if Horace can be persuaded to take a longer holiday
+than merely for the three weeks he has provided for at Bourne Parva.
+They cannot come till Monday week, but our Oxford professor and his
+party come on Thursday, and Edith will bring her girls the next day.
+Her husband, our Q.C., cannot come till his circuit is over, but of
+course you know more about his movements than I do. I wonder you
+have never said anything about those girls of his, but I suppose you
+class them as unattainable. I have said nothing to my mother or
+Emily of our plans, as I wish to be perfectly unbiased, and as I
+have seen none of the nieces for five years, and am prepared to
+delight in them all, I may be reckoned as a blank sheet as to their
+merits.--Your affectionate sister,
+
+CHARLOTTE FULFORD.
+
+
+JULY 4.--By noon to-day arrived Martyn, {127} with Mary his wife,
+Margaret and Avice their daughters, Uchtred their second son, and
+poor Harry Fulford's orphan, Isabel, who has had a home with them
+ever since she left school. Though she is only a cousin once
+removed, she seems to fall into the category of eligible nieces, and
+indeed she seems the obvious companion for us, as she has no home,
+and seems to me rather set aside among the others. I hope there is
+no jealousy, for she is much better looking than her cousins, with
+gentle, liquid eyes, a pretty complexion, and a wistful expression.
+Moreover, she is dressed in a quiet ladylike way, whereas grandmamma
+looked out just now in the twilight and said, "My dear Martyn, have
+you brought three boys down?" It was a showery, chilly evening, and
+they were all out admiring the waves. Ulsters and sailor hats were
+appropriate enough then, but the genders were not easy to
+distinguish, especially as the elder girl wears her hair short--no
+improvement to a keen face which needs softening. She is much too
+like a callow undergraduate altogether, and her sister follows suit,
+though perhaps with more refinement of feature--indeed she looks
+delicate, and was soon called in. They are in slight mourning, and
+appear in gray serges. They left a strap of books on the sofa, of
+somewhat alarming light literature for the seaside. Bacon's ESSAYS
+AND ELEMENTS OF LOGIC were the first Emily beheld, and while she
+stood regarding them with mingled horror and respect, in ran Avice
+to fetch them, as the two sisters are reading up for the Oxford
+exam--'ination' she added when she saw her two feeble-minded aunts
+looking for the rest of the word. However, she says it is only Pica
+who is going up for it this time. She herself was not considered
+strong enough. Yet there have those two set themselves down with
+their books under the rocks, blind to all the glory of sea and
+shore, deaf to the dash and ripple of the waves! I long to go and
+shout Wordsworth's warning about 'growing double' to them. I am
+glad to say that Uchtred has come and fetched Avice away. I can
+hardly believe Martyn and Mary parents to this grown-up family.
+They look as youthful as ever, and are as active and vigorous, and
+full of their jokes with one another and their children. They are
+now gone out to the point of the rocks at the end of our promontory,
+fishing for microscopical monsters, and comporting themselves boy
+and girl fashion.
+
+Isabel has meantime been chatting very pleasantly with grandmamma,
+and trying to extricate us from our bewilderment as to names and
+nicknames. My poor mother, after strenuously preventing
+abbreviations in her own family, has to endure them in her
+descendants, and as every one names a daughter after her, there is
+some excuse! This Oxford Margaret goes by the name of Pie or Pica,
+apparently because it is the remotest portion of Magpie, and her
+London cousin is universally known as Metelill--the Danish form, I
+believe; but in the Bourne Parva family the young Margaret Druce is
+nothing worse than Meg, and her elder sister remains Jane. "Nobody
+would dare to call her anything else," says Isa. Avice cannot but
+be sometimes translated into the Bird; while my poor name, in my
+second London niece, has become the masculine Charley. "I shall
+know why when I see her," says Isa laughing. This good-natured
+damsel is coming out walking with us old folks, and will walk on
+with me, when grandmamma turns back with Emily. Her great desire is
+to find the whereabouts of a convalescent home in which she and her
+cousins have subscribed to place a poor young dressmaker for a six
+weeks' rest; but I am afraid it is on the opposite side of S.
+Clements, too far for a walk.
+
+JULY 5.--Why did you never tell me how charming Metelill is? I
+never supposed the Fulford features capable of so much beauty, and
+the whole manner and address are so delightful that I do not wonder
+that all her cousins are devoted to her; Uchtred, or Butts, as they
+are pleased to name him, has brightened into another creature since
+she came, and she seems like sunshine to us all. As to my namesake,
+I am sorry to say that I perceive the appropriateness of Charley;
+but I suppose it is style, for the masculine dress which in Pica and
+Avice has an air of being worn for mere convenience' sake, and is
+quite ladylike, especially on Avice, has in her an appearance of
+defiance and coquetry. Her fox-terrier always shares her room,
+which therefore is eschewed by her sister, and this has made a
+change in our arrangements. We had thought the room in our house,
+which it seems is an object of competition, would suit best for Jane
+Druce and one of her little sisters; but a hint was given by either
+Pica or her mother that it would be a great boon to let Jane and
+Avice share it, as they are very great friends, and we had the
+latter there installed. However, this fox-terrier made Metelill
+protest against sleeping at the hotel with her sister, and her
+mother begged us to take her in. Thereupon, Emily saw Isa looking
+annoyed, and on inquiry she replied sweetly, "Oh, never mind, aunty
+dear; I daresay Wasp won't be so bad as he looks; and I'll try not
+to be silly, and then I daresay Charley will not tease me! Only I
+had hoped to be with dear Metelill; but no doubt she will prefer her
+Bird--people always do." So they were going to make that poor child
+the victim! For it seems Pica has a room to herself, and will not
+give it up or take in any one. Emily went at once to Avice and
+asked whether she would mind going to the hotel, and letting Isa be
+with Metelill, and this she agreed to at once. I don't know why I
+tell you all these details, except that they are straws to show the
+way of the wind, and you will see how Isabel is always the
+sacrifice, unless some one stands up for her. Here comes Martyn to
+beguile me out to the beach.
+
+JULY 6 (Sunday).--My mother drove to church and took Edith, who was
+glad neither to walk nor to have to skirmish for a seat. Isa walked
+with Emily and me, and so we made up our five for our seat, which,
+to our dismay, is in the gallery, but, happily for my mother, the
+stairs are easy. The pews there are not quite so close to one's
+nose as those in the body of the church; they are a little wider,
+and are furnished with hassocks instead of traps to prevent
+kneeling, so that we think ourselves well off, and we were agreeably
+surprised at the service. There is a new incumbent who is striving
+to modify things as well as his people and their architecture
+permit, and who preached an excellent sermon. So we triumph over
+the young folk, who try to persuade us that the gallery is a
+judgment on us for giving in to the hired pew system. They may
+banter me as much as they like, but I don't like to see them jest
+with grandmamma about it, as if they were on equal terms, and she
+does not understand it either. "My dear," she gravely says, "your
+grandpapa always said it was a duty to support the parish church."
+"Nothing will do but the Congregational system in these days; don't
+you think so?" began Pica dogmatically, when her father called her
+off. Martyn cannot bear to see his mother teased. He and his wife,
+with the young ones, made their way to Hollyford, where they found a
+primitive old church and a service to match, but were terribly late,
+and had to sit in worm-eaten pews near the door, amid scents of
+peppermint and southernwood. On the way back, Martyn fraternised
+with a Mr. Methuen, a Cambridge tutor with a reading party, who has,
+I am sorry to say, arrived at the house VIS-A-VIS to ours, on the
+other side of the cove. Our Oxford young ladies turn up their noses
+at the light blue, and say the men have not the finish of the dark;
+but Charley is in wild spirits. I heard her announcing the arrival
+thus: "I say, Isa, what a stunning lark! Not but that I was up to
+it all the time, or else I should have skedaddled; for this place
+was bound to be as dull as ditchwater." "But how did you know?"
+asked Isa. "Why, Bertie Elwood tipped me a line that he was coming
+down here with his coach, or else I should have told the mater I
+couldn't stand it and gone to stay with some one." This Bertie
+Elwood is, it seems, one of the many London acquaintance. He looks
+inoffensive, and so do the others, but I wish they had chosen some
+other spot for their studies, and so perhaps does their tutor,
+though he is now smoking very happily under a rock with Martyn.
+
+JULY 7.--Such a delightful evening walk with Metelill and Isa as
+Emily and I had last night, going to evensong in our despised
+church! The others said they could stand no more walking and heat,
+and yet we met Martyn and Mary out upon the rocks when we were
+coming home, after being, I must confess, nearly fried to death by
+the gas and bad air. They laughed at us and our exertions, all in
+the way of good humour, but it was not wholesome from parents. Mary
+tried to make me confess that we were coming home in a self-
+complacent fakir state of triumph in our headaches, much inferior to
+her humble revelling in cool sea, sky, and moonlight. It was like
+the difference between the BENEDICITE and the TE DEUM, I could not
+help thinking; while Emily said a few words to Martyn as to how
+mamma would be disappointed at his absenting himself from Church,
+and was answered, "Ah! Emily, you are still the good home child of
+the primitive era," which she did not understand; but I faced about
+and asked if it were not what we all should be. He answered rather
+sadly, "If we could'; and his wife shrugged her shoulders. Alas! I
+fear the nineteenth century tone has penetrated them, and do not
+wonder that this poor Isabel does not seem happy in her home.
+
+9.--What a delightful sight is a large family of young things
+together! The party is complete, for the Druces arrived yesterday
+evening in full force, torn from their bucolic life, as Martyn tells
+them. My poor dear old Margaret! She does indeed look worn and
+aged, dragged by cares like a colonist's wife, and her husband is
+quite bald, and as spare as a hermit. It is hard to believe him
+younger than Martyn; but then his whole soul is set on Bourne Parva,
+and hers on him, on the children, on the work, and on making both
+ends meet; and they toil five times more severely in one month than
+the professor and his lady in a year, besides having just twice as
+many children, all of whom are here except the schoolboys. Margaret
+declares that the entire rest, and the talking to something not
+entirely rural, will wind her husband up for the year; and it is
+good to see her sitting in a basket-chair by my mother, knitting
+indeed, but they both do that like breathing, while they purr away
+to one another in a state of perfect repose and felicity. Meantime
+her husband talks Oxford with Martyn and Mary. Their daughter Jane
+seems to be a most valuable helper to both, but she too has a worn,
+anxious countenance, and I fear she may be getting less rest than
+her parents, as they have brought only one young nursemaid with
+them, and seem to depend on her and Meg for keeping the middle-sized
+children in order. She seems to have all the cares of the world on
+her young brow, and is much exercised about one of the boxes which
+has gone astray on the railway. What do you think she did this
+morning? She started off with Avice at eight o'clock for the S.
+Clements station to see if the telegram was answered, and they went
+on to the Convalescent Home and saw the Oxford dressmaker. It seems
+that Avice had taken Uchtred with her on Sunday evening, made out
+the place, and gone to church at S. Clements close by--a very long
+walk; but it seems that those foolish girls thought me too fine a
+lady to like to be seen with her in her round hat on a Sunday. I
+wish they could understand what it is that I dislike. If I objected
+to appearances, I am afraid the poor Druces would fare ill.
+Margaret's girls cannot help being essentially ladies, but they have
+not much beauty to begin with--and their dress! It was chiefly made
+by their own sewing machine, with the assistance of the Bourne Parva
+mantua-maker, superintended by Jane, 'to prevent her from making it
+foolish'; and the effect, I grieve to say, is ill-fitting dowdiness,
+which becomes grotesque from their self-complacent belief that it
+displays the only graceful and sensible fashion in the place. It
+was laughable to hear them criticising every hat or costume they
+have seen, quite unaware that they were stared at themselves, till
+Charley told them people thought they had come fresh out of Lady
+Bountiful's goody-box, which piece of impertinence they took as a
+great compliment to their wisdom and excellence. To be sure, the
+fashions are distressing enough, but Metelill shows that they can be
+treated gracefully and becomingly, and even Avice makes her serge
+and hat look fresh and ladylike. Spite of contrast, Avice and Jane
+seem to be much devoted to each other. Pica and Charley are another
+pair, and Isa and Metelill--though Metelill is the universal
+favourite, and there is always competition for her. In early
+morning I see the brown heads and blue bathing-dresses, a-
+mermaiding, as they call it, in the cove below, and they come in all
+glowing, with the floating tresses that make Metelill look so
+charming, and full of merry adventures at breakfast. We all meet in
+the great room at the hotel for a substantial meal at half-past one,
+and again (most of us at least) at eight; but it is a moot point
+which of these meals we call dinner. Very merry both of them are;
+Martyn and Horace Druce are like boys together, and the girls scream
+with laughter, rather too much so sometimes. Charley is very noisy,
+and so is Meg Druce, when not overpowered by shyness. She will not
+exchange a sentence with any of the elders, but in the general laugh
+she chuckles and shrieks like a young Cochin-Chinese chicken
+learning to crow; and I hear her squealing like a maniac while she
+is shrimping with the younger ones and Charley. I must except those
+two young ladies from the unconscious competition, for one has no
+manners at all, and the other affects those of a man; but as to the
+rest, they are all as nice as possible, and I can only say, "How
+happy could I be with either." Isa, poor girl, seems to need our
+care most, and would be the most obliging and attentive. Metelill
+would be the prettiest and sweetest ornament of our drawing-room,
+and would amuse you the most; Pica, with her scholarly tastes, would
+be the best and most appreciative fellow-traveller; and Jane, if she
+could or would go, would perhaps benefit the most by being freed
+from a heavy strain, and having her views enlarged.
+
+10.--A worthy girl is Jane Druce, but I fear the Vicarage is no
+school of manners. Her mother is sitting with us, and has been
+discoursing to grandmamma on her Jane's wonderful helpfulness and
+activity in house and parish, and how everything hinged on her last
+winter when they had whooping-cough everywhere in and out of doors;
+indeed she doubts whether the girl has ever quite thrown off the
+effects of all her exertions then. Suddenly comes a trampling, a
+bounce and a rush, and in dashes Miss Jane, fiercely demanding
+whether the children had leave to go to the cove. Poor Margaret
+meekly responds that she had consented. "And didn't you know,"
+exclaims the damsel, "that all their everyday boots are in that
+unlucky trunk?" There is a humble murmur that Chattie had promised
+to be very careful, but it produces a hotter reply. "As if
+Chattie's promises of that kind could be trusted! And I had _TOLD_
+them that they were to keep with baby on the cliff!" Then came a
+real apology for interfering with Jane's plans, to which we listened
+aghast, and Margaret was actually getting up to go and look after
+her amphibious offspring herself, when her daughter cut her off
+short with, "Nonsense, mamma, you know you are not to do any such
+thing! I must go, that's all, or they won't have a decent boot or
+stocking left among them." Off she went with another bang, while
+her mother began blaming herself for having yielded in haste to the
+persuasions of the little ones, oblivious of the boots, thus
+sacrificing Jane's happy morning with Avice. My mother showed
+herself shocked by the tone in which Margaret had let herself be
+hectored, and this brought a torrent of almost tearful apologies
+from the poor dear thing, knowing she did not keep up her authority
+or make herself respected as would be good for her girl, but if we
+only knew how devoted Jane was, and how much there was to grind and
+try her temper, we should not wonder that it gave way sometimes.
+Indeed it was needful to turn away the subject, as Margaret was the
+last person we wished to distress.
+
+Jane could have shown no temper to the children, for at dinner a
+roly-poly person of five years old, who seems to absorb all the fat
+in the family, made known that he had had a very jolly day, and he
+loved cousin Avice very much indeed, and sister Janie very much
+indeeder, and he could with difficulty be restrained from an
+expedition to kiss them both then and there.
+
+The lost box was announced while we were at dinner, and Jane is gone
+with her faithful Avice to unpack it. Her mother would have done it
+and sent her boating with the rest, but submitted as usual when
+commanded to adhere to the former plan of driving with grandmamma.
+These Druce children must be excellent, according to their mother,
+but they are terribly brusque and bearish. They are either seen and
+not heard, or not seen and heard a great deal too much. Even Jane
+and Meg, who ought to know better, keep up a perpetual undercurrent
+of chatter and giggle, whatever is going on, with any one who will
+share it with them.
+
+10.--I am more and more puzzled about the new reading of the Fifth
+Commandment. None seem to understand it as we used to do. The
+parents are content to be used as equals, and to be called by all
+sorts of absurd names; and though grandmamma is always kindly and
+attentively treated, there is no reverence for the relationship. I
+heard Charley call her 'a jolly old party,' and Metelill respond
+that she was 'a sweet old thing.' Why, we should have thought such
+expressions about our grandmother a sort of sacrilege, but when I
+ventured to hint as much Charley flippantly answered, "Gracious me,
+we are not going back to buckram"; and Metelill, with her caressing
+way, declared that she loved dear granny too much to be so stiff and
+formal. I quoted--
+
+"If I be a Father, where is My honour?"
+
+And one of them taking it, I am sorry to say, for a line of secular
+poetry, exclaimed at the stiffness and coldness. Pica then put in
+her oar, and began to argue that honour must be earned, and that it
+was absurd and illogical to claim it for the mere accident of
+seniority or relationship. Jane, not at all conscious of being an
+offender, howled at her that this was her horrible liberalism and
+neology, while Metelill asked what was become of loyalty. "That
+depends on what you mean by it," returned our girl graduate. "LOI-
+AUTE, steadfastness to principle, is noble, but personal loyalty, to
+some mere puppet or the bush the crown hangs on, is a pernicious
+figment." Charley shouted that this was the No. 1 letter A point in
+Pie's prize essay, and there the discussion ended, Isa only sighing
+to herself, "Ah, if I had any one to be loyal to!"
+
+"How you would jockey them!" cried Charley, turning upon her so
+roughly that the tears came into her eyes; and I must have put on
+what you call my Government-house look, for Charley subsided
+instantly.
+
+11.--Here was a test as to this same obedience. The pupils, who are
+by this time familiars of the party, had devised a boating and
+fishing expedition for all the enterprising, which was satisfactory
+to the elders because it was to include both the fathers.
+Unluckily, however, this morning's post brought a summons to Martyn
+and Mary to fulfil an engagement they have long made to meet an
+American professor at ---, and they had to start off at eleven
+o'clock; and at the same time the Hollyford clergyman, an old
+fellow-curate of Horace Druce, sent a note imploring him to take a
+funeral. So the voice of the seniors was for putting off the
+expedition, but the voice of the juniors was quite the other way.
+The three families took different lines. The Druces show obedience
+though not respect; they growled and grumbled horribly, but
+submitted, though with ill grace, to the explicit prohibition. Non-
+interference is professedly Mary's principle, but even she said,
+with entreaty veiled beneath the playfulness, when it was pleaded
+that two of the youths had oars at Cambridge, "Freshwater fish, my
+dears. I wish you would wait for us! I don't want you to attend
+the submarine wedding of our old friends Tame and Isis." To which
+Pica rejoined, likewise talking out of Spenser, that Proteus would
+provide a nice ancient nymph to tend on them. Her father then
+chimed in, saying, "You will spare our nerves by keeping to dry land
+unless you can secure the ancient mariner who was with us
+yesterday."
+
+"Come, come, most illustrious," said Pica good-humouredly, "I'm not
+going to encourage you to set up for nerves. You are much better
+without them, and I must get some medusae."
+
+It ended with, "I beg you will not go without that old man," the
+most authoritative speech I have heard either Martyn or Mary make to
+their daughters; but it was so much breath wasted on Pica, who
+maintains her right to judge for herself. The ancient mariner had
+been voted an encumbrance and exchanged for a jolly young waterman.
+
+Our other mother, Edith, implored, and was laughed down by Charley,
+who declared she could swim, and that she did not think Uncle Martyn
+would have been so old-womanish. Metelill was so tender and
+caressing with her frightened mother that I thought here at last was
+submission, and with a good grace. But after a turn on the
+esplanade among the pupils, back came Metelill in a hurry to say,
+"Dear mother, will you very much _MIND_ if I go? They will be so
+disappointed, and there will be such a fuss if I don't; and Charley
+really ought to have some one with her besides Pie, who will heed
+nothing but magnifying medusae." I am afraid it is true, as Isa
+says, that it was all owing to the walk with that young Mr Horne.
+
+Poor Edith fell into such a state of nervous anxiety that I could
+not leave her, and she confided to me how Charley had caught her
+foolish masculine affectations in the family of this very Bertie
+Elwood, and told me of the danger of an attachment between Metelill
+and a young government clerk who is always on the look-out for her.
+"And dear Metelill is so gentle and gracious that she cannot bear to
+repel any one," says the mother, who would, I see, be thankful to
+part with either daughter to our keeping in hopes of breaking off
+perilous habits. I was saved, however, from committing myself by
+the coming in of Isabel. That child follows me about like a tame
+cat, and seems so to need mothering that I cannot bear to snub her.
+
+She came to propound to me a notion that has risen among these
+Oxford girls, namely, that I should take out their convalescent
+dressmaker as my maid instead of poor Amelie. She is quite well
+now, and going back next week; but a few years in a warm climate
+might be the saving of her health. So I agreed to go with Isa to
+look at her, and judge whether the charming account I heard was all
+youthful enthusiasm. Edith went out driving with my mother, and we
+began our TETE-A-TETE walk, in which I heard a great deal of the
+difficulties of that free-and-easy house at Oxford, and how often
+Isa wishes for some one who would be a real guide and helper,
+instead of only giving a playful, slap-dash answer, like good-
+natured mockery. The treatment may suit Mary's own daughters, but
+'Just as you please, my dear,' is not good for sensitive, anxious
+spirits. We passed Jane and Avice reading together under a rock; I
+was much inclined to ask them to join us, but Isa was sure they were
+much happier undisturbed, and she was so unwilling to share me with
+any one that I let them alone. I was much pleased with the
+dressmaker, Maude Harris, who is a nice, modest, refined girl, and
+if the accounts I get from her employers bear out what I hear of
+her, I shall engage her; I shall be glad, for the niece's sake, to
+have that sort of young woman about the place. She speaks most
+warmly of what the Misses Fulford have done for her.
+
+Jane will be disappointed if I cannot have her rival candidate--a
+pet schoolgirl who works under the Bourne Parva dressmaker. "What a
+recommendation!" cries Pica, and there is a burst of mirth, at which
+Jane looks round and says, "What is there to laugh at? Miss
+Dadworthy is a real good woman, and a real old Bourne Parva person,
+so that you may be quite sure Martha will have learnt no nonsense to
+begin with."
+
+"No," says Pica, "from all such pomps and vanities as style, she
+will be quite clear."
+
+While Avice's friendship goes as far as to say that if Aunt
+Charlotte cannot have Maude, perhaps Martha could get a little more
+training. Whereupon Jane runs off by the yard explanations of the
+admirable training--religious, moral, and intellectual--of Bourne
+Parva, illustrated by the best answers of her favourite scholars,
+anecdotes of them, and the reports of the inspectors, religious and
+secular; and Avice listens with patience, nay, with respectful
+sympathy.
+
+12.--We miss Mary and Martyn more than I expected. Careless and
+easy-going as they seem, they made a difference in the ways of the
+young people; they were always about with them, not as dragons, but
+for their own pleasure. The presence of a professor must needs
+impose upon young men, and Mary, with her brilliant wit and charming
+manners, was a check without knowing it. The boating party came
+back gay and triumphant, and the young men joined in our late meal;
+and oh, what a noise there was! though I must confess that it was
+not they who made the most. Metelill was not guilty of the noise,
+but she was--I fear I must say it--flirting with all her might with
+a youth on each side of her, and teasing a third; I am afraid she is
+one of those girls who are charming to all, and doubly charming to
+your sex, and that it will never do to have her among the staff. I
+don't think it is old-maidish in us to be scandalised at her walking
+up and down the esplanade with young Horne till ten o'clock last
+night; Charley was behind with Bertie Elwood, and, I grieve to say,
+was smoking. It lasted till Horace Druce went out to tell them that
+Metelill must come in at once, as it was time to shut up the house.
+
+The Oxford girls were safe indoors; Isa working chess problems with
+another of the lads, Avice keeping Jane company over the putting the
+little ones to sleep--in Mount Lebanon, as they call the Druce
+lodging--and Pica preserving microscopic objects. "Isn't she
+awful?" said one of those pupils. "She's worse than all the dons in
+Cambridge. She wants to be at it all day long, and all through the
+vacation."
+
+They perfectly flee from her. They say she is always whipping out a
+microscope and lecturing upon protoplasms--and there is some truth
+in the accusation. She is almost as bad on the emancipation of
+women, on which there is a standing battle, in earnest with Jane--in
+joke with Metelill; but it has, by special orders, to be hushed at
+dinner, because it almost terrifies grandmamma. I fear Pica tries
+to despise her!
+
+This morning the girls are all out on the beach in pairs and threes,
+the pupils being all happily shut up with their tutor. I see the
+invalid lady creep out with her beach-rest from the intermediate
+house, and come down to her usual morning station in the shade of a
+rock, unaware, poor thing, that it has been monopolised by Isa and
+Metelill. Oh, girls! why don't you get up and make room for her?
+No; she moves on to the next shady place, but there Pica has a
+perfect fortification of books spread on her rug, and Charley is
+sketching on the outskirts, and the fox-terrier barks loudly. Will
+she go on to the third seat? where I can see, though she cannot,
+Jane and Avice sitting together, and Freddy shovelling sand at their
+feet. Ah! at last she is made welcome. Good girls! They have
+seated her and her things, planted a parasol to shelter her from the
+wind, and lingered long enough not to make her feel herself turning
+them out before making another settlement out of my sight.
+
+THREE O'CLOCK.--I am sorry to say Charley's sketch turned into a
+caricature of the unprotected female wandering in vain in search of
+a bit of shelter, with a torn parasol, a limp dress, and dragging
+rug, and altogether unspeakably forlorn. It was exhibited at the
+dinner-table, and elicited peals of merriment, so that we elders
+begged to see the cause of the young people's amusement. My blood
+was up, and when I saw what it was, I said--
+
+"I wonder you like to record your own discourtesy, to call it
+nothing worse."
+
+"But, Aunt Charlotte," said Metelill in her pretty pleading way, "we
+did not know her."
+
+"Well, what of that?" I said.
+
+"Oh, you know it is only abroad that people expect that sort of
+things from strangers."
+
+"One of the worst imputations on English manners I ever heard," I
+said.
+
+"But she was such a guy!" cried Charley. "Mother said she was sure
+she was not a lady."
+
+"And therefore you did not show yourself one," I could not but
+return.
+
+There her mother put in a gentle entreaty that Charley would not
+distress grandmamma with these loud arguments with her aunt, and I
+added, seeing that Horace Druce's attention was attracted, that I
+should like to have added another drawing called 'Courtesy,' and
+shown that there was _SOME_ hospitality _EVEN_ to strangers, and
+then I asked the two girls about her. They had joined company
+again, and carried her beach-rest home for her, finding out by the
+way that she was a poor homeless governess who had come down to stay
+in cheap lodgings with an old nurse to try to recruit herself till
+she could go out again. My mother became immediately interested,
+and has sent Emily to call on her, and to try and find out whether
+she is properly taken care of.
+
+Isa was very much upset at my displeasure. She came to me
+afterwards and said she was greatly grieved; but Metelill would not
+move, and she had always supposed it wrong to make acquaintance with
+strangers in that chance way. I represented that making room was
+not picking up acquaintance, and she owned it, and was really
+grateful for the reproof; but, as I told her, no doubt such a rule
+must be necessary in a place like Oxford.
+
+How curiously Christian courtesy and polished manners sometimes
+separate themselves! and how conceit interferes with both! I acquit
+Metelill and Isa of all but thoughtless habit, and Pica was
+absorbed. She can be well mannered enough when she is not defending
+the rights of woman, or hotly dogmatical on the crude theories she
+has caught--and suppose she has thought out, poor child! And Jane,
+though high-principled, kind, and self-sacrificing, is too narrow
+and--not exactly conceited--but exclusive and Bourne Parvaish, not
+to be as bad in her way, though it is the sound one. The wars of
+the Druces and Maronites, as Martyn calls them, sometimes rage
+beyond the bounds of good humour.
+
+TEN P.M.--I am vexed too on another score. I must tell you that
+this hotel does not shine in puddings and sweets, and Charley has
+not been ashamed to grumble beyond the bounds of good manners. I
+heard some laughing and joking going on between the girls and the
+pupils, Metelill with her "Oh no! You won't! Nonsense!" in just
+that tone which means "I wish, I would, but I cannot bid you,"--the
+tone I do not like to hear in a maiden of any degree.
+
+And behold three of those foolish lads have brought her gilt and
+painted boxes of bon-bons, over which there was a prodigious
+giggling and semi-refusing and bantering among the young folks,
+worrying Emily and me excessively, though we knew it would not do to
+interfere.
+
+There is a sea-fog this evening unfavourable to the usual
+promenades, and we elders, including the tutor, were sitting with my
+mother, when, in her whirlwind fashion, in burst Jane, dragging her
+little sister Chattie with her, and breathlessly exclaiming,
+"Father, father, come and help! They are gambling, and I can't get
+Meg away!"
+
+When the nervous ones had been convinced that no one had been caught
+by the tide or fallen off the rocks, Jane explained that Metelill
+had given one box of bon-bons to the children, who were to be served
+with one apiece all round every day. And the others were put up by
+Metelill to serve as prizes in the 'racing game,' which some one had
+routed out, left behind in the lodging, and which was now spread on
+the dining-table, with all the young people playing in high glee,
+and with immense noise.
+
+"Betting too!" said Jane in horror. "Mr. Elwood betted three
+chocolate creams upon Charley, and Pica took it! Father! Come and
+call Meg away."
+
+She spoke exactly as if she were summoning him to snatch her sister
+from ROUGE ET NOIR at Monaco; and her face was indescribable when
+her aunt Edith set us all off laughing by saying, "Fearful
+depravity, my dear."
+
+"Won't you come, father?" continued Jane; "Mr. Methuen, won't you
+come and stop those young men?"
+
+Mr. Methuen smiled a little and looked at Horace, who said--
+
+"Hush, Janie; these are not things in which to interfere."
+
+"Then," quoth Jane sententiously, "I am not astonished at the
+dissipation of the university."
+
+And away she flounced in tears of wrath. Her mother went after her,
+and we laughed a little, it was impossible to help it, at the bathos
+of the chocolate creams; but, as Mr. Methuen said, she was really
+right, the amusement was undesirable, as savouring of evil. Edith,
+to my vexation, saw no harm in it; but Horace said very decidedly he
+hoped it would not happen again; and Margaret presently returned,
+saying she hoped that she had pacified Jane, and shown her that to
+descend as if there were an uproar in the school would only do much
+more harm than was likely to happen in that one evening; and she
+said to me afterwards, "I see what has been wanting in our training.
+We have let children's loyalty run into intolerance and rudeness."
+But Meg was quite innocent of there being any harm in it, and only
+needed reproof for being too much charmed by the pleasure for once
+to obey her dictatorial sister.
+
+13, TEN A.M.--Horace has had it out with sundry of the young ladies,
+so as to prevent any more betting. Several had regretted it. "Only
+they did so want to get rid of the bon-bons! And Jane did make such
+an uproar." After all, nobody did really bet but Charley and the
+young Elwood, and Pica only that once. Jane candidly owns that a
+little gentleness would have made a difference.
+
+Again I see this obtuseness to courtesy towards strangers. Our
+despised church has become popular, and so many of the young folks
+choose to accompany us that they overflowed into the free seats in
+the aisle, where I had a full view of them from above. These
+benches are long, and I was sorry to see the girls planting
+themselves fast at the outer end, and making themselves square, so
+as to hinder any one else from getting in, till the verger came and
+spoke to them, when Charley giggled offensively; and even then they
+did not make room, but forced the people to squeeze past. Isa could
+not help herself, not being the outermost; but she was much
+distressed, and does not shelter herself under Charley's plea that
+it was so hot that the verger should have been indicted for cruelty
+to animals. Certainly they all did come home very hot from walking
+back with the pupils.
+
+Pica and Avice were not among them, having joined the Druces in
+going to Hollyford, where Horace preached this morning. Their gray
+serges and sailor hats were, as they said, "not adapted to the town
+congregation."
+
+"It is the congregation you dress for?" said their uncle dryly,
+whereupon Pica upbraided him with inconsistency in telling his poor
+people not to use the excuse of 'no clothes,' and that the heart,
+not the dress, is regarded. He said it was true, but that he should
+still advocate the poor man's coming in his cleanest and best.
+"There are manners towards God as well as towards man," he said.
+
+I was too much tired by the heat to go to church again this evening,
+and am sitting with my mother, who is dozing. Where the young
+people are I do not know exactly, but I am afraid I hear Charley's
+shrill laugh on the beach.
+
+14.--Who do you think has found us out? Our dear old Governor-
+General, "in all his laurels," as enthusiastic little Avice was
+heard saying, which made Freddy stare hard and vainly in search of
+them. He is staying at Hollybridge Park, and seeing our name in the
+S. Clements' list of visitors, he made Lady Hollybridge drive him
+over to call, and was much disappointed to find that you could not
+be here during his visit. He was as kind and warm-hearted as ever,
+and paid our dear mother such compliments on her son, that we tell
+her the bows on her cap are starting upright with pride.
+
+Lady Hollybridge already knew Edith. She made herself very
+pleasant, and insisted on our coming EN MASSE to a great garden
+party which they are giving to-morrow. Hollybridge is the S.
+Clements' lion, with splendid grounds and gardens, and some fine old
+pictures, so it is a fine chance for the young people; and we are
+going to hire one of the large excursion waggonettes, which will
+hold all who have age, dress, and will for gaieties. The pupils, as
+Mr. Methuen is a friend of the Hollybridge people, will attend us as
+outriders on their bicycles. I am rather delighted at thus catching
+out the young ladies who did not think it worth while to bring a
+Sunday bonnet. They have all rushed into S. Clements to furbish
+themselves for the occasion, and we are left to the company of the
+small Druces. Neither Margaret nor Emily chooses to go, and will
+keep my mother company.
+
+I ventured on administering a sovereign apiece to Isa and Jane
+Druce. The first blushed and owned that it was very welcome, as her
+wardrobe had never recovered a great thunderstorm at Oxford. Jane's
+awkwardness made her seem as if it were an offence on my part, but
+her mother tells me it made her very happy. Her father says that
+she tells him he was hard on Avice, a great favourite of his, and
+that I must ask Jane to explain, for it is beyond him. It is all
+right about the Oxford girl. I have engaged her, and she goes home
+to-morrow to prepare herself. This afternoon she is delighted to
+assist her young ladies in their preparations. I liked her much in
+the private interview. I was rather surprised to find that it was
+'Miss Avice,' of whom she spoke with the greatest fervour, as having
+first made friends with her, and then having constantly lent her
+books and read to her in her illness.
+
+15.--S. Swithun is evidently going to be merciful to us to-day, and
+the damsels have been indefatigable--all, that is to say, but the
+two Londoners, who have lawn tennis dresses, and their mother's maid
+to turn them out complete. Isa brought home some tulle and white
+jessamine with which she is deftly freshening the pretty compromise
+between a bonnet and a hat which she wears on Sunday; also a
+charming parasol, with a china knob and a wreath of roses at the
+side. She hopes I shall not think her extravagant, but she had a
+little money of her own.
+
+Jane Druce displays two pairs of gloves and two neckties for herself
+and her sister; and after all Meg will not go; she is so uncouth
+that her mother does not like her to go without her own supervision;
+and she with true Bourne Parva self-appreciation and exclusiveness
+says--
+
+"I'm sure I don't want to go among a lot of stupid people, who care
+for nothing but fine clothes and lawn tennis."
+
+There was a light till one o'clock last night in the room where
+Avice sleeps with Charley and the dog; and I scarcely saw either of
+the Oxford sisters or Jane all this morning till dinner-time, when
+Pica appeared very appropriately to her name, turned out in an old
+black silk dress left behind by her mother, and adorned with white
+tulle in all sorts of folds, also a pretty white bonnet made up by
+Avice's clever fingers, and adorned with some soft gray sea-birds'
+feathers and white down. Isa and Metelill were very well got up and
+nice. Metelill looks charming, but I am afraid her bouquet is from
+one of those foolish pupils. She, as usual, has shared it with Isa,
+who has taken half to prevent her cousin being remarkable. And,
+after all, poor Avice is to be left behind. There was no time to
+make up things for two, and being in mourning, she could not borrow,
+though Metelill would have been too happy to lend. She says she
+shall be very happy with the children, but I can't help thinking
+there was a tear in her eye when she ran to fetch her dress cloak
+for Jane, whom, by the bye, Avice has made wonderfully more like
+other people. Here is the waggonette, and I must finish to-morrow.
+
+16.--We have had a successful day. The drive each way was a treat
+in itself, and the moon rising over the sea on our way home was a
+sight never to be forgotten. Hollybridge is charming in itself.
+Those grounds with their sea-board are unique, and I never saw such
+Spanish chestnuts in England. Then the gardens and the turf! One
+must have lived as long in foreign parts as we have to appreciate
+the perfect finish and well-tended look of such places. Your dear
+old chief does not quite agree. He says he wants space, and is
+oppressed with the sense of hedges and fences, except when he looks
+to the sea, and even there the rocks look polished off, and treated
+by landscape gardeners! He walked me about to see the show places,
+and look at the pictures, saying he had been so well lionised that
+he wanted some one to discharge his information upon. It was great
+fun to hear him criticising the impossibilities of a battle-piece--
+Blenheim, I think--the anachronisms of the firearms and uniforms,
+and the want of discipline around Marlborough, who would never have
+won a battle at that rate. You know how his hawk's eye takes note
+of everything. He looked at Metelill and said, "Uncommonly pretty
+girl that, and knows it," but when I asked what he thought of
+Isabel's looks, he said, "Pretty, yes; but are you sure she is quite
+aboveboard? There's something I don't like about her eyes." I wish
+he had not said so. I know there is a kind of unfriendly feeling
+towards her among some of the girls, especially the Druces and
+Charley. I have heard Charley openly call her a humbug, but I have
+thought much of this was dislike to the softer manners, and perhaps
+jealousy of my notice, and the expression that the old lord noticed
+is often the consequence of living in an uncongenial home.
+
+Of course my monopoly of the hero soon ended, and as I had no
+acquaintances there, and the young ones had been absorbed into
+games, or had fraternised with some one, I betook myself to
+explorations in company with Jane, who had likewise been left out.
+After we had wandered along a dazzling stand of calceolarias, she
+said, "Aunt Charlotte, papa says I ought to tell you something; I
+mean, why Avice could not come to-day, and why she has nothing to
+wear but her round hat. It is because she and Pica spent all they
+had in paying for that Maude Harris at the Convalescent Home. They
+had some kind of flimsy gauzy bonnets that were faded and utterly
+done for after Commemoration week; and as Uncle Martyn is always
+growling about ladies' luggage, they thought it would be a capital
+plan to go without all the time they are down here, till another
+quarter is due. Avice never thought of its not being right to go to
+Church such a figure, and now she finds that papa thinks the command
+to "have power on her head" really may apply to that sort of
+fashion, we are going to contrive something for Sunday, but it could
+not be done in time for to-day. Besides, she had no dress but a
+serge."
+
+"She preferred dressing her sister to dressing herself," I answered;
+and Jane began assuring me that no one knew how unselfish that dear
+old Bird is. The little money she had, she added to Pica's small
+remnant, and thus enough had been provided to fit the elder sister
+out.
+
+"I suppose," I said, "that Isa manages better, for she does not seem
+to be reduced to the same extremities, though I suppose she has less
+allowance than her cousins."
+
+"She has exactly the same. I know it." And Jane caught herself up,
+evidently checking something I might have thought ill-natured, which
+made me respond something intended to be moralising, but which was
+perhaps foolish, about good habits of economy, and how this
+disappointment, taken so good-humouredly, would be a lesson to
+Avice. "A lesson? I should think so," said Jane bluntly. "A
+lesson not to lend her money to Isa"; and then, when I asked what
+she meant, she blurted out that all Isa's so-called share of the
+subscription for Maude Harris had been advanced by Avice--Pica had
+told her so, with comments on her sister's folly in lending what she
+well knew would never be repaid; and Alice could not deny it, only
+defending herself by saying, she could not sacrifice the girl. It
+was a very uncomfortable revelation, considering that Isa might have
+given her cousin my sovereign, but no doubt she did not think that
+proper, as I had meant it to be spent for this outing.
+
+I will at least give her the benefit of the doubt, and I would not
+encourage Jane to say any more about her. Indeed, the girl herself
+did not seem so desirous of dwelling on Isa as of doing justice to
+Avice, whom, she told me very truly, I did not know. "She is always
+the one to give way and be put aside for Pie and Isa," said Jane.
+And now I think over the time we have had together, I believe it has
+often been so. "You are very fond of her," I said; and Jane
+answered, "I should _THINK_ so! Why, she spent eight months with us
+once at Bourne Parva, just after the great row with Miss Hurlstone.
+Oh, didn't you know? They had a bad governess, who used to meet a
+lover--a German musician, I think he was--when they were out
+walking, and bullied Avice because she was honest. When it all came
+to light, Pica came out and Isa was sent to school, but Avice had
+got into a low state of health, and they said Oxford was not good
+for her, so she came to us. And papa prepared her for Confirmation,
+and she did everything with us, and she really is just like one of
+ourselves," said Jane, as the highest praise imaginable, though any
+one who contrasted poor Jane's stiff PIQUE (Miss Dadsworth's turn-
+out) with the grace even of the gray serge, might not think it a
+compliment. Jane was just beginning to tell me that Avice always
+wrote to her to lay before her father the difficulties about right
+and wrong faith and practice that their way of life and habits of
+society bring before the poor child, when Isa descended upon us with
+"Oh! Aunt Charlotte, I could not think what had become of you, when
+I saw the great man without you."
+
+I begin to wonder whether she is really so very fond of me, or
+whether she does not like to see me with one of the others.
+
+However, I shall be able to take Jane's hint, and cultivate Avice,
+for, as my mother did not come yesterday, Lady Hollybridge has most
+kindly insisted on her going over to-day. The carriage is taking
+some one to the station, and is to call for her and me to bring us
+to luncheon, the kind people promising likewise to send us back. So
+I asked whether I might bring a niece who had not been able to come
+yesterday, and as the young people had, as usual, become enamoured
+of Metelill, they begged for her likewise. Avice looks very well in
+the dress she made up for Pica, and being sisters and in mourning,
+the identity will only be natural. She is very much pleased and
+very grateful, and declares that she shall see everything she cares
+about much more pleasantly than in the larger party, and perhaps
+'really hear the hero talk.' And Uncle Horace says, "True, you
+Bird, you are not like some young folk, who had rather hear
+themselves talk than Socrates and S. Ambrose both at once." "Oh!"
+said saucy Pica, "now we know what Uncle Horace thinks of his own
+conversations with father!" By the bye, Martyn and Mary come home
+to-morrow, and I am very glad of it, for those evening diversions on
+the beach go on in full force, and though there is nothing tangible,
+except Charley's smoke, to object to, and it is the present way of
+young people, there is something unsatisfactory in it. Edith does
+not seem to mind what her daughters do. Margaret has no occasion to
+be uneasy about Jane, who always stays with the little ones while
+the maids are at supper, and generally takes with her the devoted
+Avice, who has some delicacy of throat forbidding these evening
+excursions. Meg gets more boisterous and noisy every day, Uchtred
+being her chief companion; but as she is merely a tomboy, I believe
+her parents think it inexpedient to give her hints that might only
+put fancies in her head. So they have only prohibited learning to
+smoke, staying out later than nine o'clock, and shrieking louder
+than a steam whistle!
+
+17.--Yesterday was a great success. Avice was silent at first, but
+Metelill drew her out, and she had become quite at her ease before
+we arrived. You would have been enchanted to see how much was made
+of our dear mother. Lord Hollybridge came out himself to give her
+his arm up the stone steps and across the slippery hall. The good
+old chief talked to her by the hour about you, and Avice's eyes
+shone all the time. After luncheon our kind hostess arranged that
+dear mother should have half an hour's perfect rest, in a charming
+little room fitted like a tent, and then had a low chair with two
+little fairy ponies in it to drive her about the gardens, while I
+walked with the two gentlemen and saw things much better than in the
+former hurly-burly, though that was a beautiful spectacle in its
+way. Avice, who has seen scores of FETES in college grounds, much
+preferred the scenery, etc., in their natural state to a crowd of
+strangers. The young people took possession of the two girls, and
+when we all met for the five o'clock tea, before going home, Lady
+Georgina eagerly told her father that Miss Fulford had made out the
+subject of 'that picture.' It was a very beautiful Pre-Raffaelite,
+of a lady gathering flowers in a meadow, and another in
+contemplation, while a mysterious shape was at the back; the ladies
+stiff-limbed but lovely faced, and the flowers--irises, anemones,
+violets, and even the grass-blossom, done with botanical accuracy.
+A friend of Lord Hollybridge had picked it up for him in some
+obscure place in Northern Italy, and had not yet submitted it to an
+expert. Avice, it appeared, had recognised it as representing Leah
+and Rachel, as Action and Contemplation in the last books of Dante's
+PURGATORIO, with the mystic griffin car in the distance. Our hosts
+were very much delighted; we all repaired to the picture, where she
+very quietly and modestly pointed out the details. A Dante was
+hunted up, but Lady Hollybridge and I were the only elders who knew
+any Italian, and when the catalogue was brought, Avice knew all the
+names of the translators, but as none were to be found, Lord
+Hollybridge asked if she would make him understand the passage,
+which she did, blushing a little, but rendering it in very good
+fluent English, so that he thanked her, and complimented her so much
+that she was obliged to answer that she had got it up when they were
+hearing some lectures on Dante; and besides it was mentioned by
+Ruskin; whereupon she was also made to find the reference, and mark
+both it and Dante.
+
+"I like that girl," said the old Governor-General, "she is
+intelligent and modest both. There is something fine about the
+shape of her head."
+
+When we went home, Metelill was as proud and delighted as possible
+at what she called the Bird's triumph; but Avice did not seem at all
+elated, but to take her knowledge as a mere outcome of her ordinary
+Oxford life, where allusions, especially Ruskinese and Dantesque,
+came naturally. And then, as grandmamma went to sleep in her
+corner, the two girls and I fell into a conversation on that whole
+question of Action and Contemplation. At least Metelill asked the
+explanation, but I doubt whether she listened much while Avice and I
+talked out the matter, and I felt myself a girl again, holding the
+old interminable talks with the first dear Avice, before you made
+her my sister for those two happy years, and--Well, it is no use
+paining you and myself with going back to those days, though there
+was something in the earnest thoughtfulness and depth of her young
+namesake and godchild that carried me back to the choicest day of
+companionship before you came on the scene. And to think what a
+jewel I have missed all this time!
+
+18.--I am deeply grieved, and am almost ashamed to write what I have
+to tell you. I had been out to see my mother with Margaret and
+Emily settle in their favourite resort on the beach, and was coming
+in to write my letters, when, in the sitting-room, which has open
+French windows down to the ground, I heard an angry voice--
+
+"I tell you it was no joke. It's no use saying so," and I beheld
+Charley and Isa in the midst of a violent quarrel. "I've looked on
+at plenty of your dodges, sucking up to Aunt Charlotte to get taken
+out with her; but when it comes to playing spiteful tricks on my
+sister I will speak out."
+
+By this time I was on the window-step, checking Charley's very
+improper tone, and asking what was the matter. Isa sprang to me,
+declaring that it was all Charley's absurd suspicion and
+misconstruction. At last, amid hot words on both sides, I found
+that Charley had just found, shut into a small album which Metelill
+keeps upon the drawing-room table, a newly taken photograph of young
+Horne, one of the pupils, with a foolish devoted inscription upon
+the envelope, directed to Miss Fulford.
+
+Isa protested that she had only popped it in to keep it safe until
+she could return it. Charley broke out. "As if I did not know
+better than that! Didn't you make him give you that parasol and
+promise him your photo? Ay, and give it him in return? You thought
+he would keep your secret, I suppose, but he tells everything, like
+a donkey as he is, to Bertie Elwood, and Bertie and I have such fun
+over him. And now, because you are jealous of poor Metelill, and
+think Aunt Charlotte may take a fancy to you instead of her, you are
+sticking his photo into her book just to do her harm with the aunts.
+I'm not strait-laced. I wouldn't mind having the photos of a
+hundred and fifty young men, only they would be horrid guys and all
+just alike; but Aunt Charlotte is--is--well--a regular old maid
+about it, and you knew she would mind it, and so you did it on
+purpose to upset Metelill's chances."
+
+Isa clung to me in floods of tears, desiring me not to believe
+anything so cruel and false. Every one always was so hard upon her,
+she said, and she had only put the thing inadvertently there, to get
+it out of sight, into the first book she saw, but unfortunately she
+did not know I had heard her trying to pass it off to Charley as a
+jest. However, as there was no proof there, I asked about the
+parasol. While the shopping was going on, she and young Horne had
+been in another street, and this was the consequence! I was
+perfectly confounded. Receive presents from young men! It seemed
+to me quite impossible. "Oh, Isa thinks nothing of that!" said
+Charley. "Ask her where she got those bangles, and that bouquet
+which she told you was half Metelill's. You think me awful, I know,
+Aunt Charlotte, but I do draw a line, though I would never have said
+one word about it if she had not played this nasty trick on
+Metelill." Isa would have begun some imploring excuse, but our two
+gentlemen were seen coming up towards the window, and she fled,
+gasping out an entreaty that I would not tell Uncle Martyn.
+
+Nor did I then and there, for I needed to understand the matter and
+look into it, so I told Martyn and Horace not to wait for me, and
+heard Charley's story more coolly. I had thought that Mr. Horne was
+Metelill's friend. "So he was at first," Charley said, "but he is
+an uncommon goose, and Isa is no end of a hand at doing the pathetic
+poverty-stricken orphan! That's the way she gets so many presents!"
+Then she explained, in her select slang, that young Horne's love
+affairs were the great amusement of his fellow-pupils, and that she,
+being sure that the parasol was no present from me, as Isa had given
+the cousins to understand, had set Bertie Elwood to extract the
+truth by teasing his friend. "But I never meant to have told," said
+Charley, "if you had not come in upon us, when I was in the midst of
+such a wax that I did not know what I was saying"; and on my
+demanding what she meant by the elegant expression she had used
+about Isa and me, she explained that it was the schoolboy's word for
+currying favour. Every one but we stupid elders perceived the game,
+nay, even the Druces, living in full confidence with their children,
+knew what was going on. I have never spoken, but somehow people
+must read through one's brains, for there was a general conviction
+that I was going to choose a niece to accompany us. I wonder if
+you, my wise brother, let out anything to Edith. It is what men
+always do, they bind women to silence and then disclose the secret
+themselves, and say, "Nothing is safe with these women."
+
+Any way, these girls have been generous, or else true to their
+ESPRIT DE CORPS, I do not know which to call it; for though they
+looked on at Isa's manoeuvres and my blindness with indignant
+contempt, they never attempted to interfere. Jane Druce was seized
+with a fit of passionate wrath and pity for me, but her father
+withheld her from disclosures, assuring her that I should probably
+find out the girl's true disposition, and that it would be wrong to
+deprive Isa of a chance of coming under a fresh influence.
+
+Poor girl, she must be very clever, for she kept up her constant
+wooing of me while she also coquetted with Mr. Horne, being really,
+as her contemporaries declare, a much worse flirt than Metelill, but
+the temptation of the parasol threw her off her guard, and she was
+very jealous of my taking out Metelill and Avice. I see now that it
+has been her effort to keep the others away from me. This spiteful
+trick, if it be true that she meant it, seems to have been done on
+Metelill, as being supposed to be her only real rival. Avice always
+yields to her, and besides, is too inoffensive to afford her any
+such opportunity.
+
+When I talked to Mary, she said, "Oh yes, I always knew she was a
+horrid little treacherous puss. Nature began it, and that governess
+worked on a ready soil. We sent her to school, and hoped she was
+cured, but I have long seen that it has only shown her how to be
+more plausible. But what can one do? One could not turn out an
+orphan, and I did not see that she was doing our own girls any harm.
+I'm sure I gave her every chance of marrying, for there was nothing
+I wished for so much, and I never told Martyn of her little
+manoeuvres, knowing he would not stand them; and now what he will
+do, I can't think, unless you and Edward will take her off our
+hands. I believe you might do her good. She is an unfathomable
+mixture of sham and earnest, and she really likes you, and thinks
+much of you, as having a certain prestige, and being a woman of the
+world" (fancy that). "Besides, she is really religious in a sort of
+a way; much good you'll say it does her, but, as you know, there's a
+certain sort of devotion which makes no difference to people's
+conduct."
+
+It seems to be the general desire of the family that we should take
+this unfortunate Isabel off their hands. Shall we? Cruelly as I
+have been disappointed in the girl, I can't help liking her; she is
+obliging, pleasant, ladylike in manners, very affectionate, and I
+can't help thinking that with the respect and fear for you she would
+feel she might be restrained, and that we could be the saving of
+her, though at the same time I know that my having been so
+egregiously deceived may be a sign that I am not fit to deal with
+her. I leave it to your decision altogether, and will say no more
+till I hear. Metelill is a charming girl, and I fancy you prefer
+her, and that her mother knows it, and would send her for at least a
+winter; but she gets so entirely off her balance whenever a young
+man of any sort comes near, that I should not like to take charge of
+her. It might be good for the worthy Jane, but as she would take a
+great deal of toning down and licking into shape, and as she would
+despise it all, refer everything to the Bourne Parva standard, and
+pine for home and village school, I don't think she need be
+considered, especially as I am sure she would not go, and could not
+be spared. Pica would absorb herself in languages and antiquities,
+and maintain the rights of women by insisting on having full time to
+study her protoplasms, snubbing and deriding all the officers who
+did not talk like Oxford dons. Probably the E. E. would be the only
+people she would think fit to speak to. Avice is the one to whom I
+feel the most drawn. She is thoroughly thoughtful, and her religion
+is not of the uninfluential kind Mary describes. Those distresses
+and perplexities which poor Isa affected were chiefly borrowed from
+her genuine ones; but she has obtained the high cultivation and
+intelligence that her Oxford life can give in full measure, and
+without conceit or pretension, and it is her unselfish, yielding
+spirit that has prevented me from knowing her sooner, though when
+not suppressed she can be thoroughly agreeable, and take her part in
+society with something of her mother's brilliancy. I think, too,
+that she would be spared, as Oxford does not agree with her, and a
+southern winter or two would be very good for her. Besides, the
+others might come and see her in vacation time. Could we not take
+both her and Isabel at least for the first winter?
+
+19.--A stormy wet day, the first we have had. Poor Isa has made an
+attempt at explanation and apology, but lost herself in a mist of
+words and tears. I suppose I was severe, for she shrinks from me,
+and clings to Avice, who has stood her friend in many a storm
+before, and, as Jane indignantly tells me, persists in believing
+that she is really sorry and wishes to be good. She is very
+attentive and obliging, and my dear mother, who is in happy
+ignorance of all this uproar, really likes her the best of all the
+girls.
+
+21.--We have had a great alarm. Last evening we went to the parish
+church; Horace Druce had been asked to preach, and the rain, which
+had fallen all the morning, cleared off just in time for the walk.
+Emily, Margaret, two of her children, and I sat in the gallery, and
+Avice and Isa in the free seats below. Avice had been kept at home
+by the rain in the morning, but had begged leave to go later.
+Darkness came on just as the first hymn was given out, and the
+verger went round with his long wand lighting the gas. In the
+gallery we saw plainly how, at the east end, something went wrong
+with his match, one which he thought had failed, and threw aside.
+It fell on a strip of straw matting in the aisle, which, being very
+dry, caught fire and blazed up for a few seconds before it was
+trampled out. Some foolish person, however, set the cry of 'Fire!'
+going, and you know what that is in a crowded church. The vicar, in
+his high old-fashioned desk with a back to it, could not see.
+Horace in a chair, in the narrow, shallow sanctuary, did see that it
+was nothing, but between the cries of 'Fire!' and the dying peal of
+the organ, could not make his voice heard. All he could do was to
+get to the rear of the crowd, together with the other few who had
+seen the real state of things, and turn back all those whom they
+could, getting them out through the vestry. But the main body were
+quite out of their reach, and everybody tried to rush scrambling
+into the narrow centre aisle, choking up the door, which was a
+complicated trap meant to keep out draughts. We in the gallery
+tried vainly to assure them that the only danger was in the crowd,
+and the clergyman in his desk, sure that was the chief peril, at any
+rate, went on waving and calling to them to wait; but the cries and
+shrieks drowned everything, and there was a most terrible time, as
+some 600 people jammed themselves in that narrow space, fighting,
+struggling, fainting.
+
+You may suppose how we watched our girls. They had let themselves
+be thrust up to the end of the seat by later comers: Avice the
+innermost. We saw them look up to us, with white faces. To our
+joy, Avice seemed to understand our signs and to try to withhold
+Isa, but she was too wild with fright not to try to push on to the
+end of the pew. Avice held her dress, and kept her back. Then, as
+the crowd swayed, the two girls stood on the seat, and presently I
+saw Avice bend down, and take from some one's arms a little child,
+which she seated on the edge of the pew, holding it in her arms, and
+soothing it. I don't know how long it all lasted, Horace says it
+was not ten minutes before he had got men and tools to break down
+the obstruction at the door, and pull out the crowded, crushed
+people, but to us it seemed hours. They were getting calmer too in
+the rear, for many had followed the lead through the vestry door,
+and others had found out that there was no fire at all.
+
+Wonderful to tell, no one was killed. There were some broken arms,
+three I think, and some bad bruises. Many people were fainting, and
+much hurt by the horrible heat and crush, but when at last the way
+was free, we saw Horace come into the church, looking about in great
+anxiety for the two girls, whom he had failed to find in the
+trampled multitude. Then Avice came up to him, with the child in
+her arms, and Isa followed, quite safe! How thankful we all were!
+Avice says she remembered at once that she had been told of the
+American fireman's orders to his little girl always to keep still in
+such an alarm, for the crowd was a worse peril than the fire. By
+the time we had come down the stairs and joined them, the child's
+father had come for it in great anxiety, for its sister had been
+trampled down fainting, and had just only revived enough to miss it!
+I shall never forget what it was to see people sucked down in that
+surging mass, and the thankful thrill of seeing our girls standing
+there quietly with the child between them, its little fair head on
+Avice's breast. We went home quietly and thankfully. Horace took
+Avice to the hotel that he might explain all to her parents, and let
+them know how well she had behaved; Isabel was shaken and tearful,
+and her voice sounded weak and nervous as she bade her cousin good-
+night and embraced her with much agitation. So I went to her room
+to see whether she needed any doctoring, but I found Metelill
+soothing her nicely, so I only kissed her (as I had not done these
+two nights). "Ah, dear aunt, you forgive me!" she said. The tone
+threw me back, as if she were making capital of her adventure, and I
+said, "You have not offended _ME_." "Ah! you are still angry, and
+yet you _DO_ love me still a little," she said, not letting me go.
+"The more love, the more grief for your having done wrong," I said;
+and she returned, "Ah! if I always had you." That chilled me, and I
+went away. She does not know the difference between pardon and
+remission of consequences. One must have something of the spirit of
+the fifty-first Psalm before that perception comes. Poor dear
+child, how one longs for power to breathe into her some such
+penitence!
+
+Avice is quite knocked up to-day, and her mother has kept her in
+bed, where she is very happy with her Jane. I have been to see her,
+and she has been thanking me for having suggested the making way for
+fresh comers in a pew. Otherwise, she says, she could not have
+withstood the rush.
+
+
+SIR EDWARD FULFORD TO MISS FULFORD
+22D JULY.
+
+My Dear Charlotte,--I decidedly object to the company of a young
+lady with such a genius for intrigue as Isabel Fulford seems to
+possess. If we had only ourselves to consider, no doubt it would be
+well for you to take her in hand, but in the sort of house ours will
+be, there must be no one we cannot depend upon in our own family.
+
+I suppose I am guilty of having betrayed my thoughts to Edith. I
+had certainly wished for Metelill. She is an engaging creature, and
+I am sorry you take so adverse a view of her demeanour; but I
+promised to abide by your judgment and I will not question it. We
+will ask Arthur and Edith to bring her to visit us, and then perhaps
+you may be better satisfied with her.
+
+The learned young lady is out of the question, and as Avice is my
+dear wife's godchild as well as mine, I am very glad she has
+deserved that your choice should fall upon her. It seems as if you
+would find in her just the companionship you wish, and if her health
+needs the southern climate, it is well to give her the opportunity.
+You had better propose the scheme at once, and provide what she will
+need for an outfit. The last touches might be given at Paris. I
+hope to get time to run down to New Cove next week, and if you and
+the niece can be ready to start by the middle of August, we will
+take Switzerland by the way, and arrive at Malta by the end of
+September.
+
+I shall be curious to hear the result of your throwing the
+handkerchief.--Your affectionate brother,
+
+E. F.
+
+
+MISS FULFORD TO SIR EDWARD FULFORD
+
+JULY 24.--I threw the handkerchief by asking Martyn and Mary to
+spare their daughter. Tears came into Mary's eyes, the first I ever
+saw there, and she tried in vain to say something ridiculous.
+Martyn walked to the window and said huskily, "Dr. A--- said it
+would confirm her health to spend a few winters in the South. Thank
+you, Charlotte!" They did not doubt a moment, but Martyn feels the
+parting more than I ever thought he would, and Pica and Uchtred go
+about howling and bewailing, and declaring that they never shall
+know where to find anything again.
+
+Avice herself is much more sorrowful than glad, though she is too
+courteous and grateful not to show herself gracious to me. She did
+entreat me to take Isa instead, so earnestly that I was obliged to
+read her your decided objections. It was a blow to her at first,
+but she is rapidly consoling herself over the wonderful commissions
+she accepts. She is to observe Mediterranean zoophytes, and send
+them home on glass slides for the family benefit. She is to send
+her father photographs and drawings to illustrate his lectures, and
+Jane has begged for a pebble or rock from S. Paul's Bay, to show to
+her class at school. Indeed, I believe Avice is to write a special
+journal, to be published in the BOURNE PARVA PARISH MAGAZINE;
+Charley begs for a sea-horse, and Freddy has been instructed by one
+of the pupils to bargain for nothing less than the Colossus of
+Rhodes; Metelill is quite as cordial in her rejoicing, and Edith
+owns that, now it has come to the point, she is very glad to keep
+her daughter.
+
+And Isa? Well, she is mortified, poor child. I think she must have
+cried bitterly over the disappointment, for she looked very wretched
+when we met at dinner.
+
+Meanwhile, Martyn had a walk with Emily, who found that he was very
+sorry not to be relieved from Isabel, though he knew you were quite
+right not to take her. He thought Oxford not a good place for such
+a girl, and the absence of the trustworthy Avice would make things
+worse. Then Emily proposed to take Isabel back to the Birchwood
+with her. Grandmamma really likes the girl, who is kind and
+attentive. There are no young people to whom she could do harm,
+Emily can look after her, and will be glad of help and
+companionship. The whole family council agreed that it will be a
+really charitable work, and that if any one can do her good, it will
+be the mother and Aunt Emily.
+
+Isa has acquiesced with an overflow of gratitude and affection to
+them for taking pity on her. It sounds a little fulsome, but I
+believe some of it is genuine. She is really glad that some one
+wishes for her, and I can quite believe that she will lose in Avice
+all that made life congenial to her under Mary's brisk
+uncompromising rule. If she can only learn to be true--true to
+herself and to others--she will yet be a woman to love and esteem,
+and at Birchwood they will do their best to show that religious
+sentiment must be connected with Truth.
+
+And so ends my study of the manners of my nieces, convincing me the
+more that as the manners are, so is the man or woman. The heart, or
+rather the soul, forms the manners, and they _ARE_ the man.
+
+C. F.
+
+
+
+COME TO HER KINGDOM
+
+
+
+'Take care! Oh, take care!'
+
+Whisk, swish, click, click, through the little crowd at Stokesley on
+a fine April afternoon, of jocund children just let loose from
+school, and mothers emerging from their meeting, collecting their
+progeny after the fashion of old ewes with their lambs; Susan
+Merrifield in a huge, carefully preserved brown mushroom hat, with a
+big basket under one arm, and a roll of calico under the other; her
+sister Elizabeth with a book in one hand, and a packet of ambulance
+illustrations; the Vicar, Mr. Doyle, and his sister likewise loaded,
+talking to them about the farmer's wedding of the morning, for which
+the bells had been ringing fitfully all day, and had just burst out
+again. Such was the scene, through which, like a flash, spun a
+tricycle, from which a tiny curly-haired being in knickerbockers was
+barely saved by his mother's seizing him by one arm.
+
+'A tricycle!' exclaimed the Vicar.
+
+'A woman! Oh!' cried Susan in horror, 'and she's stopping--at the
+Gap. Oh!'
+
+'My dear Susie, you must have seen ladies on tricycles before,'
+whispered her sister.
+
+'No, indeed, I am thankful to say I have not! If it should be Miss
+Arthuret!' said Susan, with inexpressible tones in her voice.
+
+'She was bowing right and left,' said the Vicar, a little
+maliciously; 'depend upon it, she thought this was a welcome from
+the rural population.'
+
+'Hark! here's something coming.'
+
+The Bonchamp fly came rattling up, loaded with luggage, and with a
+quiet lady in black seated in it, which stopped at the same gate.
+
+'The obedient mother, no doubt,' said Elizabeth. 'She looks like a
+lady.'
+
+There had been a good deal of excitement at Stokesley about the
+property known by the pleasing name of the Gap. An old gentleman
+had lived there for many years, always in a secluded state, and
+latterly imbecile, and on his death in the previous year no one had
+for some time appeared as heir; but it became known that the
+inheritrix was a young lady, a great-niece, living with a widowed
+mother in one of the large manufacturing towns in the north of
+England. Her father had been a clergyman and had died when she was
+an infant. That was all that was known, and as the house had become
+almost uninhabitable, the necessary repairs had prevented the
+heiress from taking possession all this time. It was not a very
+large inheritance, only comprising a small farm, the substantial
+village shop, four or five cottages, and a moderate-sized house and
+grounds, where the neglected trees had grown to strange irregular
+proportions, equally with the income, which, owing to the outgoings
+being small, had increased to about 800 or 900 pounds a year, and of
+course it was a subject of much anxiety with Admiral Merrifield's
+family to know what sort of people the newcomers would prove.
+
+Of the large family only the two eldest daughters were at home;
+Susan, now nearly forty, had never left it, but had been the
+daughter-of-all-work at home and lady-of-all-work to the parish ever
+since she had emerged from the schoolroom; her apricot complexion
+showing hardly any change, and such as there was never perceived by
+her parents. The Admiral, still a light, wiry, hale man, as active
+as ever, with his hands full of county, parish, and farming
+business; an invalid for many years, but getting into that health
+which is LA JEUNESSE DE LA VIEILLESSE.
+
+Elizabeth had, from twenty-five to thirty-two, been spared from home
+by her father to take care of his stepmother in London, where she
+had beguiled her time with a certain amount of authorship under a
+NOM DE PLUME, and had been introduced to some choice society both
+through her literary abilities and her family connections.
+
+Four years previous the old lady had died, leaving her a legacy,
+which, together with her gains, would have enabled her to keep such
+a home in town as to remain in touch with the world to which she had
+been introduced; but she had never lost her Stokesley heart enough
+for the temptation to outweigh the disappointment she would have
+caused at home, and the satisfaction and rest of being among her own
+people. So she only went up for an occasional visit, and had become
+the brightness of the house, and Susan's beloved partner in all her
+works.
+
+Her father, who understood better than did her mother and sister
+what she had given up, had insisted on her having a sitting-room to
+herself, which she embellished with the personal possessions she had
+accumulated, and where she pursued her own avocations in the
+forenoon, often indeed interrupted, but never showing, and not often
+feeling, that it was to her hindrance, and indeed the family looked
+on her work sufficiently as a profession, not only to acquiesce, but
+to have a certain complacency in it, though it was a kind of
+transparent fiction that MESA was an anagram of her initials and
+that of Stokesley. Her mother at any rate believed that none of the
+neighbours guessed at any such thing.
+
+Stokesley was a good deal out of the world, five miles from the
+station at Bonchamp, over hilly, stony roads, so that the cyclist
+movement had barely reached it; the neighbourhood was sparse, and
+Mrs. Merrifield's health had not been conducive to visiting, any
+more than was her inclination, so that there was a little agitation
+about first calls.
+
+The newcomers appeared at church on Sunday at all the services. A
+bright-faced girl of one-and-twenty, with little black eyes like
+coals of fire, a tight ulster, like a riding habit, and a small
+billycock hat, rather dismayed those who still held that bonnets
+ought to be the Sunday gear of all beyond childhood; but the mother,
+in rich black silk, was unexceptionable.
+
+Refusing to be marshalled up the aisle to the seat which persistent
+tradition assigned to the Gap in the aristocratic quarter, daughter
+and mother (it was impossible not thus to call them) sat themselves
+down on the first vacant place, close to a surviving white smock-
+frock, and blind to the bewildered glances of his much-bent friend
+in velveteen, who, hobbling in next after, found himself displaced
+and separated alike from his well-thumbed prayer and hymn book and
+the companion who found the places for him.
+
+'It ain't fitty like,' said the old man confidentially to Susan,
+'nor the ladies wouldn't like it when we comes in with our old coats
+all of a muck with wet.'
+
+'The principle is right,' said Bessie, when this was repeated to
+her; 'but practice ought to wait till native manners and customs are
+learnt.'
+
+The two sisters offered to save their mother the first visit--leave
+her card, or make her excuses; but Mrs. Merrifield held that a card
+thus left savoured of deceit, and that the deed must be womanfully
+done in person. But she would not wait till the horses could be
+spared, saying that for near village neighbours it was more friendly
+to go down in her donkey-chair; and so she did, Bessie driving her,
+and the Admiral walking with them.
+
+The Gap had, ever since Bessie could remember, been absolutely
+shrouded in trees, its encircling wall hidden in ivy bushes, over
+which laburnums, lilacs, pink thorns, and horse chestnuts towered;
+and the drive from the seldom-opened gate was almost obstructed by
+the sweeping arms of laurels and larches.
+
+It was obstructed now, but by these same limbs lying amputated; and
+'chop, chop!' was heard in the distance.
+
+'Oh, the Arbutus!' sighed Bessie.
+
+'Clearing was much needed,' said her father, with a man's propensity
+for the axe.
+
+The donkey, however, thought it uncanny, 'upon the pivot of his
+skull, turned round his long left ear,' and planted his feet firmly.
+Mrs. Merrifield, deprecating the struggle by which her husband would
+on such occasions enforce discipline, begged to get out; and while
+this was going on, the ulstered young lady, with a small axe in
+hand, came, as it were, to the rescue, and, while the donkey was
+committed to a small boy, explained hastily, 'So overgrown, there is
+nothing to be done but to let in light and air. My mother is at
+home,' she added; 'she will be happy to see you,' and, conducting
+them in with complete self-possession--rather, as it occurred to
+Bessie, as the Queen might have led the way to the Duchess of Kent,
+though there was a perfect simplicity and evident enjoyment about
+her that was very prepossessing, and took off the edge of the sense
+of conceit. Besides, the palace was, to London eyes at least, so
+little to boast of, with the narrow little box of a wooden porch,
+the odd, one-sided vestibule, and the tiny anteroom with the worn
+carpet; but the drawing-room, in spite of George IV furniture, was
+really pretty, with French windows opening on a well-mown lawn, and
+fresh importations of knick-knacks, and vases of wild flowers, which
+made it look inhabited and pleasant. There was no one there, and
+the young lady proceeded to fetch her mother; and the unguarded
+voice was caught by Bessie's quick ears from the window.
+
+'Here are Admiral and Mrs. Merrifield, and one daughter. Come
+along, little mammy! Worthy, homely old folks--just in your line.'
+
+To Bessie's relief, she perceived that this was wholly unheard by
+her father and mother. And there was no withstanding the eager,
+happy, shy looks of the mother, whose whole face betrayed that after
+many storms she had come into a haven of peace, and that she was
+proud to owe it to her daughter.
+
+A few words showed that mother and daughter were absolutely
+enchanted with Stokesley, their own situation, and one another--the
+young lady evidently all the more because she perceived so much to
+be done.
+
+'Everything wants improving. It is so choked up,' she said, 'one
+wants to let in the light.'
+
+'There are a good many trees,' said the Admiral, while Bessie
+suspected that she meant figuratively as well as literally; and as
+the damsel was evidently burning to be out at her clearing
+operations again, and had never parted with her axe, the Admiral
+offered to go with her and tell her about the trees, for, as he
+observed, she could hardly judge of those not yet out in leaf.
+
+She accepted him, though Bessie shrewdly suspected that the advice
+would be little heeded, and, not fancying the wet grass and
+branches, nor the demolition of old friends, she did not follow the
+pair, but effaced herself, and listened with much interest to the
+two mothers, who sat on the sofa with their heads together. Either
+Mrs. Merrifield was wonderful in inspiring confidence, or it was
+only too delightful to Mrs. Arthuret to find a listener of her own
+standing to whom to pour forth her full heart of thankfulness and
+delight in her daughter. 'Oh, it is too much!' occurred so often in
+her talk that, if it had not been said with liquid eyes, choking
+voice, and hands clasped in devout gratitude, it would have been
+tedious; but Mrs. Merrifield thoroughly went along with it, and was
+deeply touched.
+
+The whole story, as it became known, partly in these confidences,
+partly afterwards, was this. The good lady, who had struck the
+family at first as a somewhat elderly mother for so young a
+daughter, had been for many years a governess, engaged all the time
+to a curate, who only obtained a small district incumbency in a
+town, after wear and tear, waiting and anxiety, had so exhausted him
+that the second winter brought on bronchitis, and he scarcely lived
+to see his little daughter, Arthurine. The mother had struggled on
+upon a pittance eked out with such music teaching as she could
+procure, with her little girl for her sole care, joy, and pride--a
+child who, as she declared, had never given her one moment's pang or
+uneasiness.
+
+'Poor mamma, could she say that of any one of her nine?' thought
+Bessie; and Mrs. Merrifield made no such attempt.
+
+Arthurine had brought home all prizes, all distinctions at the High
+School, but--here was the only disappointment of her life--a low
+fever had prevented her trying for a scholarship at Girton. In
+consideration, however, of her great abilities and high qualities,
+as well as out of the great kindness of the committee, she had been
+made an assistant to one of the class mistresses, and had worked on
+with her own studies, till the wonderful tidings came of the
+inheritance that had fallen to her quite unexpectedly; for since her
+husband's death Mrs. Arthuret had known nothing of his family, and
+while he was alive there were too many between him and the
+succession for the chance to occur to him as possible. The relief
+and blessing were more than the good lady could utter. All things
+are comparative, and to one whose assured income had been 70 pounds
+a year, 800 pounds was unbounded wealth; to one who had spent her
+life in schoolrooms and lodgings, the Gap was a lordly demesne.
+
+'And what do you think was the first thing my sweet child said?'
+added Mrs. Arthuret, with her eyes glittering through tears.
+'Mammy, you shall never hear the scales again, and you shall have
+the best Mocha coffee every day of your life.'
+
+Bessie felt that after this she must like the sweet child, though
+sweetness did not seem to her the predominant feature in Arthurine.
+
+After the pathos to which she had listened there was somewhat of a
+comedy to come, for the ladies had spent the autumn abroad, and had
+seen and enjoyed much. 'It was a perfect feast to see how Arthurine
+entered into it all,' said the mother. 'She was never at a loss,
+and explained it all to me. Besides, perhaps you have seen her
+article?'
+
+'I beg your pardon.'
+
+'Her article in the KENSINGTON. It attracted a great deal of
+attention, and she has had many compliments.'
+
+'Oh! the KENSINGTON MAGAZINE,' said Mrs. Merrifield, rather
+uneasily, for she was as anxious that Bessie should not be suspected
+of writing in the said periodical as the other mother was that
+Arthurine should have the fame of her contributions.
+
+'Do you take it?' asked Mrs. Arthuret, 'for we should be very glad
+to lend it to you.'
+
+A whole pile was on the table, and Mrs. Merrifield looked at them
+with feeble thanks and an odd sort of conscious dread, though she
+could with perfect truth have denied either 'taking it' or reading
+it.
+
+Bessie came to her relief. 'Thank you,' she said; 'we do; some of
+us have it. Is your daughter's article signed A. A., and doesn't it
+describe a boarding-house on the Italian lakes? I thought it very
+clever and amusing.'
+
+Mrs. Arthuret's face lighted up. 'Oh yes, my dear,' slipped out in
+her delight. 'And do you know, it all came of her letter to one of
+the High School ladies, who is sister to the sub-editor, such a
+clever, superior girl! She read it to the headmistress and all, and
+they agreed that it was too good to be lost, and Arthurine copied it
+out and added to it, and he--Mr. Jarrett--said it was just what he
+wanted--so full of information and liveliness--and she is writing
+some more for him.'
+
+Mrs. Merrifield was rather shocked, but she felt that she herself
+was in a glass house, was, in fact, keeping a literary daughter, so
+she only committed herself to, 'She is very young.'
+
+'Only one-and-twenty,' returned Mrs. Arthuret triumphantly; 'but
+then she has had such advantages, and made such use of them.
+Everything seems to come at once, though, perhaps, it is unthankful
+to say so. Of course, it is no object now, but I could not help
+thinking what it would have been to us to have discovered this
+talent of hers at the time when we could hardly make both ends
+meet.'
+
+'She will find plenty of use for it,' said Mrs. Merrifield, who, as
+the wife of a country squire and the mother of nine children, did
+not find it too easy to make her ends meet upon a larger income.
+
+'Oh yes! indeed she will, the generous child. She is full of plans
+for the regeneration of the village.'
+
+Poor Mrs. Merrifield! this was quite too much for her. She thought
+it irreverent to apply the word in any save an ecclesiastical sense;
+nor did she at all desire to have the parish, which was considered
+to be admirably worked by the constituted authorities,
+'regenerated,' whatever that might mean, by a young lady of one-and-
+twenty. She rose up and observed to her daughter that she saw papa
+out upon the lawn, and she thought it was time to go home.
+
+Mrs. Arthuret came out with them, and found what Bessie could only
+regard as a scene of desolation. Though gentlemen, as a rule, have
+no mercy on trees, and ladies are equally inclined to cry, 'Woodman,
+spare that tree,' the rule was reversed, for Miss Arthuret was
+cutting, and ordering cutting all round her ruthlessly with
+something of the pleasure of a child in breaking a new toy to prove
+that it is his own, scarcely listening when the Admiral told her
+what the trees were, and how beautiful in their season; while even
+as to the evergreens, she did not know a yew from a cedar, and
+declared that she must get rid of this horrid old laurustinus, while
+she lopped away at a Portugal laurel. Her one idea seemed to be
+that it was very unwholesome to live in a house surrounded with
+trees; and the united influence of the Merrifields, working on her
+mother by representing what would be the absence of shade in a few
+months' time, barely availed to save the life of the big cedar;
+while the great rhododendron, wont to present a mountain of shining
+leaves and pale purple blossoms every summer, was hewn down without
+remorse as an awful old laurel, and left a desolate brown patch in
+its stead.
+
+'Is it an emblem,' thought Bessie, 'of what she would like to do to
+all of us poor old obstructions?'
+
+After all, Mrs. Merrifield could not help liking the gentle mother,
+by force of sympathy; and the Admiral was somewhat fascinated by the
+freshness and impetuosity of the damsel, as elderly men are wont to
+be with young girls who amuse them with what they are apt to view as
+an original form of the silliness common to the whole female world
+except their own wives, and perhaps their daughters; and Bessie was
+extremely amused, and held her peace, as she had been used to do in
+London. Susan was perhaps the most annoyed and indignant. She was
+presiding over seams and button-holes the next afternoon at school,
+when the mother and daughter walked in; and the whole troop started
+to their feet and curtsied.
+
+'Don't make them stand! I hate adulation. Sit down, please.
+Where's the master?'
+
+'In the boys' school, ma'am,' said the mistress, uncomfortably
+indicating the presence of Miss Merrifield, who felt herself obliged
+to come forward and shake hands.
+
+'Oh! so you have separate schools. Is not that a needless expense?'
+
+'It has always been so,' returned Susan quietly.
+
+'Board? No? Well, no doubt you are right; but I suppose it is at a
+sacrifice of efficiency. Have you cookery classes?'
+
+'We have not apparatus, and the girls go out too early for it to be
+of much use.'
+
+'Ah, that's a mistake. Drawing?'
+
+'The boys draw.'
+
+'I shall go and see them. Not the girls? They look orderly enough;
+but are they intelligent? Well, I shall look in and examine them on
+their special subjects, if they have any. I suppose not.'
+
+'Only class. Grammar and needlework.'
+
+'I see, the old routine. Quite the village school.'
+
+'It is very nice work,' put in Mrs. Arthuret, who had been looking
+at it.
+
+'Oh yes, it always is when everything is sacrificed to it. Good-
+morning, I shall see more of you, Mrs.--ahem.'
+
+'Please, ma'am, should I tell her that she is not a school manager?'
+inquired the mistress, somewhat indignantly, when the two ladies had
+departed.
+
+'You had better ask the Vicar what to do,' responded Susan.
+
+The schoolmaster, on his side, seemed to have had so much advice and
+offers of assistance in lessons on history, geography, and physical
+science, that he had been obliged to refer her to the managers, and
+explain that till the next inspection he was bound to abide by the
+time-table.
+
+'Ah, well, I will be one of the managers another year.'
+
+So she told the Vicar, who smiled, and said, 'We must elect you.'
+
+'I am sure much ought to be done. It is mere waste to have two
+separate schools, when a master can bring the children on so much
+better in the higher subjects.'
+
+'Mrs. Merrifield and the rest of us are inclined to think that what
+stands highest of all with us is endangered by mixed schools,' said
+Mr. Doyle.
+
+'Oh!' Arthurine opened her eyes; 'but education does all _THAT_!'
+
+'Education does, but knowledge is not wisdom. Susan Merrifield's
+influence has done more for our young women than the best class
+teaching could do.'
+
+'Oh, but the Merrifields are all so BORNES and homely; they stand in
+the way of all culture.'
+
+'Indeed,' said the Vicar, who had in his pocket a very favourable
+review of MESA's new historical essay.
+
+'Surely an old-fashioned squire and Lady Bountiful and their very
+narrow daughters should not be allowed to prevent improvement,
+pauperise the place, and keep it in its old grooves.'
+
+'Well, we shall see what you think by the time you have lived here
+long enough to be eligible for--what?'
+
+'School manager, guardian of the poor!' cried Arthurine.
+
+'We shall see,' repeated the Vicar. 'Good-morning.'
+
+He asked Bessie's leave to disclose who MESA was.
+
+'Oh, don't!' she cried, 'it would spoil the fun! Besides, mamma
+would not like it, which is a better reason.'
+
+There were plenty of books, old and new, in Bessie's room, magazines
+and reviews, but they did not come about the house much, unless any
+of the Rockstone cousins or the younger generation were staying
+there, or her brother David had come for a rest of mind and body.
+Between housekeeping, gardening, parish work, and pottering, Mrs.
+Merrifield and Susan never had time for reading, except that Susan
+thought it her duty to keep something improving in hand, which
+generally lasted her six weeks on a moderate average. The Admiral
+found quite reading enough in the newspapers, pamphlets, and
+business publications; and their neighbours, the Greville family,
+were chiefly devoted to hunting and lawn tennis, so that there was
+some reason in Mrs. Arthuret's lamentation to the Vicar that dear
+Arthurine did so miss intellectual society, such as she had been
+used to with the High School mistresses--two of whom had actually
+been at Girton!
+
+'Does she not get on with Bessie Merrifield?' he asked.
+
+'Miss Bessie has a very sweet face; Arthurine did say she seemed
+well informed and more intelligent than her sister. Perhaps
+Arthurine might take her up. It would be such an advantage to the
+poor girl.'
+
+'Which?' was on Mr. Doyle's tongue, but he restrained it, and only
+observed that Bessie had lived for a good many years in London.
+
+'So I understood,' said Arthurine, 'but with an old grandmother, and
+that is quite as bad as if it was in the country; but I will see
+about it. I might get up a debating society, or one for studying
+German.'
+
+In the meantime Arthurine decided on improving and embellishing the
+parish with a drinking fountain, and meeting Bessie one afternoon in
+the village, she started the idea.
+
+'But,' said Bessie, 'there is a very good supply. Papa saw that
+good water was accessible to all the houses in the village street
+ten years ago, and the outlying ones have wells, and there's the
+brook for the cattle.'
+
+'I am sure every village should have a fountain and a trough, and I
+shall have it here instead of this dirty corner.'
+
+'Can you get the ground?'
+
+'Oh, any one would give ground for such a purpose! Whose is it?'
+
+'Mr. Grice's, at Butter End.'
+
+The next time Susan and Bessie encountered Arthurine, she began--
+
+'Can you or Admiral Merrifield do nothing with that horrid old
+Grice! Never was any one so pigheaded and stupid.'
+
+'What? He won't part with the land you want?'
+
+'No; I wrote to him and got no answer. Then I wrote again, and I
+got a peaked-hand sort of note that his wife wrote, I should think.
+"Mr. Grice presented his compliments" (compliments indeed!), "and
+had no intention of parting with any part of Spragg's portion."
+Well, then I called to represent what a benefit it would be to the
+parish and his own cattle, and what do you think the old brute
+said?--that "there was a great deal too much done for the parish
+already, and he wouldn't have no hand in setting up the labourers,
+who were quite impudent enough already." Well, I saw it was of no
+use to talk to an old wretch like that about social movements and
+equal rights, so I only put the question whether having pure water
+easily accessible would not tend to make them better behaved and
+less impudent as he called it, upon which he broke out into a
+tirade. "He didn't hold with cold water and teetotal, not he. Why,
+it had come to _THAT_--that there was no such thing as getting a
+fair day's work out of a labouring man with their temperance, and
+their lectures, and their schools, and their county councils and
+what not!" Really I had read of such people, but I hardly believed
+they still existed.'
+
+'Grice is very old, and the regular old sort of farmer,' said
+Bessie.
+
+'But could not the Admiral persuade him, or Mr. Doyle?'
+
+'Oh no,' said Susan, 'it would be of no use. He was just as bad
+about a playground for the boys, though it would have prevented
+their being troublesome elsewhere.'
+
+'Besides,' added Bessie, 'I am sure papa would say that there is no
+necessity. He had the water analysed, and it is quite good, and
+plenty of it.'
+
+'Well, I shall see what can be done.'
+
+'She thinks us as bad as old Grice,' said Susan, as they saw her
+walking away in a determined manner.
+
+The next thing that was heard was the Admiral coming in from the
+servants' hall, whither he had been summoned by 'Please, sir, James
+Hodd wishes to speak to you.'
+
+'What is this friend of yours about, Bessie?'
+
+'What friend, papa?'
+
+'Why, this Miss Arthur--what d'ye call her?' said the Admiral (who
+on the whole was much more attracted by her than were his
+daughters). 'Here's a deputation from her tenant, James Hodd, with
+"Please, sir, I wants to know if 'tis allowed to turn folks out of
+their houses as they've paid rent for reg'lar with a week's notice,
+when they pays by the year."'
+
+'You don't mean it!' exclaimed Mrs. Merrifield and Susan together.
+
+'Poor old Mrs. West,' said the mother.
+
+'And all the Tibbinses!' exclaimed Susan. 'She can't do it, can
+she, papa?'
+
+'Certainly not, without the proper notice, and so I told James, and
+that the notice she had sent down to him was so much waste-paper.'
+
+'So at least she has created a village Hampden,' said Bessie,
+'though, depend upon it, she little supposes herself to be the petty
+tyrant.'
+
+'I must go and explain to her, I suppose, to-morrow morning,' said
+the Admiral.
+
+However, he had scarcely reached his own gate before the ulstered
+form was seen rushing up to him.
+
+'Oh! Admiral Merrifield, good-morning; I was coming to ask you--'
+
+'And I was coming to you.'
+
+'Oh! Admiral, is it really so--as that impudent man told me--that
+those horrid people can't be got out of those awful tumbledown,
+unhealthy places for all that immense time?'
+
+'Surely he was not impudent to you? He was only asserting his
+right. The cottages were taken by the year, and you have no choice
+but to give six months' notice. I hope he was not disrespectful.'
+
+'Well, no--I can't say that he was, though I don't care for those
+cap-in-hand ways of your people here. But at any rate, he says he
+won't go--no, not any of them, though I offered to pay them up to
+the end of the time, and now I must put off my beautiful plans. I
+was drawing them all yesterday morning--two model cottages on each
+side, and the drinking fountain in the middle. I brought them up to
+show you. Could you get the people to move out? I would promise
+them to return after the rebuilding.'
+
+'Very nice drawings. Yes--yes--very kind intentions.'
+
+'Then can't you persuade them?'
+
+'But, my dear young lady, have you thought what is to become of them
+in the meantime?'
+
+'Why, live somewhere else! People in Smokeland were always shifting
+about.'
+
+'Yes--those poor little town tenements are generally let on short
+terms and are numerous enough. But here--where are the vacant
+cottages for your four families? Hodd with his five children,
+Tibbins with eight or nine, Mrs. West and her widow daughter and
+three children, and the Porters with a bedridden father?'
+
+'They are dreadfully overcrowded. Is there really no place?'
+
+'Probably not nearer than those trumpery new tenements at Bonchamp.
+That would be eight miles to be tramped to the men's work, and the
+Wests would lose the washing and charing that maintains them.'
+
+'Then do you think it can never be done? See how nice my plans
+are!'
+
+'Oh yes! very pretty drawings, but you don't allow much outlet.'
+
+'I thought you had allotments, and that they would do, and I mean to
+get rid of the pig-sties.'
+
+'A most unpopular proceeding, I warn you.'
+
+'There's nothing more unsanitary than a pig-sty.'
+
+'That depends on how it is kept. And may I ask, do you mean also to
+dispense with staircases?'
+
+'Oh! I forgot. But do you really mean to say that I can never
+carry out my improvements, and that these people must live all
+herded together till everybody is dead?'
+
+'Not quite that,' said the Admiral, laughing; 'but most improvements
+require patience and a little experience of the temper and habits of
+the people. There are cottages worse than these. I think two of
+them have four rooms, and the Wests and Porters do not require so
+much. If you built one or two elsewhere, and moved the people into
+them, or waited for a vacant one, you might carry out some of your
+plans--gradually.'
+
+'And my fountain?'
+
+'I am not quite sure, but I am afraid your cottages are on that
+stratum where you could not bring the water without great expense.'
+
+Arthurine controlled herself enough for a civil 'Good-morning!' but
+she shed tears as she walked home and told her pitying mother that
+she was thwarted on every side, and that nobody could comprehend
+her.
+
+The meetings for German reading were, however, contrived chiefly--
+little as Arthurine guessed it--by the influence of Bessie
+Merrifield. The two Greville girls and Mr. Doyle's sister, together
+with the doctor's young wife, two damsels from the next parish, and
+a friend or two that the Arthurets had made at Bonchamp, formed an
+imposing circle--to begin.
+
+'Oh, not on WILHELM TELL!' cried Arthurine. 'It might as well be
+the alphabet at once.'
+
+However, the difficulties in the way of books, and consideration for
+general incompetency, reduced her to WILHELM TELL, and she began
+with a lecture first on Schiller, and then upon Switzerland, and on
+the legend; but when Bessie Merrifield put in a word of such history
+and criticisms as were not in the High School Manual, she was sure
+everything else must be wrong--'Fraulein Blumenbach never said so,
+and she was an admirable German scholar.'
+
+Miss Doyle went so far as to declare she should not go again to see
+Bessie Merrifield so silenced, sitting by after the first saying
+nothing, but only with a little laugh in her eyes.
+
+'But,' said Bessie, 'it is such fun to see any person having it so
+entirely her own way--like Macaulay, so cock-sure of everything--and
+to see those Bonchamp girls--Mytton is their name--so entirely
+adoring her.'
+
+'I am sorry she has taken up with those Myttons,' said Miss Doyle.
+
+'So am I,' answered Susan.
+
+'You too, Susie!' exclaimed Bessie--'you, who never have a word to
+say against any one!'
+
+'I daresay they are very good girls,' said Susan; 'but they are--'
+
+'Underbred,' put in Miss Doyle in the pause. 'And how they
+flatter!'
+
+'I think the raptures are genuine gush,' said Bessie; 'but that is
+so much the worse for Arthurine. Is there any positive harm in the
+family beyond the second-rate tone?'
+
+'It was while you were away,' said Susan; 'but their father somehow
+behaved very ill about old Colonel Mytton's will--at least papa
+thought so, and never wished us to visit them.'
+
+'He was thought to have used unfair influence on the old gentleman,'
+said Miss Doyle; 'but the daughters are so young that probably they
+had no part in it. Only it gives a general distrust of the family;
+and the sons are certainly very undesirable young men.'
+
+'It is unlucky,' said Bessie, 'that we can do nothing but inflict a
+course of snubbing, in contrast with a course of admiration.'
+
+'I am sure I don't want to snub her,' said good-natured Susan.
+'Only when she does want to do such queer things, how can it be
+helped?'
+
+It was quite true, Mrs. and Miss Arthuret had been duly called upon
+and invited about by the neighbourhood; but it was a scanty one, and
+they had not wealth and position enough to compensate for the girl's
+self-assertion and literary pretensions. It was not a superior or
+intellectual society, and, as the Rockstone Merrifields laughingly
+declared, it was fifty years behindhand, and where Bessie
+Merrifield, for the sake of the old stock and her meek bearing of
+her success--nay, her total ignoring of her literary honours--would
+be accepted. Arthurine, half her age, and a newcomer, was disliked
+for the pretensions which her mother innocently pressed on the
+world. Simplicity and complacency were taken for arrogance, and the
+mother and daughter were kept upon formal terms of civility by all
+but the Merrifields, who were driven into discussion and opposition
+by the young lady's attempts at reformations in the parish.
+
+It was the less wonder that they made friends where their intimacy
+was sought and appreciated. There was nothing underbred about
+themselves; both were ladies ingrain, though Arthurine was abrupt
+and sometimes obtrusive, but they had not lived a life such as to
+render them sensitive to the lack of fine edges in others, and were
+quite ready to be courted by those who gave the meed of appreciation
+that both regarded as Arthurine's just portion.
+
+Mr. Mytton had been in India, and had come back to look after an old
+relation; to whom he and his wife had paid assiduous attention, and
+had been so rewarded as to excite the suspicion and displeasure of
+the rest of the family. The prize had not been a great one, and the
+prosperity of the family was further diminished by the continual
+failures of the ne'er-do-well sons, so that they had to make the
+best of the dull, respectable old house they had inherited, in the
+dull, respectable old street of the dull, respectable old town.
+Daisy and Pansy Mytton were, however, bright girls, and to them
+Arthurine Arthuret was a sort of realised dream of romance, raised
+suddenly to the pinnacle of all to which they had ever durst aspire.
+
+After meeting her at a great OMNIUM GATHERUM garden party, the
+acquaintance flourished. Arthurine was delighted to give the
+intense pleasure that the freedom of a country visit afforded to the
+sisters, and found in them the contemporaries her girl nature had
+missed.
+
+They were not stupid, though they had been poorly educated, and were
+quite willing to be instructed by her and to read all she told them.
+In fact, she was their idol, and a very gracious one. Deeply did
+they sympathise in all her sufferings from the impediments cast in
+her way at Stokesley.
+
+Indeed, the ladies there did not meet her so often on their own
+ground for some time, and were principally disturbed by reports of
+her doings at Bonchamp, where she played at cricket, and at hockey,
+gave a course of lectures on physiology, presided at a fancy-dress
+bazaar for the schools as Lady Jane Grey, and was on two or three
+committees. She travelled by preference on her tricycle, though she
+had a carriage, chiefly for the sake of her mother, who was still in
+a state of fervent admiration, even though perhaps a little worried
+at times by being hurried past her sober paces.
+
+The next shock that descended on Stokesley was that, in great
+indignation, a cousin sent the Merrifields one of those American
+magazines which are read and contributed to by a large proportion of
+English. It contained an article called 'The Bide-as-we-bes and
+parish of Stick-stodge-cum-Cadgerley,' and written with the same
+sort of clever, flippant irony as the description of the mixed
+company in the boarding-house on the Lago Maggiore.
+
+There was the parish embowered, or rather choked, in trees, the
+orderly mechanical routine, the perfect self-satisfaction of all
+parties, and their imperviousness to progress,--the two squires, one
+a fox-hunter, the other a general reposing on his laurels,--the
+school where everything was subordinated to learning to behave
+oneself lowly and reverently to all one's betters, and to do one's
+duty in that state of life to which it _HAS_ pleased Heaven to call
+one,--the horror at her tricycle, the impossibility of improvement,
+the predilection for farmyard odours, the adherence to tumbledown
+dwellings, the contempt of drinking fountains,--all had their meed
+of exaggeration not without drollery.
+
+The two ancient spinsters, daughters to the general, with their
+pudding-baskets, buttonholes, and catechisms, had their full share--
+dragooning the parish into discipline,--the younger having so far
+marched with the century as to have indited a few little tracts of
+the Goody Two-Shoes order, and therefore being mentioned by her
+friends with bated breath as something formidable, 'who writes,'
+although, when brought to the test, her cultivation was of the
+vaguest, most discursive order. Finally, there was a sketch of the
+heavy dinner party which had welcomed the strangers, and of the
+ponderous county magnates and their wives who had been invited, and
+the awe that their broad and expansive ladies expected to impress,
+and how one set talked of their babies, and the other of G.F.S.
+girls, and the gentlemen seemed to be chiefly occupied in abusing
+their M.P. and his politics. Altogether, it was given as a lesson
+to Americans of the still feudal and stationary state of country
+districts in poor old England.
+
+'What do you think of this, Bessie?' exclaimed Admiral Merrifield.
+'We seem to have got a young firebrand in the midst of us.'
+
+'Oh, papa! have you got that thing? What a pity!'
+
+'You don't mean that you have seen it before?'
+
+'Yes; one of my acquaintances in London sent it to me.'
+
+'And you kept it to yourself?'
+
+'I thought it would only vex you and mamma. Who sent it to you?'
+
+'Anne did, with all the passages marked. What a horrid little
+treacherous baggage!'
+
+'I daresay we are very tempting. For once we see ourselves as
+others see us! And you see 'tis American.'
+
+'All the worse, holding us, who have done our best to welcome her
+hospitably, up to the derision of the Yankees!'
+
+'But you won't take any notice.'
+
+'Certainly not, ridiculous little puss, except to steer as clear of
+her as possible for fear she should be taking her observations.
+"Bide as we be"; why, 'tis the best we can do. She can't pick a
+hole in your mother though, Bess. It would have been hard to have
+forgiven her that! You're not such an aged spinster.'
+
+'It is very funny, though,' said Bessie; 'just enough exaggeration
+to give it point! Here is her interview with James Hodd.'
+
+Whereat the Admiral could not help laughing heartily, and then he
+picked himself out as the general, laughed again, and said:
+'Naughty girl! Bess, I'm glad that is not your line. Little
+tracts--Goody Two-Shoes! Why, what did that paper say of your
+essay, Miss Bess? That it might stand a comparison with Helps,
+wasn't it?'
+
+'And I wish I was likely to enjoy such lasting fame as Goody Two-
+Shoes,' laughed Bessie, in a state of secret exultation at this bit
+of testimony from her father.
+
+Mrs. Merrifield, though unscathed, was much more hurt and annoyed
+than either her husband or her daughter, especially at Susan and
+Bessie being termed old maids. She _DID_ think it very ungrateful,
+and wondered how Mrs. Arthuret could have suffered such a thing to
+be done. Only the poor woman was quite foolish about her daughter--
+could have had no more authority than a cat. 'So much for modern
+education.'
+
+But it was not pleasant to see the numbers of the magazine on the
+counters at Bonchamp, and to know there were extracts in the local
+papers, and still less to be indignantly condoled with by neighbours
+who expressed their intention of 'cutting' the impertinent girl.
+They were exactly the 'old fogies' Arthurine cared for the least,
+yet whose acquaintance was the most creditable, and the home party
+at Stokesley were unanimous in entreating others to ignore the whole
+and treat the newcomers as if nothing had happened.
+
+They themselves shook hands, and exchanged casual remarks as if
+nothing were amiss, nor was the subject mentioned, except that Mrs.
+Arthuret contrived to get a private interview with Mrs. Merrifield.
+
+'Oh! dear Mrs. Merrifield, I am so grieved, and so is Arthurine. We
+were told that the Admiral was so excessively angry, and he is so
+kind. I could not bear for him to think Arthurine meant anything
+personal.'
+
+'Indeed,' said Mrs. Merrifield, rather astonished.
+
+'But is he so very angry?--for it is all a mistake.'
+
+'He laughs, and so does Bessie,' said the mother.
+
+'Laughs! Does he? But I do assure you Arthurine never meant any
+place in particular; she only intended to describe the way things go
+on in country districts, don't you understand? She was talking one
+day at the Myttons, and they were all so much amused that they
+wanted her to write it down. She read it one evening when they were
+with us, and they declared it was too good not to be published--and
+almost before she knew it, Fred Mytton's literary friend got hold of
+it and took it to the agency of this paper. But indeed, indeed, she
+never thought of its being considered personal, and is as vexed as
+possible at the way in which it has been taken up. She has every
+feeling about your kindness to us, and she was so shocked when Pansy
+Mytton told us that the Admiral was furious.'
+
+'Whoever told Miss Mytton so made a great mistake. The Admiral only
+is--is--amused--as you know gentlemen will be at young girls'
+little--little scrapes,' returned Mrs. Merrifield, longing to say
+'impertinences,' but refraining, and scarcely believing what
+nevertheless was true, that Arthurine did not know how personal she
+had been, although her mother said it all over again twice. Bessie,
+however, did believe it, from experience of resemblances where she
+had never intended direct portraiture; and when there was a somewhat
+earnest invitation to a garden party at the Gap, the Merrifields not
+only accepted for themselves, but persuaded as many of their
+neighbours as they could to countenance the poor girl. 'There is
+something solid at the bottom in spite of all the effervescence,'
+said Bessie.
+
+It was late in the year for a garden party, being on the 2d of
+October, but weather and other matters had caused delays, and the
+Indian summer had begun with warm sun and exquisite tints. 'What
+would not the maple and the liquid amber have been by this time,'
+thought the sisters, 'if they had been spared.' Some of the PETITE
+NOBLESSE, however, repented of their condescension when they saw how
+little it was appreciated. Mrs. Arthuret, indeed, was making
+herself the best hostess that a lady who had served no
+apprenticeship could be to all alike, but Arthurine or 'Atty,' as
+Daisy and Pansy were heard shouting to her--all in white flannels, a
+man all but the petticoats--seemed to be absorbed in a little court
+of the second-rate people of Bonchamp, some whom, as Mrs. Greville
+and Lady Smithson agreed, they had never expected to meet. She was
+laughing and talking eagerly, and by and by ran up to Bessie,
+exclaiming in a patronising tone--
+
+'Oh! my dear Miss Bessie, let me introduce you to Mr. Foxholm--such
+a clever literary man. He knows everybody--all about everybody and
+everything. It would be such an advantage! And he has actually
+made me give him my autograph! Only think of that!'
+
+Bessie thought of her own good luck in being anonymous, but did not
+express it, only saying, 'Autograph-hunters are a great nuisance. I
+know several people who find them so.'
+
+'Yes, he said it was one of the penalties of fame that one must
+submit to,' returned Miss Arthuret, with a delighted laugh of
+consciousness.
+
+Bessie rejoiced that none of her own people were near to see the
+patronising manner in which Arthurine introduced her to Mr. Foxholm,
+a heavily-bearded man, whose eyes she did not at all like, and who
+began by telling her that he felt as if he had crossed the Rubicon,
+and entering an Arcadia, had found a Parnassus.
+
+Bessie looked to see whether the highly-educated young lady detected
+the malaprop for the Helicon, but Arthurine was either too well-bred
+or too much exalted to notice either small slips, or even bad taste,
+and she stood smiling and blushing complacently. However, just then
+Susan hurried up. 'Bessie, you are wanted. Here's a card. The
+gentleman sent it in, and papa asked me to find you.'
+
+Bessie opened her eyes. The card belonged to the editor of one of
+the most noted magazines of the day, but one whose principles she
+did not entirely approve. What could be coming?
+
+Her father was waiting for her.
+
+'Well, Miss Bessie,' he said, laughing, 'Jane said the gentleman was
+very urgent in wanting to know when you would be in. An offer, eh?'
+
+'Perhaps it is an offer, but not of _THAT_ sort,' said Bessie, and
+she explained what the unliterary Admiral had not understood. He
+answered with a whistle.
+
+'Shall you do it, Bessie?'
+
+'I think not,' she said quietly.
+
+The editor was found waiting for her, with many apologies for
+bringing her home, and the Admiral was so delighted with his
+agreeableness as hardly to be able to tear himself away to bring
+home his wife.
+
+The offer was, as Bessie expected, of excellent terms for a serial
+story--terms that proved to her what was her own value, and in which
+she saw education for her sister Anne's eldest boy.
+
+'Of course, there would be a certain adaptation to our readers.'
+
+She knew what that meant, and there was that in her face which drew
+forth the assurance.
+
+'Of course nothing you would not wish to say would be required, but
+it would be better not to press certain subjects.'
+
+'I understand,' said Bessie. 'I doubt--'
+
+'Perhaps you will think it over.'
+
+Bessie's first thought was, 'If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, then let
+my right hand forget her cunning.' That had been the inward motto
+of her life. Her second was, 'Little Sam! David's mission room!'
+There was no necessity to answer at once, and she knew the
+periodical rather by report than by reading, so she accepted the two
+numbers that were left with her, and promised to reply in a week.
+It was a question on which to take counsel with her father, and with
+her own higher conscience and heavenly Guide.
+
+The Admiral, though not much given to reading for its own sake, and
+perhaps inclined to think ephemeral literature the more trifling
+because his little daughter was a great light there, was anything
+but a dull man, and had an excellent judgment. So Bessie, with all
+the comfort of a woman still with a wise father's head over her,
+decided to commit the matter to him. He was somewhat disappointed
+at finding her agreeable guest gone, and wished that dinner and bed
+had been offered.
+
+Mrs. Merrifield and Susan were still a good deal excited about
+Arthurine's complimentary friend, who they said seemed to belong to
+Fred Mytton, of whom some of the ladies had been telling most
+unpleasant reports, and there was much lamentation over the set into
+which their young neighbour had thrown herself.
+
+'Such a dress too!' sighed Mrs. Merrifield.
+
+'And her headmistress has just arrived,' said Susan, 'to make her
+worse than ever!'
+
+'How comes a headmistress to be running about the country at this
+time of year?' asked Bessie.
+
+'She has been very ill,' said Mrs. Merrifield, 'and they wrote to
+her to come down as soon as she could move. There was a telegram
+this morning, and she drove up in the midst of the party, and was
+taken to her room at once to rest. That was the reason Miss
+Arthuret was away so long. I thought it nice in her.'
+
+'Perhaps she will do good,' said Bessie.
+
+Dinner was just over, and the Admiral had settled down with his
+shaded lamp to read and judge of the article that Bessie had given
+him as a specimen, when in came the message, 'Mrs. Rudden wishes to
+speak to you, sir.'
+
+Mrs. Rudden was the prosperous widow who continued the business in
+the village shop, conjointly with the little farm belonging to the
+Gap property. She was a shrewd woman, had been able to do very well
+by her family, and was much esteemed, paying a rent which was a
+considerable item in the Gap means. The ladies wondered together at
+the summons. Susan hoped 'that girl' did not want to evict her, and
+Bessie suggested that a co-operative store was a more probable
+peril. Presently the Admiral came back. 'Do any of you know Miss
+Arthuret's writing?' he said.
+
+'Bessie knows it best,' said Susan.
+
+He showed a letter. 'That is hers--the signature,' said Bessie. 'I
+are not sure about the rest. Why--what does it mean?'
+
+For she read--
+
+
+'The Gap, 2D OCT.
+
+'MRS. RUDDEN,--You are requested to pay over to the bearer, Mr.
+Foxholm, fifty pounds of the rent you were about to bring me to-
+morrow.--I remain, etc.,
+
+'ARTHURINE ARTHURET.'
+
+
+'What does it mean?' asked Bessie again. 'That's just what Mrs.
+Rudden has come up to me to ask,' said the Admiral. 'This fellow
+presented it in her shop about a quarter of an hour ago. The good
+woman smelt a rat. What do you think she did? She looked at it and
+him, asked him to wait a bit, whipped out at her back door, luckily
+met the policeman starting on his rounds, bade him have an eye to
+the customer in her shop, and came off to show it to me. That young
+woman is demented enough for anything, and is quite capable of doing
+it--for some absurd scheme. But do you think it is hers, or a
+swindle?'
+
+'Didn't she say she had given her autograph?' exclaimed Susan.
+
+'And see here,' said Bessie, 'her signature is at the top of the
+sheet of note-paper--small paper. And as she always writes very
+large, it would be easy to fill up the rest, changing the first side
+over.'
+
+'I must take it up to her at once,' said the Admiral. 'Even if it
+be genuine, she may just as well see that it is a queer thing to
+have done, and not exactly the way to treat her tenants.'
+
+'It is strange too that this man should have known anything about
+Mrs. Rudden,' said Mrs. Merrifield.
+
+'Mrs. Rudden says she had a message this morning, when she had come
+up with her rent and accounts, to say that Miss Arthuret was very
+much engaged, and would be glad if she would come to-morrow! Could
+this fellow have been about then?'
+
+No one knew, but Bessie breathed the word, 'Was not that young
+Mytton there?'
+
+It was not taken up, for no one liked to pronounce the obvious
+inference. Besides, the Admiral was in haste, not thinking it well
+that Mr. Foxholm should be longer kept under surveillance in the
+shop, among the bread, bacon, cheeses, shoes, and tins of potted
+meat.
+
+He was then called for; and on his loudly exclaiming that he had
+been very strangely treated, the Admiral quietly told him that Mrs.
+Rudden had been disturbed at so unusual a way of demanding her rent,
+and had come for advice on the subject; and to satisfy their minds
+that all was right, Mr. Foxholm would, no doubt, consent to wait
+till the young lady could be referred to. Mr. Foxholm did very
+decidedly object; he said no one had any right to detain him when
+the lady's signature was plain, and Admiral Merrifield had seen him
+in her society, and he began an account of the philanthropical
+purpose for which he said the money had been intended, but he was
+cut short.
+
+'You must be aware,' said the Admiral, 'that this is not an ordinary
+way of acting, and whatever be your purpose, Mrs. Rudden must
+ascertain your authority more fully before paying over so large a
+sum. I give you your choice, therefore, either of accompanying us
+to the Gap, or of remaining in Mrs. Rudden's parlour till we
+return.'
+
+The furtive eye glanced about, and the parlour was chosen. Did he
+know that the policeman stationed himself in the shop outside?
+
+The dinner at the Gap was over, and Miss Elmore, the headmistress,
+was established in an arm-chair, listening to the outpouring of her
+former pupil and the happy mother about all the felicities and
+glories of their present life, the only drawback being the dullness
+and obstructiveness of the immediate neighbours. 'I thought Miss
+Merrifield was your neighbour--Mesa?'
+
+'Oh no--quite impossible! These are Merrifields, but the daughters
+are two regular old goodies, wrapped up in Sunday schools and penny
+clubs.'
+
+'Well, that is odd! The editor of the --- came down in the train
+with me, and said he was going to see Mesa--Miss Elizabeth
+Merrifield.'
+
+'I do think it is very unfair,' began Arthurine; but at that moment
+the door-bell rang. 'How strange at this time!'
+
+'Oh! perhaps the editor is coming here!' cried Arthurine. 'Did you
+tell him _I_ lived here, Miss Elmore?'
+
+'Admiral Merrifield,' announced the parlour-maid.
+
+He had resolved not to summon the young lady in private, as he
+thought there was more chance of common-sense in the mother.
+
+'You are surprised to see me at this time,' he said; 'but Mrs.
+Rudden is perplexed by a communication from you.'
+
+'Mrs. Rudden!' exclaimed Arthurine. 'Why, I only sent her word that
+I was too busy to go through her accounts to-day, and asked her to
+come to-morrow. That isn't against the laws of the Medes and
+Persians, is it?'
+
+'Then did you send her this letter?'
+
+'I?' said Arthurine, staring at it, with her eyes at their fullest
+extent. 'I! fifty pounds! Mr. Foxholm! What does it mean?'
+
+'Then you never wrote that order?'
+
+'No! no! How should I?'
+
+'That is not your writing?'
+
+'No, not that.'
+
+'Look at the signature.'
+
+'Oh! oh! oh!'--and she dropped into a chair. 'The horrible man!
+That's the autograph I gave him this afternoon.'
+
+'You are sure?'
+
+'Quite; for my pen spluttered in the slope of the A. Has she gone
+and given it to him?'
+
+'No. She brought it to me, and set the policeman to watch him.'
+
+'What a dear, good woman! Shall you send him to prison, Admiral
+Merrifield? What can be done to him?' said Arthurine, not looking
+at all as if she would like to abrogate capital punishment.
+
+'Well, I had been thinking,' said the Admiral. 'You see he did not
+get it, and though I could commit him for endeavouring to obtain
+money on false pretences, I very much doubt whether the prosecution
+would not be worse for you than for him.'
+
+'That is very kind of you, Admiral!' exclaimed the mother. 'It
+would be terribly awkward for dear Arthurine to stand up and say he
+cajoled her into giving her autograph. It might always be
+remembered against her!'
+
+'Exactly so,' said the Admiral; 'and perhaps there may be another
+reason for not pushing the matter to extremity. The man is a
+stranger here, I believe.'
+
+'He has been staying at Bonchamp,' said Mrs. Arthuret. 'It was
+young Mr. Mytton who brought him over this afternoon.'
+
+'Just so. And how did he come to be aware that Mrs. Rudden owed you
+any money?'
+
+There was a pause, then Arthurine broke out--
+
+'Oh, Daisy and Pansy can't have done anything; but they were all
+three there helping me mark the tennis-courts when the message
+came.'
+
+'Including the brother?'
+
+'Yes.'
+
+'He is a bad fellow, and I would not wish to shield him in any way,
+but that such a plot should be proved against him would be a
+grievous disgrace to the family.'
+
+'I can't ever feel about them as I have done,' said Arthurine, in
+tears. 'Daisy and Pansy said so much about poor dear Fred, and
+every one being hard on him, and his feeling my good influence--and
+all the time he was plotting this against me, with my chalk in his
+hand marking my grass,' and she broke down in child-like sobs.
+
+The mortification was terrible of finding her pinnacle of fame the
+mere delusion of a sharper, and the shock of shame seemed to
+overwhelm the poor girl.
+
+'Oh, Admiral!' cried her mother, 'she cannot bear it. I know you
+will be good, and manage it so as to distress her as little as
+possible, and not have any publicity.'
+
+'1 will do my best,' said the Admiral. 'I will try and get a
+confession out of him, and send him off, though it is a pity that
+such a fellow should get off scot-free.'
+
+'Oh, never mind, so that my poor Arthurine's name is not brought
+forward! We can never be grateful enough for your kindness.'
+
+It was so late that the Admiral did not come back that night, and
+the ladies were at breakfast when he appeared again. Foxholm had,
+on finding there was no escape, confessed the fraud, but threw most
+of the blame on Fred Mytton, who was in debt, not only to him but to
+others. Foxholm himself seemed to have been an adventurer, who
+preyed on young men at the billiard-table, and had there been in
+some collusion with Fred, though the Admiral had little doubt as to
+which was the greater villain. He had been introduced to the Mytton
+family, who were not particular; indeed, Mr. Mytton had no objection
+to increasing his pocket-money by a little wary, profitable betting
+and gambling on his own account. However, the associates had no
+doubt brought Bonchamp to the point of being too hot to hold them,
+and Fred, overhearing the arrangement with Mrs. Rudden, had
+communicated it to him--whence the autograph trick. Foxholm was
+gone, and in the course of the day it was known that young Mytton
+was also gone.
+
+The Admiral promised that none of his family should mention the
+matter, and that he would do his best to silence Mrs. Rudden, who
+for that matter probably believed the whole letter to have been
+forged, and would not enter into the enthusiasm of autographs.
+
+'Oh, thank you! It is so kind,' said the mother; and Arthurine, who
+looked as if she had not slept all night, and was ready to burst
+into tears on the least provocation, murmured something to the same
+effect, which the Admiral answered, half hearing--
+
+'Never mind, my dear, you will be wiser another time; young people
+will be inexperienced.'
+
+'Is that the cruellest cut of all?' thought Miss Elmore, as she
+beheld her former pupil scarcely restraining herself enough for the
+farewell civilities, and then breaking down into a flood of tears.
+
+Her mother hovered over her with, 'What is it? Oh! my dear child,
+you need not be afraid; he is so kind!'
+
+'I hate people to be kind, that is the very thing,' said Arthurine,--
+'Oh! Miss Elmore, don't go!--while he is meaning all the time that
+I have made such a fool of myself! And he is glad, I know he is, he
+and his hateful, stupid, stolid daughters.'
+
+'My dear! my dear!' exclaimed her mother.
+
+'Well, haven't they done nothing but thwart me, whatever I wanted to
+do, and aren't they triumphing now in this abominable man's
+treachery, and my being taken in? I shall go away, and sell the
+place, and never come back again.'
+
+'I should think that was the most decided way of confessing a
+failure,' said Miss Elmore; and as Mrs. Arthuret was called away by
+the imperative summons to the butcher, she spoke more freely. 'Your
+mother looks terrified at being so routed up again.'
+
+'Oh, mother will be happy anywhere; and how can I stay with these
+stick-in-the-mud people, just like what I have read about?'
+
+'And have gibbeted! Really, Arthurine, I should call them very
+generous!'
+
+'It is their thick skins,' muttered she; 'at least so the Myttons
+said; but, indeed, I did not mean to be so personal as it was
+thought.'
+
+'But tell me. Why did you not get on with Mesa?'
+
+'That was a regular take-in. Not to tell one! When I began my
+German class, she put me out with useless explanations.'
+
+'What kind of explanations?'
+
+'Oh, about the Swiss being under the Empire, or something, and she
+_WOULD_ go into parallels of Saxon words, and English poetry, such
+as our Fraulein never troubled us with. But I showed her it would
+not _DO_.'
+
+'So instead of learning what you had not sense to appreciate, you
+wanted to teach your old routine.'
+
+'But, indeed, she could not pronounce at all well, and she looked
+ever so long at difficult bits, and then she even tried to correct
+_ME_.'
+
+'Did she go on coming after you silenced her?'
+
+'Yes, and never tried to interfere again.'
+
+'I am afraid she drew her own conclusions about High Schools.'
+
+'Oh, Miss Elmore, you used to like us to be thorough and not
+discursive, and how could anybody brought up in this stultifying
+place, ages ago, know what will tell in an exam?'
+
+'Oh! Arthurine. How often have I told you that examinations are not
+education. I never saw so plainly that I have not educated you.'
+
+'I wanted to prepare Daisy and Pansy, and they didn't care about her
+prosing when we wanted to get on with the book.'
+
+'Which would have been the best education for them, poor girls, an
+example of courtesy, patience, and humility, or _GETTING ON_, as you
+call it?'
+
+'Oh! Miss Elmore, you are very hard on me, when I have just been so
+cruelly disappointed.'
+
+'My dear child, it is only because I want you to discover why you
+have been so cruelly disappointed.'
+
+It would be wearisome to relate all that Arthurine finally told of
+those thwartings by the Merrifields which had thrown her into the
+arms of the Mytton family, nor how Miss Elmore brought her to
+confess that each scheme was either impracticable, or might have
+been injurious, and that a little grain of humility might have made
+her see things very differently. Yet it must be owned that the good
+lady felt rather like bending a bow that would spring back again.
+
+Bessie Merrifield had, like her family, been inclined to conclude
+that all was the fault of High Schools. She did not see Miss Elmore
+at first, thinking the Arthurets not likely to wish to be intruded
+upon, and having besides a good deal to think over. For she and her
+father had talked over the proposal, which pecuniarily was so
+tempting, and he, without prejudice, but on principle, had concurred
+with her in deciding that it was her duty not to add one touch of
+attractiveness to aught which supported a cause contrary to their
+strongest convictions. Her father's approbation was the crowning
+pleasure, though she felt the external testimony to her abilities,
+quite enough to sympathise with such intoxication of success as to
+make any compliment seem possible. Miss Elmore had one long talk
+with her, beginning by saying--
+
+'I wish to consult you about my poor, foolish child.'
+
+'Ah! I am afraid we have not helped her enough!' said Bessie. 'If
+we had been more sympathetic she might have trusted us more.'
+
+'Then you are good enough to believe that it was not all folly and
+presumption.'
+
+'I am sure it was not,' said Bessie. 'None of us ever thought it
+more than inexperience and a little exaltation, with immense good
+intention at the bottom. Of course, our dear old habits did look
+dull, coming from life and activity, and we rather resented her
+contempt for them; but I am quite sure that after a little while,
+every one will forget all about this, or only recollect it as one
+does a girlish scrape.'
+
+'Yes. To suppose all the neighbourhood occupied in laughing at her
+is only another phase of self-importance. You see, the poor child
+necessarily lived in a very narrow world, where examinations came,
+whatever I could do, to seem everything, and she only knew things
+beyond by books. She had success enough there to turn her head, and
+not going to Cambridge, never had fair measure of her abilities.
+Then came prosperity--'
+
+'Quite enough to upset any one's balance,' said Bessie. 'In fact,
+only a very sober, not to say stolid, nature would have stood it.'
+
+'Poor things! They were so happy--so open-hearted. I did long to
+caution them. "Pull cup, steady hand."'
+
+'It will all come right now,' said Bessie. 'Mrs Arthuret spoke of
+their going away for the winter; I do not think it will be a bad
+plan, for then we can start quite fresh with them; and the intimacy
+with the Myttons will be broken, though I am sorry for the poor
+girls. They have no harm in them, and Arthurine was doing them
+good.'
+
+'A whisper to you, Miss Merrifield--they are going back with me, to
+be prepared for governesses at Arthurine's expense. It is the only
+thing for them in the crash that young man has brought on the
+family.'
+
+'Dear, good Arthurine! She only needed to learn how to carry her
+cup.'
+
+
+
+MRS. BATSEYES
+
+
+
+I. FATHER AND DAUGHTER
+
+
+SCENE.--THE DRAWING-ROOM OF DARKGLADE VICARAGE. MR. AVELAND, AN
+ELDERLY CLERGYMAN. MRS. MOLDWARP, WIDOW ON THE VERGE OF MIDDLE AGE.
+
+MR. A. So, my dear good child, you will come back to me, and do
+what you can for the lonely old man!
+
+MRS. M. I know nothing can really make up--
+
+MR. A. Ah! my dear, you know only too well by your own experience,
+but if any one could, it would be you. And at least you will let
+nothing drop in the parish work. You and Cicely together will be
+able to take that up when Euphrasia is gone too.
+
+MRS. M. It will be delightful to me to come back to it! You know I
+was to the manner born. Nothing seems to be so natural!
+
+MR. A. I am only afraid you are giving up a great deal. I don't
+know that I could accept it--except for the parish and these poor
+children.
+
+MRS. M. Now, dear father, you are not to talk so! Is not this my
+home, my first home, and though it has lost its very dearest centre,
+what can be so dear to me when my own has long been broken?
+
+MR. A. But the young folks--young Londoners are apt to feel such a
+change a great sacrifice.
+
+MRS. M. Lucius always longs to be here whenever he is on shore, and
+Cicely. Oh! it will be so good for Cicely to be with you, dear
+father. I know some day you will be able to enjoy her. And I do
+look forward to having her to myself, as I have never had before
+since she was a little creature in the nursery. It is so fortunate
+that I had not closed the treaty for the house at Brompton, so that
+I can come whenever Phrasie decides on leaving you.
+
+MR. A. And she must not be long delayed. She and Holland have
+waited for each other quite long enough. Your dear mother begged
+that there should be no delay; and neither you nor I, Mary, could
+bear to shorten the time of happiness together that may be granted
+them. She will have no scruple about leaving George's children now
+you and Cicely will see to them--poor little things!
+
+MRS. M. Cicely has always longed for a sphere, and between the
+children and the parish she will be quite happy. You need have no
+fears for her, father!
+
+
+II. BROTHER AND SISTER
+
+
+SCENE--THE BROAD WALK UNDER THE VICARAGE GARDEN WALL, LUCIUS
+MOLDWARP, A LIEUTENANT IN THE NAVY. CICELY MOLDWARP.
+
+C. Isn't it disgusting, Lucius?
+
+L. What is?
+
+C. This proceeding of the mother's.
+
+L. Do you mean coming down here to live?
+
+C. Of course I do! Without so much as consulting me.
+
+L. The captain does not ordinarily consult the crew.
+
+C. Bosh, Lucius. That habit of discipline makes you quite stupid.
+Now, haven't I the right to be consulted?
+
+L. (A WHISTLE)
+
+C. (A STAMP)
+
+L. Pray, what would your sagacity have proposed for grandpapa and
+the small children?
+
+C. (HESITATION.)
+
+L. (A SLIGHT LAUGH.)
+
+C. I do think it is quite shocking of Aunt Phrasie to be in such
+haste to marry!
+
+L. After eleven years--eh? or twelve, is it?
+
+C. I mean of course so soon after her mother's death.
+
+L. You know dear granny herself begged that the wedding might not
+be put off on that account.
+
+C. Mr. Holland might come and live here.
+
+L. Perhaps he thinks he has a right to be consulted.
+
+C. Then she might take those children away with her.
+
+L. Leaving grandpapa alone.
+
+C. The Curate might live in the house.
+
+L. Lively and satisfactory to mother. Come now, Cis, why are you
+so dead set against this plan? It is only because your august
+consent has not been asked?
+
+C. I should have minded less if the pros and cons had been set
+before me, instead of being treated like a chattel; but I do not
+think my education should be sacrificed.
+
+L. Not educated! At twenty!
+
+C. Don't be so silly, Lucius. This is the time when the most
+important brain work is to be done. There are the art classes at
+the Slade, and the lectures I am down for, and the Senior Cambridge
+and cookery and nursing. Yes, I see you make faces! You sailors
+think women are only meant for you to play with when you are on
+shore; but I must work.
+
+L. Work enough here!
+
+C. Goody-goody! Babies, school-children, and old women! I'm meant
+for something beyond that, or what are intellect and artistic
+faculty given for?
+
+L. You could read for Cambridge exam. all the same. Here are tons
+of books, and grandpapa would help you. Why not? He is not a bit
+of a dull man. He is up to everything.
+
+C. So far as _YOU_ know. Oh no, he is not naturally dense. He is
+a dear old man; but you know clerics of his date, especially when
+they have vegetated in the country, never know anything but the
+Fathers and church architecture.
+
+L. Hum! I should have said the old gentleman had a pretty good
+intelligence of his own. I know he set me on my legs for my exam.
+as none of the masters at old Coade's ever did. What has made you
+take such a mortal aversion to the place? We used to think it next
+door to Paradise when we were small children.
+
+C. Of course, when country freedom was everything, and we knew
+nothing of rational intercourse; but when all the most intellectual
+houses are open to me, it is intolerable to be buried alive here
+with nothing to talk of but clerical shop, and nothing to do but
+read to old women, and cram the unfortunate children with the
+catechism. And mother and Aunt Phrasie expect me to be in raptures!
+
+L. Whereas you seem to be meditating a demonstration.
+
+C. I shall tell mother that if she must needs come down to wallow
+in her native goodiness, it is due to let me board in Kensington
+till my courses are completed.
+
+L. Since she won't be an unnatural daughter, she is to leave the
+part to you. Well, I suppose it will be for the general peace.
+
+C. Now, Lucius, you speak out of the remains of the old tyrannical
+barbarism, when the daughters were nothing but goods and chattels.
+
+L. Goods, yes, indeed, and betters.
+
+C. No doubt the men liked it! But won't you stand by me, Lucius?
+You say it would be for the general peace.
+
+L. I only said you would be better away than making yourself
+obnoxious. I can't think how you can have the heart, Cis, such a
+pet as you always were.
+
+C. I would not hurt their feelings for the world, only my
+improvement is too important to be sacrificed, and if no one else
+will stand up for me, I must stand up for myself.
+
+
+III. BRIDE-ELECT AND FATHER
+
+
+SCENE.--THREE WEEKS LATER. BREAKFAST TABLE AT DARKGLADE VICARAGE,
+MR. AVELAND AND EUPHRASIA READING THEIR LETTERS. THREE LITTLE
+CHILDREN EATING BREAD AND MILK.
+
+E. There! Mary has got the house at Brompton off her hands and can
+come for good on the 11th. That is the greatest possible comfort.
+She wants to bring her piano; it has a better tone than ours.
+
+MR. A. Certainly! Little Miss Hilda there will soon be strumming
+her scales on the old one, and Mary and Cis will send me to sleep in
+the evening with hers.
+
+E. Oh!
+
+MR. A. Why, Phrasie, what's the matter?
+
+E. This is a blow! Cicely is only coming to be bridesmaid, and
+then going back to board at Kensington and go on with her studies.
+
+MR. A. To board? All alone?
+
+E. Oh! that's the way with young ladies!
+
+MR. A. Mary cannot have consented.
+
+E. Have you done, little folks? Then say grace, Hilda, and run out
+till the lesson bell rings. Yes, poor Mary, I am afraid she thinks
+all that Cecilia decrees is right; or if she does not naturally
+believe so, she is made to.
+
+MR. A. Come, come, Phrasie, I always thought Mary a model mother.
+
+E. So did I, and so she was while the children were small, except
+that they were more free and easy with her than was the way in our
+time. And I think she is all that is to be desired to her son; but
+when last I was in London, I cannot say I was satisfied, I thought
+Cissy had got beyond her.
+
+MR. A. For want of a father?
+
+E. Not entirely. You know I could not think Charles Moldwarp quite
+worthy of Mary, though she never saw it.
+
+MR. A. Latterly we saw so little of him! He liked to spend his
+holiday in mountain climbing, and Mary made her visits here alone.
+
+E. Exactly so. Sympathy faded out between them, though she, poor
+dear, never betrayed it, if she realised it, which I doubt. And as
+Cissy took after her father, this may have weakened her allegiance
+to her mother. At any rate, as soon as she was thought to have
+outgrown her mother's teaching, those greater things, mother's
+influence and culture, were not thought of, and she went to school
+and had her companions and interests apart; while Mary, good soul,
+filled up the vacancy with good works, and if once you get into the
+swing of that sort of thing in town, there's no end to the demands
+upon your time. I don't think she ever let them bore her husband.
+He was out all day, and didn't want her; but I am afraid they do
+bore her daughter, and absorb attention and time, so as to hinder
+full companionship, till Cissy has grown up an extraneous creature,
+not formed by her. Mary thinks, in her humility, dear old thing,
+that it is a much superior creature; but I don't like it as well as
+the old sort.
+
+MR. A. The old barndoor hen hatched her eggs and bred up her chicks
+better than the fine prize fowl. Eh?
+
+E. So that incubator-hatched chicks, with a hot-bed instead of a
+hovering wing and tender cluck-cluck, are the fashion! I was in
+hopes that coming down to the old coop, with no professors to run
+after, and you to lead them both, all would right itself, but it
+seems my young lady wants more improving.
+
+MR. A. Well, my dear, it must be mortifying to a clever girl to
+have her studies cut short.
+
+E. Certainly; but in my time we held that studies were subordinate
+to duties; and that there were other kinds of improvement than in
+model-drawing and all the rest of it.
+
+MR. A. It will not be for long, and Cissy will find the people, or
+has found them, and Mary will accept them.
+
+E. If her native instinct objects, she will be cajoled or bullied
+into seeing with Cissy's eyes.
+
+MR. A. Well, Euphrasia, my dear, let us trust that people are the
+best judges of their own affairs, and remember that the world has
+got beyond us. Mary was always a sensible, right-minded girl, and I
+cannot believe her as blind as you would make out.
+
+E. At any rate, dear papa, you never have to say to her as to me,
+'Judge not, that ye be not judged.'
+
+
+IV. MOTHER AND DAUGHTER
+
+
+SCENE.--DARKGLADE VICARAGE DRAWING-ROOM.
+
+MRS. M. So, my dear, you think it impossible to be happy here?
+
+C. Little Mamsey, why _WILL_ you never understand? It is not a
+question of happiness, but of duty to myself.
+
+MRS. M. And that is--
+
+C. Not to throw away all my chances of self-improvement by
+burrowing into this hole.
+
+MRS. M. Oh, my dear, I don't like to hear you call it so.
+
+C. Yes, I know you care for it. You were bred up here, and know
+nothing better, poor old Mamsey, and pottering suits you exactly;
+but it is too much to ask me to sacrifice my wider fields of culture
+and usefulness.
+
+MRS. M. Grandpapa would enjoy nothing so much as reading with you.
+He said so.
+
+C. Oxford half a century old and wearing off ever since. No, I
+thank you! Besides, it is not only physical science, but art.
+
+MRS. M. There's the School of Art at Holbrook.
+
+C. My dear mother, I am far past country schools of art!
+
+MRS. M. It is not as if you intended to take up art as a
+profession.
+
+C. Mother! will nothing ever make you understand? Nothing ought to
+be half-studied, merely to pass away the time as an _ACCOMPLISHMENT_
+(UTTERED WITH INFINITE SCORN, ACCENTUATED ON THE SECOND SYLLABLE),
+just to do things to sell at bazaars. No! Art with me means work
+worthy of exhibition, with a market-price, and founded on a thorough
+knowledge of the secrets of the human frame.
+
+MRS. M. Those classes! I don't like all I hear of them, or their
+attendants.
+
+C. If you _WILL_ listen to all the gossip of all the old women of
+both sexes, I can't help it! Can't you trust to innocence and
+earnestness?
+
+MRS. M. I wish it was the Art College at Wimbledon. Then I should
+be quite comfortable about you.
+
+C. Have not we gone into all that already? You know I must go to
+the fountain-head, and not be put off with mere feminine, lady-like
+studies! Pah! Besides, in lodgings I can be useful. I shall give
+two evenings in the week to the East End, to the Society for the
+Diversion and Civilisation of the Poor.
+
+MRS. M. Surely there is room for usefulness here! Think of the
+children! And for diversion and civilisation, how glad we should be
+of your fresh life and brightness among poor people!
+
+C. Such poor! Why, even if grandpapa would let me give a lecture
+on geology, or a reading from Dickens, old Prudence Blake would go
+about saying it hadn't done nothing for her poor soul.
+
+MRS. M. Grandpapa wanted last winter to have penny readings, only
+there was nobody to do it. He would give you full scope for that,
+or for lectures.
+
+C. Yes; about vaccination and fresh air! or a reading of John
+Gilpin or the Pied Piper. Mamsey, you know a model parish stifles
+me. I can't stand your prim school-children, drilled in the
+Catechism, and your old women who get out the Bible and the clean
+apron when they see you a quarter of a mile off. Free air and open
+minds for me! No, I won't have you sighing, mother. You have
+returned to your native element, and you must let me return to mine.
+
+MRS. M. Very well, my dear. Perhaps a year or two of study in town
+may be due to you, though this is a great disappointment to
+grandpapa and me. I know Mrs. Payne will make a pleasant and safe
+home for you, if you must be boarded.
+
+C. Too late for that. I always meant to be with Betty Thurston at
+Mrs. Kaye's. In fact, I have written to engage my room. So there's
+an end of it. Come, come, don't look vexed. It is better to make
+an end of it at once. There are things that one must decide for
+oneself.
+
+
+V. TWO FRIENDS
+
+
+SCENE--OVER THE FIRE IN MRS. KAYE'S BOARDING-HOUSE. CECILIA
+MOLDWARP AND BETTY THURSTON.
+
+C. So I settled the matter at once.
+
+B. Quite right, too, Cis.
+
+C. The dear woman was torn every way. Grandpapa and Aunt Phrasie
+wanted her to pin me down into the native stodge; and Lucius, like a
+true man, went in for subjection: so there was nothing for it but
+to put my foot down. And though little mother might moan a little
+to me, I knew she would stand up stoutly for me to all the rest, and
+vindicate my liberty.
+
+B. To keep you down there. Such a place is very well to breathe in
+occasionally, like a whale; but as to living in them--
+
+C. Just hear how they spend the day. First, 7.30, prayers in
+church. The dear old man has hammered on at them these forty years,
+with a congregation averaging 4 to 2.5.
+
+B. You are surely not expected to attend at that primitive
+Christian hour! Cruelty to animals!
+
+C. If I don't, the absence of such an important unit hurts folks'
+feelings, and I am driven to the fabrication of excuses. After
+breakfast, whatever is available trots off to din the Catechism and
+Genesis into the school-children's heads--the only things my
+respected forefather cares about teaching them. Of course back
+again to the children's lessons.
+
+B. What children?
+
+C. Didn't I explain? Three Indian orphans of my uncle's, turned
+upon my grandfather--jolly little kids enough, as long as one hasn't
+to teach them.
+
+B. Are governesses unknown in those parts?
+
+C. Too costly; and besides, my mother was designed by nature for a
+nursery-governess. She has taught the two elder ones to be
+wonderfully good when she is called off. 'The butcher, ma'am'; or,
+'Mrs. Tyler wants to speak to you, ma'am'; or, 'Jane Cox is come for
+a hospital paper, ma'am.' Then early dinner, of all things
+detestable, succeeded by school needlework, mothers' meeting, and
+children's walk, combined with district visiting, or reading to old
+women. Church again, high tea, and evenings again pleasingly varied
+by choir practices, night schools, or silence, while grandpapa
+concocts his sermon.
+
+B. Is this the easy life to which Mrs. Moldwarp has retired?
+
+C. It is her native element. People of her generation think it
+their vocation to be ladies-of-all-work to the parish of
+Stickinthemud cum-Humdrum.
+
+B. All-work indeed!
+
+C. I did not include Sundays, which are one rush of meals, schools,
+and services, including harmonium.
+
+B. No society or rational conversation, of course?
+
+C. Adjacent clergy and clergy woman rather less capable of aught
+but shop than the natives themselves! You see, even if I did offer
+myself as a victim, I couldn't do the thing! Fancy my going on
+about the six Mosaic days, and Jonah's whale, and Jael's nail, and
+doing their duty in that state of life where it _HAS_ pleased Heaven
+to place them.
+
+B. Impossible, my dear! Those things can't be taught--if they are
+to be taught--except by those who accept them as entirely as ever;
+and it is absurd to think of keeping you where you would be totally
+devoid of all intellectual food!
+
+
+SCENE.--ART STUDENT AND DISTINGUISHED PROFESSOR A YEAR LATER.
+SOIREE IN A LONDON DRAWING-ROOM. PROFESSOR DUNLOP AND CECILIA.
+
+
+PROF. D. Miss Moldwarp? Is your mother here?
+
+C. No; she is not in town.
+
+PROF. D. Not living there?
+
+C. She lives with my grandfather at Darkglade.
+
+PROF. D. Indeed! I hope Mr. and Mrs. Aveland are well?
+
+C. Thank you, _HE_ is well; but my grandmother is dead.
+
+PROF. D. Oh, I am sorry! I had not heard of his loss. How long
+ago did it happen?
+
+C. Last January twelvemonth. My aunt is married, and my mother has
+taken her place at home.
+
+PROF. D. Then you are here on a visit. Where are you staying?
+
+C. No, I live here. I am studying in the Slade schools.
+
+PROF. D. This must have greatly changed my dear old friend's life!
+
+C. I did not know that you were acquainted with my grandfather.
+
+PROF. D. I was one of his pupils. I may say that I owe everything
+to him. It is long since I have been at Darkglade, but it always
+seemed to me an ideal place.
+
+C. Rather out of the world.
+
+PROF. D. Of one sort of world perhaps; but what a beautiful
+combination is to be seen there of the highest powers with the
+lowliest work! So entirely has he dedicated himself that he really
+feels the guidance of a ploughman's soul a higher task than the
+grandest achievement in science or literature. By the bye, I hope
+he will take up his pen again. It is really wanted. Will you give
+him a message from me?
+
+C. How strange! I never knew that he was an author.
+
+PROF. D. Ah! you are a young thing, and these are abstruse
+subjects.
+
+C. Oh! the Fathers and Ritual, I suppose?
+
+PROF. D. No doubt he is a great authority there, as a man of his
+ability must be; but I was thinking of a course of scientific papers
+he put forth ten years ago, taking up the arguments against
+materialism as no one could do who is not as thoroughly at home as
+he is in the latest discoveries and hypotheses. He ought to answer
+that paper in the CRITICAL WORLD.
+
+C. I was so much interested in that paper.
+
+PROF. D. It has just the speciousness that runs away with young
+people. I should like to talk it over with him. Do you think I
+should be in the way if I ran down?
+
+C. I should think a visit from you would be an immense pleasure to
+him; and I am sure it would be good for the place to be stirred up.
+
+PROF. D. You have not learnt to prize that atmosphere in which
+things always seem to assume their true proportion, and to prompt
+the cry of St. Bernard's brother--'All earth for me, all heaven for
+you.'
+
+C. That was surely an outcome of the time when people used to
+sacrifice certainties to uncertainties, and spoil life for the sake
+of they knew not what.
+
+PROF. D. For eye hath not seen, nor ear heard.
+
+STRANGER. Mr. Dunlop! This is an unexpected pleasure!
+
+C. (ALONE). Well, wonders will never cease. The great Professor
+Dunlop talking to me quite preachy and goody; and of all people in
+the world, the old man at Darkglade turning out to be a great
+physiologist!
+
+
+VII. TWO OLD FRIENDS
+
+
+SCENE.--DARKGLADE VICARAGE STUDY. MR. AVELAND AND PROFESSOR DUNLOP.
+
+PROF. D. Thank you, sir. It has been a great pleasure to talk over
+these matters with you; I hope a great benefit.
+
+MR. A. I am sure it is a great benefit to us to have a breath from
+the outer world. I hope you will never let so long a time go by
+without our meeting. Remember, as iron sharpeneth iron, so doth a
+man's countenance that of his friend.
+
+PROF. D. I shall be only too thankful. I rejoice in the having met
+your grand-daughter, who encouraged me to offer myself. Is she
+permanently in town?
+
+MR. A. She shows no inclination to return. I hoped she would do so
+after the last competition; but there is always another stage to be
+mounted. I wish she would come back, for her mother ought not to be
+left single-handed; but young people seem to require so much
+external education in these days, instead of being content to work
+on at home, that I sometimes question which is more effectual,
+learning or being taught.
+
+PROF. D. Being poured-upon versus imbibing?
+
+MR. A. It may depend on what amount there is to imbibe; and I
+imagine that the child views this region as an arid waste; as of
+course we are considerably out of date.
+
+PROF. D. The supply would be a good deal fresher and purer!
+
+MR. A. Do you know anything of her present surroundings?
+
+PROF. D. I confess that I was surprised to meet her with Mrs.
+Eyeless, a lady who is active in disseminating Positivism, and all
+tending that way. She rather startled me by some of her remarks;
+but probably it was only jargon and desire to show off. Have you
+seen her lately?
+
+MR. A. At Christmas, but only for a short time, when it struck me
+that she treated us with the patronage of precocious youth; and I
+thought she made the most of a cold when church or parish was
+concerned. I hinted as much; but her mother seemed quite satisfied.
+Poor girl! Have I been blind? I did not like her going to live at
+one of those boarding-houses for lady students. Do you know
+anything of them?
+
+PROF. D. Of course all depends on the individual lady at the head,
+and the responsibility she undertakes, as well as on the tone of the
+inmates. With some, it would be only staying in a safe and guarded
+home. In others, there is a great amount of liberty, the girls
+going out without inquiry whether, with whom, or when they return.
+
+MR. A. American fashion! Well, they say young women are equal to
+taking care of themselves. I wonder whether my daughter understands
+this, or whether it is so at Cecilia's abode. Do you know?
+
+PROF. D. I am afraid I do. The niece of a friend of mine was
+there, and left it, much distressed and confused by the agnostic
+opinions that were freely broached there. How did your grand-
+daughter come to choose it?
+
+MR. A. For the sake of being with a friend. I think Thurston is
+the name.
+
+PROF. D. I know something of that family; clever people, but bred
+up--on principle, if it can be so called, with their minds a blank
+as to religion. I remember seeing one of the daughters at the party
+where I met Miss Moldwarp.
+
+MR. A. So this is the society into which we have allowed our poor
+child to run! I blame myself exceedingly for not having made more
+inquiries. Grief made me selfishly passive, or I should have opened
+my eyes and theirs to the danger. My poor Mary, what a shock it
+will be to her!
+
+PROF. D. Was not she on the spot?
+
+MR. A. True; but, poor dear, she is of a gentle nature, easily led,
+and seeing only what her affection lets her perceive. And now, she
+is not strong.
+
+PROF. D. She is not looking well.
+
+MR. A. You think so! I wonder whether I have been blind, and let
+her undertake too much.
+
+PROF. D. Suppose you were to bring her to town for a few days. We
+should be delighted to have you, and she could see the doctor to
+whom she is accustomed. Then you can judge for yourself about her
+daughter.
+
+MR. A. Thank you, Dunlop! It will be a great comfort if it can be
+managed.
+
+
+VIII. AUNT AND NIECE
+
+
+SCENE.--IN A HANSOM CAB. MRS. HOLLAND AND CECILIA.
+
+MRS. H. I wanted to speak to you, Cissy.
+
+C. I thought so!
+
+MRS. H. What do you think of your mother?
+
+C. Poor old darling. They have been worrying her till she has got
+hipped and nervous about herself.
+
+MRS. H. Do you know what spasms she has been having?
+
+C. Oh! mother has had spasms as long as I can remember; and the
+more she thinks of them the worse they are. I have often heard her
+say so.
+
+MRS. H. Yes; she has gone on much too long overworking herself, and
+not letting your grandfather suspect anything amiss.
+
+C. Nerves. That is what it always is.
+
+MRS. H. Dr. Brownlow says there is failure of heart, not dangerous
+or advanced at present, but that there is an overstrain of all the
+powers, and that unless she keeps fairly quiet, and free from hurry
+and worry, there may be very serious, if not fatal attacks.
+
+C. I never did think much of Dr. Brownlow. He told me my
+palpitations were nothing but indigestion, and I am sure they were
+not!
+
+MRS. H. Well, Cissy, something must be done to relieve your mother
+of some of her burthens.
+
+C. I see what you are driving at, Aunt Phrasie; but I cannot go
+back till I have finished these courses. There's my picture,
+there's the cookery school, the ambulance lectures, and our
+sketching tour in August. Ever so many engagements. I shall be
+free in the autumn, and then I will go down and see about it. I
+told mother so.
+
+MRS. H. All the hot trying months of summer without help!
+
+C. I never can understand why they don't have a governess.
+
+MRS. H. Can't you? Is there not a considerable outgoing on your
+behalf?
+
+C. That is my own. I am not bound to educate my uncle's children
+at my expense.
+
+MRS. H. No; but if you contributed your share to the housekeeping,
+you would make a difference, and surely you cannot leave your mother
+to break down her health by overworking herself in this manner.
+
+C. Why does grandpapa let her do so?
+
+MRS. H. Partly he does not see, partly he cannot help it. He has
+been so entirely accustomed to have all those family and parish
+details taken off his hands, and borne easily as they were when your
+dear grandmamma and I were both there at home, that he cannot
+understand that they can be over much--especially as they are so
+small in themselves. Besides, he is not so young as he was, and
+your dear mother cannot bear to trouble him.
+
+C. Well, I shall go there in September and see about it. It is
+impossible before.
+
+MRS. H. In the hopping holidays, when the stress of work is over!
+Cannot you see with your own eyes how fagged and ill your mother
+looks, and how much she wants help?
+
+C. Oh! she will be all right again after this rest. I tell you,
+Aunt Phrasie, it is _IMPOSSIBLE_ at present--(CAB STOPS).
+
+
+IX. THE TWO SISTERS
+
+
+SCENE.--A ROOM IN PROFESSOR DUNLOP'S HOUSE. MRS. MOLDWARP AND MRS.
+HOLLAND.
+
+MRS. H. I have done my best, but I can't move her an inch.
+
+MRS. M. Poor dear girl! Yet it seems hardly fair to make my health
+the lever, when really there is nothing serious the matter.
+
+MRS. H. I can't understand the infatuation. Can there be any love
+affair?
+
+MRS. M. Oh no, Phrasie; it is worse!
+
+MRS. H. Worse! Mary, what can you mean?
+
+MRS. M. Yes, it _IS_ worse. I got at the whole truth yesterday.
+My poor child's faith has gone! Oh, how could I let her go and let
+her mingle among all those people, all unguarded!
+
+MRS. H. Do you mean that this is the real reason that she will not
+come home?
+
+MRS. M. Yes; she told me plainly at last that she could not stand
+our round of services. They seem empty and obsolete to her, and she
+could not feign to attend them or vex us, and cause remarks by
+staying away, and of course she neither could nor would teach
+anything but secular matters. 'My coming would be nothing but pain
+to everybody,' she said.
+
+MRS H. You did not tell me this before my drive with her.
+
+MRS. M. No, I never saw you alone; besides, I thought you would
+speak more freely without the knowledge. And, to tell the truth, I
+did think it possible that consideration for me might bring my poor
+Cissy down to us, and that when once under my father's influence,
+all these mists might clear away. But I do not deserve it. I have
+been an unfaithful parent, shutting my eyes in feeble indulgence,
+and letting her drift into these quicksands.
+
+MRS. H. Fashion and imitation, my dear Mary; it will pass away.
+Now, you are not to talk any more.
+
+MRS. M. I can't-- (A SPASM COMES ON.)
+
+
+X. AUNT AND NEPHEW
+
+
+SCENE.--SIX MONTHS LATER, DARKGLADE VICARAGE, A DARKENED ROOM. MRS.
+HOLLAND AND LUCIUS.
+
+MRS. H. Yes, Lucius, we have all much to reproach ourselves with;
+even poor grandpapa is heart-broken at having been too much absorbed
+to perceive how your dear mother was overtasked.
+
+L. You did all you could, aunt; you took home one child, and caused
+the other to be sent to school.
+
+MRS. H. Yes, too late to be of any use.
+
+L. And after all, I don't think it was overwork that broke the poor
+dear one down, so much as grief at that wretched sister of mine.
+
+MRS. H. Don't speak of her in that way, Lucius.
+
+L. How can I help it? I could say worse!
+
+MRS. H. She is broken-hearted, poor thing.
+
+L. Well she may be.
+
+MRS. H. Ah, the special point of sorrow to your dear mother was
+that she blamed herself, for--
+
+L. How could she? How can you say so, aunt?
+
+MRS. H. Wait a moment, Lucius. What grieved her was the giving in
+to Cissy's determination, seeing with her eyes, and not allowing
+herself to perceive that what she wished might not be good for her.
+
+L. Cissy always did domineer over mother.
+
+MRS. H. Yes; and your mother was so used to thinking Cissy's
+judgment right that she never could or would see when it was time to
+make a stand, and prevent her own first impressions from being
+talked down as old-fashioned,--letting her eyes be bandaged, in
+fact.
+
+L. So she vexed herself over Cissy's fault; but did not you try to
+make Cissy see what she was about?
+
+MRS. H. True; but if love had blinded my dear sister, Cissy was
+doubly blinded--
+
+L. By conceit and self-will.
+
+MRS. H. Poor girl, I am too sorry for her now to use those hard
+words, but I am afraid it is true. First she could or would not see
+either that her companions might be undesirable guides, or that her
+duty lay here, and then nothing would show her that her mother's
+health was failing. Indeed, by that time the sort of blindness had
+come upon her which really broke your mother's heart.
+
+L. You mean her unbelief, agnosticism, or whatever she chooses to
+call it. I thought at least women were safe from that style of
+thing. It is all fashion and bad company, I suppose?
+
+MRS. H. I hope and pray that it may be so; but I am afraid that it
+goes deeper than you imagine. Still, I see hope in her extreme
+unhappiness, and in the remembrance of your dear mother's last words
+and prayers.
+
+
+XI. GRANDFATHER AND GRAND-DAUGHTER
+
+
+A MONTH LATER. MR. AVELAND AND CECILIA.
+
+MR. A. My dear child, I wish I could do anything for you.
+
+C. You had better let me go back to London, grandpapa.
+
+MR. A. Do you really wish it?
+
+C. I don't know. I hate it all; but if I were in the midst of
+everything again, it might stifle the pain a little.
+
+MR. A. I am afraid that is not the right way of curing it.
+
+C. Oh, I suppose it will wear down in time.
+
+MR. A. Is that well?
+
+C. I don't know. It is only unbearable as it is; and yet when I
+think of my life in town, the din and the chatter and the bustle,
+and the nobody caring, seem doubly intolerable; but I shall work off
+that. You had better let me go, grandpapa. The sight of me can be
+nothing but a grief and pain to you.
+
+MR. A. No; it gives me hope.
+
+C. Hope of what?
+
+MR. A. That away from the whirl you will find your way to peace.
+
+C. I don't see how. Quiet only makes me more miserable.
+
+MR. A. My poor child, if you can speak out and tell me exactly how
+it is with you, I think it might be comfortable to you. If it is
+the missing your mother, and blaming yourself for having allowed her
+to overdo herself, I may well share with you in that. I feel most
+grievously that I never perceived how much she was undertaking, nor
+how she flagged under it. Unselfish people want others to think for
+them, and I did not.
+
+C. Dear grandpapa, it would not have been too much if I had come
+and helped. I know that; but it is not the worst. You can't feel
+as I do--that if my desertion led to her overworking herself, Aunt
+Phrasie and Lucius say that what really broke her down was the
+opinions I cannot help having. Say it was not, grandpapa.
+
+MR. A. I wish I could, my dear; but I cannot conceal that
+unhappiness about you, and regret for having let you expose yourself
+to those unfortunate arguments, broke her spirits so that her
+energies were unequal to the strain that I allowed to be laid on
+her.
+
+C. Poor dear mother! And you and she can feel in that way about
+the importance of what to me seems--pardon me, grandpapa--utterly
+unproved.
+
+MR. A. You hold everything unproved that you cannot work out like a
+mathematical demonstration.
+
+C. I can't help it, grandpapa. I read and read, till all the
+premises become lost in the cloud of myths that belong to all
+nations. I don't want to think such things. I saw dear mother rest
+on her belief, and grow peaceful. They were perfect realities to
+her; but I cannot unthink. I would give anything to think that she
+is in perfect happiness now, and that we shall meet again; but
+nothing seems certain to me. All is extinguished.
+
+MR. A. How do you mean?
+
+C. They--Betty and her set, I mean--laughed at and argued one thing
+after another, till they showed me that there were no positive
+grounds to go on.
+
+MR. A. No material grounds.
+
+C. And what else is certain?
+
+MR. A. Do you think your mother was not certain?
+
+C. I saw she was; I see you are certain. But what am I to do? I
+cannot unthink.
+
+MR. A. Poor child, they have loosed you from the shore, because you
+could not see it, and left you to flounder in the waves.
+
+C. Well, so I feel it sometimes; but if I could only feel that
+there was a shore, I would try to get my foothold. Oh, with all my
+heart!
+
+MR. A. Will you take my word, dear child--the word of one who can
+dare humbly to say he has proved it, so as to be as sure as of the
+floor we are standing on, that that Rock exists; and God grant that
+you may, in prayer and patience, be brought to rest on it once more.
+
+C. Once more! I don't think I ever did so really. I only did not
+think, and kept away from what was dull and tiresome. Didn't you
+read something about 'If thou hadst known--'
+
+MR. A. 'If thou hadst known, even thou, at least in this thy day,
+the things that belong unto thy peace! but now they are hid from
+thine eyes.' But oh, my dear girl, it is my hope and prayer, not
+for ever. If you will endure to walk in darkness for a while, till
+the light be again revealed to you.
+
+C. At any rate, dear grandfather, I will do what mother entreated,
+and not leave you alone.
+
+
+XII.
+
+
+TWO YEARS LATER. ST. THOMAS'S DAY.
+
+C. Grandpapa, may I come with you on Christmas morning?
+
+MR. A. You make me a truly happy Christmas, dear child.
+
+C. I think I feel somewhat as St. Thomas did, in to-day's Gospel.
+It went home to my heart
+
+MR. A. Ah, child, to us that 'Blessed are they who have not seen
+and yet have believed,' must mean those who are ready to know by
+faith instead of material tangible proof.
+
+
+
+CHOPS
+
+
+
+You ask me why I call that old great-grandmother black cat Chops?
+Well, thereby hangs a tale. I don't mean the black tail which is
+standing upright and quivering at your caresses, but a story that
+there will be time to tell you before Charlie gets home from market.
+
+Seven years ago, Charlie had just finished his training both at an
+agricultural college and under a farmer, and was thinking of going
+out to Texas or to Canada, and sending for me when he should have
+been able to make a new home for me, when his godfather, Mr. Newton,
+offered to let him come down and look after the draining and
+otherwise reclaiming of this great piece of waste land. It had come
+to Mr. Newton through some mortgages, I believe, and he thought
+something might be made of it by an active agent. It was the first
+time Mr. Newton had shown the least interest in us, though he was a
+cousin of our poor mother's; and Charlie was very much gratified,
+more especially as when he had 150 pounds a year and a house, he
+thought I might leave the school where I was working as a teacher,
+and make a home with him.
+
+Yes, this is the house; but it has grown a good deal since we
+settled down, and will grow more before you come to it for good.
+Then it was only meant for a superior sort of gamekeeper, and had
+only six rooms in it--parlour, kitchen, and back kitchen, and three
+bedrooms above them; but this we agreed would be ample for ourselves
+and Betsey, an old servant of our mother's, who could turn her hand
+to anything, and on the break-up of our home had begged to join us
+again whenever or wherever we should have a house of our own once
+more.
+
+We have half a dozen cottages near us now; but then it seemed to us
+like a lodge in a vast wilderness--three miles away from everything,
+shop, house, or church. Betsey fairly sat down and cried when she
+heard how far away was the butcher, and it really seemed as if we
+were to have the inconveniences of colonisation without the honour
+of it. However, contrivances made us merry; we made our rooms
+pretty and pleasant, and as a pony and trap were essential to
+Charlie in his work, we were able to fetch and carry easily.
+Moreover, we had already a fair kitchen garden laid out, and there
+were outhouses for pigs and poultry, so that even while draining and
+fencing were going on, we raised a good proportion of our own
+provisions, and very proud of them we were; our own mustard and
+cress, which we sowed in our initials, tasted doubly sweet when we
+reaped them as our earliest crop.
+
+Mr. Newton had always said that some day he should drop down and see
+how Charles was getting on, but as he hardly ever stirred from his
+office in London, and only answered letters in the briefest and most
+business-like way, we had pretty well left off expecting him.
+
+We had been here about six months, and had killed our first pig--'a
+pretty little porker as ever was seen,' as Betsey said. It was hard
+to understand, after all the petting, admiration, and back-
+scratching Betsey had bestowed on him, how ready she was to sentence
+him, and triumph in his death; while I, feeble-minded creature,
+delayed rising in the morning that I might cower under the
+bedclothes and stop my ears against his dying squeals. However,
+when he was no more, the housekeeping spirit triumphed in our
+independence of the butcher, while his fry and other delicacies
+lasted, and Betsey was supremely happy over the saltings of the
+legs, etc., with a view to the more distant future.
+
+It was a cold day of early spring. I had been down the lanes and
+brought in five tiny starved primroses with short stems, for which
+Betsey scolded me soundly, telling me that the first brood of
+chickens was always the same in number as the first primroses
+brought into the house. I eked them out with moss in a saucer, and
+then, how well I remember the foolish, weary feeling that I wished
+something would happen to break the quiet. We were out of the reach
+of new books, and the two magazines we took in would not be due for
+ten long days. I did not feel sensible or energetic enough to turn
+to one of the standard well-bound volumes that had been Charlie's
+school prizes, and at the moment I hated my needlework, both steady
+sewing and fancy work. It was the same with my piano. I had no new
+fashionable music, and I was in a mood to disdain what was good and
+classical. So, as the twilight came on, I sat drearily by the fire,
+fondling the cat--yes, this same black cat--and thinking that my
+life at the ladies' college had been a good deal livelier, and that
+if I had given it up for the sake of my brother's society, I had
+very little of that.
+
+The hunt had gone by last week--what a treat it would be if some one
+would meet with a little accident and be carried in here!
+
+Behold, I heard a step at the back door, and the loud call of
+'Kitty! Kitty!' There stood Charlie, as usual covered with clay
+nearly up to the top of his gaiters--clay either pale yellow, or
+horrid light blue, according to the direction of his walk. He was
+beginning frantically to unbutton them, and as he beheld me he cried
+out, 'Kitty! he's coming!' and before I could say, 'Who?' he went
+on, 'Old Newton. His fly is working through the mud in Draggletail
+Lane. The driver hailed me to ask the way, and when I saw who it
+was, I cut across to give you notice. He'll stay the night to a
+dead certainty.'
+
+What was to be done? A wild hope seized me that, at sight of the
+place, he would retain his fly and go off elsewhere for better
+accommodation.
+
+Only, where would he find it? The nearest town, where the only
+railway station then was, was eight miles off, and he was not likely
+to plod back thither again, and the village inn, five miles away,
+was little more than a pot-house.
+
+No, we must rise to the occasion, Betsey and I, while Charlie was
+making himself respectable to receive the guest. Where was he to
+sleep? What was he to eat? A daintily fed, rather hypochrondriacal
+old bachelor, who seldom stirred out of his comfortable house in
+London. What a guest for us!
+
+The council was held while the gaiters were being unbuttoned. He
+must have my room, and I would sleep with Betsey. As to food, it
+was impossible to send to the butcher; and even if I could have
+sacrificed my precious Dorking fowls, there would have been scant
+time to prepare them.
+
+There was nothing for it but to give him the pork chops, intended
+for our to-morrow's dinner, and if he did not like them, he might
+fall back upon poached eggs and rashers.
+
+'Mind,' called Charlie, as I dashed into my room to remove my
+properties and light the fire, so that it might get over its first
+smoking fit,--'mind you lock up the cat. He hates them like
+poison.'
+
+It was so long before the carriage appeared, that I began half to
+hope, half to fear, it was a false alarm; but at last, just as it
+was perfectly dark, we heard it stop at the garden gate, and Charlie
+dashed out to open the fly door, and bring in the guest, who was
+panting, nervous--almost terrified, at a wild drive, so contrary to
+all his experiences. When the flyman's demands had been appeased,
+and we had got the poor old gentleman out of his wraps, he turned
+out to be a neat, little, prim-looking London lawyer, clean-shaved,
+and with an indoor complexion. I daresay Charlie, with his big
+frame, sunburnt face, curly beard, and loud hearty voice, seemed to
+him like a kind of savage, and he thought he had got among the
+Aborigines.
+
+After all, he had written to announce his coming. But he had not
+calculated on our never getting our letters unless we sent for them.
+He was the very pink of politeness to me, and mourned so much over
+putting me to inconvenience that we could only profess our delight
+and desire to make him comfortable.
+
+On the whole, it went off very well. I gave him a cup of tea to
+warm and occupy him while the upstairs' chimney was coming to its
+senses; and then Charles took him upstairs. He reappeared in
+precise evening dress, putting us to shame; for Charles had not a
+dress-coat big enough for him to get into, and I had forgotten to
+secure my black silk before abandoning my room. We could not ask
+him to eat in the best kitchen, as was our practice, and he showed
+himself rather dismayed at our having only one sitting-room, saying
+he had not thought the cottage such a dog-hole, or known that it
+would be inhabited by a lady; and then he paid some pretty
+compliment on the feminine hand evident in the room. We had laid
+the table before he came down, but the waiting was managed by
+ourselves, or rather, by Charles, for Mr. Newton's politeness made
+him jump up whenever I moved; so that I had to sit still and do the
+lady hostess, while my brother changed plates and brought in relays
+of the chops from the kitchen. They were a great success. Mr.
+Newton eyed them for a moment distrustfully, but Betsey had turned
+them out beautifully--all fair and delicate with transparent fat,
+and a brown stripe telling of the gridiron. He refused the egg
+alternative, and greatly enjoyed them and our Brussels sprouts,
+speaking highly of the pleasure of country fare, and apologising
+about the good appetising effects of a journey, when Charlie tempted
+him with a third chop, the hottest and most perfect of all.
+
+I think we also produced a rhubarb tart, and I know he commended our
+prudence in having no wine, and though he refused my brother's ale,
+seemed highly satisfied with a tumbler of brandy and water, when I
+quitted the gentlemen to see to the coffee, while they talked over
+the scheme for farm-buildings, which Charlie had sent up to him.
+
+When I bade him good-night, a couple of hours later, he was
+evidently in a serene state of mind, regarding us as very superior
+young people.
+
+In the middle of the night, Betsey and I were appalled by a
+tremendous knocking on the wall. I threw on a dressing-gown and
+made for the door, while Betsey felt for the matches. As I opened a
+crack of the door, Charlie's voice was to be heard, 'Yes, yes; I'll
+get you some, sir. You'll be better presently,' interspersed with
+heavy groans; then, seeing me wide awake, he begged that Betsey
+would go down and get some hot water--'and mustard,' called out a
+suffering voice. 'Oh, those chops!'
+
+Poor Mr. Newton had, it appeared, wakened with a horrible oppression
+on his chest, and at once attributing it to his unwonted meal of
+pork chops, he had begun, in the dark, knocking and calling with
+great energy. Charlie had stumbled in in the dark, not waiting to
+light a candle, and indeed ours were chiefly lamps, which took time
+to light. Betsey had hers, however, and had bustled into some
+clothes, tumbling downstairs to see whether any water were still hot
+in the copper, Charlie running down to help her, while I fumbled
+about for a lamp and listened with awe to the groans from within,
+wondering which of us would have to go for the doctor.
+
+Up came Charlie, in his shirt sleeves, with a steaming jug in one
+hand and a lamp in the other. Up came Betsey, in a scarlet
+petticoat and plaid shawl, her gray locks in curl-papers, and a
+tallow-candle in hand. The door was thrown open, Charlie observing,
+
+'Now, sir,' then breaking out into 'Thunder and turf' (his favourite
+Hibernian ejaculation); 'Ssssssss!' and therewith, her green eyes
+all one glare, out burst this cat! She was the nightmare! She had
+been sitting on the unfortunate man's chest, and all her weight had
+been laid to the score of the chops!
+
+No doubt she had been attracted by the fire, stolen up in the
+confusion of the house, remained hidden whilst Mr. Newton was going
+to bed, and when the fire went out, settled herself on his chest, as
+it seems he slept on his back, and it was a warm position.
+
+Probably his knockings on the wall dislodged her; but if so,
+imagination carried on the sense of oppression, and with feline
+pertinacity she had returned as soon as he was still again.
+
+Poor old gentleman! I am afraid he heard some irrepressible
+laughter, and it was very sore to him to be ridiculous. His grave
+dignity and politeness when he came down very late the next morning
+were something awful, and it must have been very dreadful to him
+that he could not get away till half the day was over.
+
+So dry and short was he over matters of business that Charles
+actually thought we might begin to pack up and make our arrangements
+for emigrating. Grave, dry, and civil as ever, he departed, and I
+never saw him more, nor do I think he ever entirely forgave me.
+There did not, however, come any dismissal, and when Charlie had
+occasion to go up to his office and see him, he was just the same as
+ever, and acceded to the various arrangements which have made this a
+civilised, though still rather remote place.
+
+And when he died, a year ago, to our surprise we found that this
+same reclaimed property was left to my brother. The consequence
+whereof you well know, my dear little sister that is to be. Poor
+old Chops! you had nearly marred our fortunes; and now, will you go
+with me to my home at the Rectory, or do you prefer your old abode
+to your old mistress?
+
+
+
+Footnotes:
+
+{127} [In the book this genealogy is a diagram. It is rendered as
+text here.--DP] John Fulford: sons: John Fulford {127a} (married
+Margaret Lacy) and Henry {127b}.
+
+{127a} John Fulford and Margaret Lacy: Sir Edward Fulford (married
+Avice Lee--died after two years), Arthur, Q.C. (married Edith
+Ganler) {127c}, Martyn (Professor, married Mary Alwyn) {127d},
+Charlotte, Emily, Margaret (married Rev. H. Druce) {127e}.
+
+{127b} Henry had a son called Henry--whose son was also Henry--
+whose daughter was Isabel.
+
+{127c} Arthur, Q.C. and Edith Ganler: Margaret called Metelill,
+Charlotte called Charley, Sons not at New Cove.
+
+{127d} Martyn (Professor) and Mary Alwyn: Margaret called Pica,
+Avice and Uchtred.
+
+{127e} Margaret and Rev. H. Druce: Jane and large family.
+
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MORE BYWORDS***
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