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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Cathedral Courtship, by Kate Douglas Wiggin
+
+
+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: A Cathedral Courtship
+
+
+Author: Kate Douglas Wiggin
+
+
+
+Release Date: July 7, 2008 [eBook #1551]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A CATHEDRAL COURTSHIP***
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1893 Gay and Bird edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@pglaf.org
+
+
+
+
+
+ A CATHEDRAL COURTSHIP
+
+
+ BY
+ KATE DOUGLAS WIGGIN
+
+ WITH FIVE ILLUSTRATIONS
+ BY CLIFFORD CARLETON
+
+ LONDON: GAY AND BIRD
+ 5 CHANDOS STREET STRAND
+ 1893
+
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+ First Edition June 1893.
+ Second Edition July 1893.
+ Third Edition September 1893.
+ Fourth Edition November 1893.
+ Fifth Edition October 1894.
+
+ TO MY BOSTON FRIEND
+ SALEMINA
+ NO ANGLOMANIAC, BUT
+ A TRUE BRITON
+
+
+
+
+ SHE
+
+
+ WINCHESTER, _May_ 28, 1891
+ The Royal Garden Inn.
+
+We are doing the English cathedral towns, aunt Celia and I. Aunt Celia
+has an intense desire to improve my mind. Papa told her, when we were
+leaving Cedarhurst, that he wouldn't for the world have it too much
+improved, and aunt Celia remarked that, so far as she could judge, there
+was no immediate danger; with which exchange of hostilities they parted.
+
+We are traveling under the yoke of an iron itinerary, warranted neither
+to bend nor break. It was made out by a young High Church curate in New
+York, and if it had been blessed by all the bishops and popes it could
+not be more sacred to aunt Celia. She is awfully High Church, and I
+believe she thinks this tour of the cathedrals will give me a taste for
+ritual and bring me into the true fold. I have been hearing dear old Dr.
+Kyle a great deal lately, and aunt Celia says that he is the most
+dangerous Unitarian she knows, because he has leanings towards
+Christianity.
+
+Long ago, in her youth, she was engaged to a young architect. He, with
+his triangles and T-squares and things, succeeded in making an imaginary
+scale-drawing of her heart (up to that time a virgin forest, an unmapped
+territory), which enabled him to enter in and set up a pedestal there, on
+which he has remained ever since. He has been only a memory for many
+years, to be sure, for he died at the age of twenty-six, before he had
+had time to build anything but a livery stable and a country hotel. This
+is fortunate, on the whole, because aunt Celia thinks he was destined to
+establish American architecture on a higher plane,--rid it of its base,
+time-serving, imitative instincts, and waft it to a height where, in the
+course of centuries, we should have been revered and followed by all the
+nations of the earth. I went to see the livery stable, after one of
+these Miriam-like flights of prophecy on the might-have-been. It isn't
+fair to judge a man's promise by one performance, and that one a livery
+stable, so I shall say nothing.
+
+This sentiment about architecture and this fondness for the very
+toppingest High Church ritual cause aunt Celia to look on the English
+cathedrals with solemnity and reverential awe. She has given me a fat
+notebook, with "Katharine Schuyler" stamped in gold letters on the Russia
+leather cover, and a lock and key to protect its feminine confidences. I
+am not at all the sort of girl who makes notes, and I have told her so;
+but she says that I must at least record my passing impressions, if they
+are ever so trivial and commonplace.
+
+I wanted to go directly from Southampton to London with the Abbotts, our
+ship friends, who left us yesterday. Roderick Abbott and I had had a
+charming time on board ship (more charming than aunt Celia knows, because
+she was very ill, and her natural powers of chaperoning were severely
+impaired), and the prospect of seeing London sights together was not
+unpleasing; but Roderick Abbott is not in aunt Celia's itinerary, which
+reads: "Winchester, Salisbury, Wells, Bath, Bristol, Gloucester, Oxford,
+London, Ely, Lincoln, York, Durham."
+
+Aunt Celia is one of those persons who are born to command, and when they
+are thrown in contact with those who are born to be commanded all goes as
+merry as a marriage bell; otherwise not.
+
+So here we are at Winchester; and I don't mind all the Roderick Abbotts
+in the universe, now that I have seen the Royal Garden Inn, its pretty
+coffee-room opening into the old-fashioned garden, with its borders of
+clove pinks, its aviaries, and its blossoming horse-chestnuts, great
+towering masses of pink bloom!
+
+Aunt Celia has driven to St. Cross Hospital with Mrs. Benedict, an
+estimable lady tourist whom she "picked up" en route from Southampton. I
+am tired, and stayed at home. I cannot write letters, because aunt Celia
+has the guide-books, so I sit by the window in indolent content, watching
+the dear little school laddies, with their short jackets and wide white
+collars; they all look so jolly, and rosy, and clean, and kissable! I
+should like to kiss the chambermaid, too! She has a pink print dress; no
+bangs, thank goodness (it's curious our servants can't leave that
+deformity to the upper classes), but shining brown hair, plump figure,
+soft voice, and a most engaging way of saying, "Yes, miss? Anythink
+more, miss?" I long to ask her to sit down comfortably and be English,
+while I study her as a type, but of course I mustn't. Sometimes I wish I
+could retire from the world for a season and do what I like, "surrounded
+by the general comfort of being thought mad."
+
+An elegant, irreproachable, high-minded model of dignity and reserve has
+just knocked and inquired what we will have for dinner. It is very
+embarrassing to give orders to a person who looks like a judge of the
+Supreme Court, but I said languidly, "What would you suggest?"
+
+"How would you like a clear soup, a good spring soup, to begin with,
+miss?"
+
+"Very much."
+
+"And a bit of turbot next, miss?"
+
+"Yes, turbot, by all means," I said, my mouth watering at the word.
+
+"And what for a roast, miss? Would you enjoy a young duckling, miss?"
+
+"Just the thing; and for dessert"--I couldn't think what we ought to have
+for dessert in England, but the high-minded model coughed apologetically
+and said, "I was thinking you might like gooseberry tart and cream for a
+sweet, miss."
+
+Oh that I could have vented my New World enthusiasm in a shriek of
+delight as I heard those intoxicating words, heretofore met only in
+English novels!
+
+"Ye-es," I said hesitatingly, though I was palpitating with joy, "I fancy
+we should like gooseberry tart (here a bright idea entered my mind) and
+perhaps in case my aunt doesn't care for the gooseberry tart, you might
+bring a lemon squash, please."
+
+Now I had never met a lemon squash personally, but I had often heard of
+it, and wished to show my familiarity with British culinary art.
+
+"One lemon squash, miss?"
+
+"Oh, as to that, it doesn't matter," I said haughtily; "bring a
+sufficient number for two persons."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Aunt Celia came home in the highest feather. She had twice been taken
+for an Englishwoman. She said she thought that lemon squash was a drink;
+I thought it was a pie; but we shall find out at dinner, for, as I said,
+I ordered a sufficient number for two persons.
+
+At four o'clock we attended even-song at the cathedral. I shall not say
+what I felt when the white-surpliced boy choir entered, winding down
+those vaulted aisles, or when I heard for the first time that intoned
+service, with all its "witchcraft of harmonic sound." I sat quite by
+myself in a high carved-oak seat, and the hour was passed in a trance of
+serene delight. I do not have many opinions, it is true, but papa says I
+am always strong on sentiments; nevertheless, I shall not attempt to tell
+even what I feel in these new and beautiful experiences, for it has been
+better told a thousand times.
+
+There were a great many people at service, and a large number of
+Americans among them, I should think, though we saw no familiar faces.
+There was one particularly nice young man, who looked like a Bostonian.
+He sat opposite me. He didn't stare,--he was too well bred; but when I
+looked the other way, he looked at me. Of course I could feel his
+eyes,--anybody can, at least any girl can; but I attended to every word
+of the service, and was as good as an angel. When the procession had
+filed out and the last strain of the great organ had rumbled into
+silence, we went on a tour through the cathedral, a heterogeneous band,
+headed by a conscientious old verger who did his best to enlighten us,
+and succeeded in virtually spoiling my pleasure.
+
+After we had finished (think of "finishing" a cathedral in an hour or
+two!), aunt Celia and I, with one or two others, wandered through the
+beautiful close, looking at the exterior from every possible point, and
+coming at last to a certain ruined arch which is very famous. It did not
+strike me as being remarkable. I could make any number of them with a
+pattern, without the least effort. But at any rate, when told by the
+verger to gaze upon the beauties of this wonderful relic and tremble, we
+were obliged to gaze also upon the beauties of the aforesaid nice young
+man, who was sketching it. As we turned to go away, aunt Celia dropped
+her bag. It is one of those detestable, all-absorbing, all-devouring,
+thoroughly respectable, but never proud Boston bags, made of black cloth
+with leather trimmings, "C. Van T." embroidered on the side, and the top
+drawn up with stout cords which pass over the Boston wrist or arm. As
+for me, I loathe them, and would not for worlds be seen carrying one,
+though I do slip a great many necessaries into aunt Celia's.
+
+I hastened to pick up the horrid thing, for fear the nice young man would
+feel obliged to do it for me; but, in my indecorous haste, I caught hold
+of the wrong end and emptied the entire contents on the stone flagging.
+Aunt Celia didn't notice; she had turned with the verger, lest she should
+miss a single word of his inspired testimony. So we scrambled up the
+articles together, the nice young man and I; and oh, I hope I may never
+look upon his face again!
+
+There were prayer-books and guide-books, a bottle of soda mint tablets, a
+spool of dental floss, a Bath bun, a bit of gray frizz that aunt Celia
+pins into her steamer cap, a spectacle case, a brandy flask, and a bonbon
+box, which broke and scattered cloves and cardamom seeds. (I hope he
+guessed aunt Celia is a dyspeptic, and not intemperate!) All this was
+hopelessly vulgar, but I wouldn't have minded anything if there had not
+been a Duchess novel. Of course he thought that it belonged to me. He
+couldn't have known aunt Celia was carrying it for that accidental Mrs.
+Benedict, with whom she went to St. Cross Hospital.
+
+After scooping the cardamom seeds out of the cracks in the stone
+flagging, he handed me the tattered, disreputable-looking copy of "A
+Modern Circe" with a bow that wouldn't have disgraced a Chesterfield, and
+then went back to his easel, while I fled after aunt Celia and her
+verger.
+
+Memoranda: The Winchester Cathedral has the longest nave. The inside is
+more superb than the outside. Izaak Walton and Jane Austen are buried
+there.
+
+
+
+
+ HE
+
+
+ WINCHESTER, _May_ 28, 1891
+ The White Swan.
+
+As sure as my name is Jack Copley, I saw the prettiest girl in the world
+to-day,--an American, too, or I'm greatly mistaken. It was in the
+cathedral, where I have been sketching for several days. I was sitting
+in the end of a seat, at afternoon service, when two ladies entered by
+the side door. The ancient maiden, evidently the head of the family,
+settled herself devoutly, and the young one stole off by herself to one
+of the old carved seats back of the choir. She was worse than pretty! I
+took a sketch of her during service, as she sat under the dark carved-oak
+canopy, with this Latin inscription over her head:--
+
+ CARLTON CUM
+ DOLBY
+ LETANIA
+ IX SOLIDORUM
+ SUPER FLUMINA
+ CONFITEBOR TIBI
+ DUC PROBATI
+
+There ought to be a law against a woman's making a picture of herself,
+unless she is willing to sit and be sketched.
+
+A black and white sketch doesn't give any definite idea of this charmer's
+charms, but some time I'll fill it in,--hair, sweet little hat, gown, and
+eyes, all in golden brown, a cape of tawny sable slipping off her arm, a
+knot of yellow primroses in her girdle, carved-oak background, and the
+afternoon sun coming through a stained-glass window. Great Jove! She
+had a most curious effect on me, that girl! I can't explain it,--very
+curious, altogether new, and rather pleasant! When one of the choir boys
+sang, "Oh for the wings of a dove!" a tear rolled out of one of her
+lovely eyes and down her smooth brown cheek. I would have given a large
+portion of my modest monthly income for the felicity of wiping away that
+teardrop with one of my new handkerchiefs, marked with a tremendous "C"
+by my pretty sister.
+
+An hour or two later they appeared again,--the dragon, who answers to the
+name of "aunt Celia," and the "nut-brown mayde," who comes when you call
+her "Katharine." I was sketching a ruined arch. The dragon dropped her
+unmistakably Boston bag. I expected to see encyclopaedias and Russian
+tracts fall from it, but was disappointed. The nut-brown mayde (who has
+been brought up rigidly) hastened to pick up the bag, for fear that I
+should serve her by doing it. She was punished by turning it inside out,
+and I was rewarded by helping her pick up the articles, which were many
+and ill assorted. My little romance received the first blow when I found
+that she reads the Duchess novels. I think, however, she has the grace
+to be ashamed of it, for she blushed scarlet when I handed her "A Modern
+Circe." I could have told her that such a blush on such a cheek would
+atone for reading Mrs. Southworth, but I refrained. After she had gone I
+discovered a slip of paper which had blown under some stones. It proved
+to be an itinerary. I didn't return it. I thought they must know which
+way they were going; and as this was precisely what I wanted to know, I
+kept it for my own use. She is doing the cathedral towns. I am doing
+the cathedral towns. Happy thought! Why shouldn't we do them
+together,--we and aunt Celia?
+
+I had only ten minutes--to catch my train for Salisbury, but I concluded
+to run in and glance at the registers of the principal hotels. Found my
+nut-brown mayde at once on the pages of the Royal Garden Inn register:
+"Miss Celia Van Tyck, Beverly, Mass.; Miss Katharine Schuyler, New York."
+I concluded to stay over another train, ordered dinner, and took an
+altogether indefensible and inconsistent pleasure in writing "John Quincy
+Copley, Cambridge, Mass.," directly beneath the charmer's autograph.
+
+
+
+
+ SHE
+
+
+ SALISBURY, _June_ 1
+ The White Hart Inn.
+
+We left Winchester on the 1.06 train yesterday, and here we are within
+sight of another superb and ancient pile of stone. I wanted so much to
+stop at the Highflyer Inn in Lark Lane, but aunt Celia said that if we
+were destitute of personal dignity, we at least owed something to our
+ancestors. Aunt Celia has a temperamental distrust of joy as something
+dangerous and ensnaring. She doesn't realize what fun it would be to
+date one's letters from the Highflyer Inn, Lark Lane, even if one were
+obliged to consort with poachers and cockneys in order to do it.
+
+We attended service at three. The music was lovely, and there were
+beautiful stained-glass windows by Burne-Jones and Morris. The verger
+(when wound up with a shilling) talked like an electric doll. If that
+nice young man is making a cathedral tour, like ourselves, he isn't
+taking our route, for he isn't here. If he has come over for the purpose
+of sketching, he wouldn't stop at sketching one cathedral. Perhaps he
+began at the other end and worked down to Winchester. Yes, that must be
+it, for the Ems sailed yesterday from Southampton.
+
+* * *
+
+June 2.
+
+We intended to go to Stonehenge this morning, but it rained, so we took a
+"growler" and went to the Earl of Pembroke's country place to see the
+pictures. Had a delightful morning with the magnificent antiques,
+curios, and portraits. The Van Dyck room is a joy forever. There were
+other visitors; nobody who looked especially interesting. Don't like
+Salisbury so well as Winchester. Don't know why. We shall drive this
+afternoon, if it is fair, and go to Wells to-morrow. Must read Baedeker
+on the bishop's palace. Oh dear! if one could only have a good time and
+not try to know anything!
+
+Memoranda: _This cathedral has the highest spire_. _Remember_:
+_Winchester_, _longest nave_; _Salisbury_, _highest spire_.
+
+_The Lancet style is those curved lines meeting in a rounding or a sharp
+point like this_
+
+ [Drawing like two very circular n's next to each other]
+
+_and then joined together like this_:
+
+ [Drawing like \/\/\/]
+
+_the way they used to scallop flannel petticoats_. _Gothic looks like
+triangles meeting together in various spots and joined with beautiful
+sort of ornamented knobs_. _I think I know Gothic when I see it_. _Then
+there is Norman_, _Early English_, _fully developed Early English_,
+_Early and Late Perpendicular_, _and Transition_. _Aunt Celia knows them
+all apart_.
+
+
+
+
+ HE
+
+
+ SALISBURY, _June_ 3
+ The Red Lion.
+
+I went off on a long tramp this afternoon, and coming on a pretty river
+flowing through green meadows, with a fringe of trees on either side, I
+sat down to make a sketch. I heard feminine voices in the vicinity, but,
+as these are generally a part of the landscape in the tourist season, I
+paid no special notice. Suddenly a dainty patent-leather shoe floated
+towards me on the surface of the stream. It evidently had just dropped
+in, for it was right side up with care, and was disporting itself right
+merrily. "Did ever Jove's tree drop such fruit?" I quoted, as I fished
+it out on my stick; and just then I heard a distressed voice saying, "Oh,
+aunt Celia, I've lost my smart little London shoe. I was sitting in a
+tree, taking a pebble out of the heel, when I saw a caterpillar, and I
+dropped it into the river, the shoe, you know, not the caterpillar."
+Hereupon she came in sight, and I witnessed the somewhat unusual
+spectacle of my nut-brown mayde hopping on one foot, like a divine stork,
+and ever and anon emitting a feminine shriek as her off foot, clad in a
+delicate silk stocking, came in contact with the ground. I rose quickly,
+and, polishing the patent leather ostentatiously, inside and out, with my
+handkerchief, I offered it to her with distinguished grace. She swayed
+on her one foot with as much dignity as possible, and then recognizing me
+as the person who picked up the contents of aunt Celia's bag, she said,
+dimpling in the most distracting manner (that's another thing there ought
+to be a law against), "Thank you again; you seem to be a sort of
+knight-errant!"
+
+"Shall I--assist you?" I asked. (I might have known that this was going
+too far.)
+
+"No, thank you," she said, with polar frigidity. "Good-afternoon." And
+she hopped back to her aunt Celia without another word.
+
+I don't know how to approach aunt Celia. She is formidable. By a
+curious accident of feature, for which she is not in the least
+responsible, she always wears an unfortunate expression as of one
+perceiving some offensive odor in the immediate vicinity. This may be a
+mere accident of high birth. It is the kind of nose often seen in the
+"first families," and her name betrays the fact that she is of good old
+Knickerbocker origin. We go to Wells to-morrow. At least I think we do.
+
+
+
+
+ SHE
+
+
+ GLOUCESTER, _June_ 9
+ The Spread Eagle.
+
+I met him at Wells, and again at Bath. We are always being ridiculous,
+and he is always rescuing us. Aunt Celia never really sees him, and thus
+never recognizes him when he appears again, always as the flower of
+chivalry and guardian of ladies in distress. I will never again travel
+abroad without a man, even if I have to hire one from a Feeble-Minded
+Asylum. We work like galley slaves, aunt Celia and I, finding out about
+trains and things. Neither of us can understand Bradshaw, and I can't
+even grapple with the lesser intricacies of the A B C railway guide. The
+trains, so far as I can see, always arrive before they go out, and I can
+never tell whether to read up the page or down. It is certainly very
+queer that the stupidest man that breathes, one that barely escapes
+idiocy, can disentangle a railway guide, when the brightest woman fails.
+Even the Boots at the inn in Wells took my book, and, rubbing his
+frightfully dirty finger down the row of puzzling figures, found the
+place in a minute, and said, "There ye are, miss." It is very
+humiliating. All the time I have left from the study of routes and
+hotels I spend on guide-books. Now I'm sure that if any one of the men I
+know were here, he could tell me all that is necessary as we walk along
+the streets. I don't say it in a frivolous or sentimental spirit in the
+least, but I do affirm that there is hardly any juncture in life where
+one isn't better off for having a man about. I should never dare divulge
+this to aunt Celia, for she doesn't think men very nice. She excludes
+them from conversation as if they were indelicate subjects.
+
+But, to go on, we were standing at the door of Ye Olde Bell and Horns, at
+Bath, waiting for the fly which we had ordered to take us to the station,
+when who should drive up in a four-wheeler but the flower of chivalry.
+Aunt Celia was saying very audibly, "We shall certainly miss the train if
+the man doesn't come at once."
+
+"Pray take this fly," said the flower of chivalry. "I am not leaving
+till the next train."
+
+Aunt Celia got in without a murmur; I sneaked in after her. I don't
+think she looked at him, though she did vouchsafe the remark that he
+seemed to be a civil sort of person.
+
+At Bristol, I was walking about by myself, and I espied a sign, "Martha
+Huggins, Licensed Victualer." It was a nice, tidy little shop, with a
+fire on the hearth and flowers in the window, and, as it was raining
+smartly, I thought no one would catch me if I stepped inside to chat with
+Martha. I fancied it would be so delightful and Dickensy to talk quietly
+with a licensed victualer by the name of Martha Huggins.
+
+Just after I had settled myself, the flower of chivalry came in and
+ordered ale. I was disconcerted at being found in a dramshop alone, for
+I thought, after the bag episode, he might fancy us a family of
+inebriates. But he didn't evince the slightest astonishment; he merely
+lifted his hat, and walked out after he had finished his ale. He
+certainly has the loveliest manners!
+
+And so it goes on, and we never get any further. I like his politeness
+and his evident feeling that I can't be flirted and talked with like a
+forward boarding-school miss, but I must say I don't think much of his
+ingenuity. Of course one can't have all the virtues, but, if I were he,
+I would part with my distinguished air, my charming ease, in fact almost
+anything, if I could have in exchange a few grains of common sense, just
+enough to guide me in the practical affairs of life.
+
+I wonder what he is? He might be an artist, but he doesn't seem quite
+like an artist; or a dilettante, but he doesn't seem in the least like a
+dilettante. Or he might be an architect; I think that is the most
+probable guess of all. Perhaps he is only "going to be" one of these
+things, for he can't be more than twenty-five or twenty-six. Still he
+looks as if he were something already; that is, he has a kind of
+self-reliance in his mien,--not self-assertion, nor self-esteem, but
+belief in self, as if he were able, and knew that he was able, to conquer
+circumstances.
+
+
+
+
+ HE
+
+
+ GLOUCESTER, _June_ 10
+ The Bell.
+
+Nothing accomplished yet. Her aunt is a Van Tyck, and a stiff one, too.
+I am a Copley, and that delays matters. Much depends upon the manner of
+approach. A false move would be fatal. We have six more towns (as per
+itinerary), and if their thirst for cathedrals isn't slaked when these
+are finished we have the entire continent to do. If I could only succeed
+in making an impression on the retina of aunt Celia's eye! Though I have
+been under her feet for ten days, she never yet has observed me. This
+absent-mindedness of hers serves me ill now, but it may prove a blessing
+later on.
+
+
+
+
+ SHE
+
+
+ OXFORD, _June_ 12
+ The Mitre.
+
+It was here in Oxford that a grain of common sense entered the brain of
+the flower of chivalry. You might call it the dawn of reason. We had
+spent part of the morning in High Street, "the noblest old street in
+England," as our dear Hawthorne calls it. As Wordsworth had written a
+sonnet about it, aunt Celia was armed for the fray,--a volume of
+Wordsworth in one hand, and one of Hawthorne in the other. (I wish
+Baedeker didn't give such full information about what one ought to read
+before one can approach these places in a proper spirit.) When we had
+done High Street, we went to Magdalen College, and sat down on a bench in
+Addison's Walk, where aunt Celia proceeded to store my mind with the
+principal facts of Addison's career, and his influence on the literature
+of the something or other century. The cramming process over, we
+wandered along, and came upon "him" sketching a shady corner of the walk.
+
+Aunt Celia went up behind him, and, Van Tyck though she is, she could not
+restrain her admiration of his work. I was surprised myself: I didn't
+suppose so good looking a youth could do such good work. I retired to a
+safe distance, and they chatted together. He offered her the sketch; she
+refused to take advantage of his kindness. He said he would "dash off"
+another that evening, and bring it to our hotel,--"so glad to do anything
+for a fellow-countryman," etc. I peeped from behind a tree and saw him
+give her his card. It was an awful moment; I trembled, but she read it
+with unmistakable approval, and gave him her own with an expression that
+meant, "Yours is good, but beat that if you can!"
+
+She called to me, and I appeared. Mr. John Quincy Copley, Cambridge, was
+presented to her niece, Miss Katharine Schuyler, New York. It was over,
+and a very small thing to take so long about, too.
+
+He is an architect, and of course has a smooth path into aunt Celia's
+affections. Theological students, ministers, missionaries, heroes, and
+martyrs she may distrust, but architects never!
+
+"He is an architect, my dear Katharine, and he is a Copley," she told me
+afterwards. "I never knew a Copley who was not respectable, and many of
+them have been more."
+
+After the introduction was over, aunt Celia asked him guilelessly if he
+had visited any other of the English cathedrals. Any others, indeed!
+This to a youth who had been all but in her lap for a fortnight! It was
+a blow, but he rallied bravely, and, with an amused look in my direction,
+replied discreetly that he had visited most of them at one time or
+another. I refused to let him see that I had ever noticed him before;
+that is, particularly.
+
+Memoranda: "The very stones and mortar of this historic town seem
+impregnated with the spirit of restful antiquity." (Extract from one of
+aunt Celia's letters.) Among the great men who have studied here are the
+Prince of Wales, Duke of Wellington, Gladstone, Sir Robert Peel, Sir
+Philip Sidney, William Penn, John Locke, the two Wesleys, Ruskin, Ben
+Jonson, and Thomas Otway. (Look Otway up.)
+
+
+
+
+ HE
+
+
+ OXFORD, _June_ 13
+ The Angel.
+
+I have done it, and if I hadn't been a fool and a coward I might have
+done it a week ago, and spared myself a good deal of delicious torment.
+I have just given two hours to a sketch of Addison's Walk and carried it
+to aunt Celia at the Mitre. Object, to find out whether they make a long
+stay in London (our next point), and if so where. It seems they go
+directly through. I said in the course of conversation, "So Miss
+Schuyler is willing to forego a London season? Marvelous self-denial!"
+
+"My niece did not come to Europe for a London season," replied Miss Van
+Tyck. "We go through London this time merely as a cathedral town, simply
+because it chances to be where it is geographically. We shall visit St.
+Paul's and Westminster Abbey, and then go directly on, that our chain of
+impressions may have absolute continuity and be free from any disturbing
+elements."
+
+Oh, but she is lovely, is aunt Celia!
+
+ LINCOLN, _June_ 20
+ The Black Boy Inn.
+
+I am stopping at a beastly little hole, which has the one merit of being
+opposite Miss Schuyler's lodgings. My sketch-book has deteriorated in
+artistic value during the last two weeks. Many of its pages, while
+interesting to me as reminiscences, will hardly do for family or studio
+exhibition. If I should label them, the result would be something like
+this:--
+
+1. Sketch of a footstool and desk where I first saw Miss Schuyler
+kneeling.
+
+2. Sketch of a carved-oak chair, Miss Schuyler sitting in it.
+
+3. "Angel Choir." Heads of Miss Schuyler introduced into the carving.
+
+4. Altar screen. Full length figure of Miss Schuyler holding lilies.
+
+5. Tomb of a bishop, where I tied Miss Schuyler's shoe.
+
+6. Tomb of another bishop, where I had to tie it again because I did it
+so badly the first time.
+
+7. Sketch of the shoe; the shoe-lace worn out with much tying.
+
+8. Sketch of the blessed verger who called her "madam," when we were
+walking together.
+
+9. Sketch of her blush when he did it the prettiest thing in the world.
+
+10. Sketch of J. Q. Copley contemplating the ruins of his heart.
+
+"How are the mighty fallen!"
+
+
+
+
+ SHE
+
+
+ LINCOLN, _June_ 22
+ At Miss Brown's, Castle Garden.
+
+Mr. Copley _has_ done something in the world; I was sure that he had. He
+has a little income of his own, but he is too proud and ambitious to be
+an idler. He looked so manly when he talked about it, standing up
+straight and strong in his knickerbockers. I like men in knickerbockers.
+Aunt Celia doesn't. She says she doesn't see how a well-brought-up
+Copley can go about with his legs in that condition. I would give worlds
+to know how aunt Celia ever unbent sufficiently to get engaged. But, as
+I was saying, Mr. Copley has accomplished something, young as he is. He
+has built three picturesque suburban churches suitable for weddings, and
+a state lunatic asylum.
+
+Aunt Celia says we shall have no worthy architecture until every building
+is made an exquisitely sincere representation of its deepest purpose,--a
+symbol, as it were, of its indwelling meaning. I should think it would
+be very difficult to design a lunatic asylum on that basis, but I didn't
+dare say so, as Mr. Copley seemed to think it all right. Their
+conversation is absolutely sublimated when they get to talking of
+architecture. I have just copied two quotations from Emerson, and am
+studying them every night for fifteen minutes before I go to sleep. I'm
+going to quote them some time offhand, just after morning service, when
+we are wandering about the cathedral grounds. The first is this: "The
+Gothic cathedral is a blossoming in stone, subdued by the insatiable
+demand of harmony in man. The mountain of granite blooms into an eternal
+flower, with the lightness and delicate finish as well as the aerial
+proportion and perspective of vegetable beauty." Then when he has
+recovered from the shock of this, here is my second: "Nor can any lover
+of nature enter the old piles of Oxford and English cathedrals without
+feeling that the forest overpowered the mind of the builder, and that his
+chisel, his saw and plane, still reproduced its ferns, its spikes of
+flowers, its locust, elm, pine, and spruce."
+
+Memoranda: _Lincoln choir is an example of Early English or First
+Pointed_, _which can generally be told from something else by bold
+projecting buttresses and dog-tooth moulding round the abacusses_. (The
+plural is my own, and it does not look right.) _Lincoln Castle was the
+scene of many prolonged sieges_, _and was once taken by Oliver Cromwell_.
+
+
+
+
+ HE
+
+
+ YORK, _June_ 24
+ The Black Swan.
+
+Kitty Schuyler is the concentrated essence of feminine witchery.
+Intuition strong, logic weak, and the two qualities so balanced as to
+produce an indefinable charm; will-power large, but docility equal, if a
+man is clever enough to know how to manage her; knowledge of facts
+absolutely nil, but she is exquisitely intelligent in spite of it. She
+has a way of evading, escaping, eluding, and then gives you an
+intoxicating hint of sudden and complete surrender. She is divinely
+innocent, but roguishness saves her from insipidity. Her looks? She
+looks as you would imagine a person might look who possessed these
+graces; and she is worth looking at, though every time I do it I have a
+rush of love to the head. When you find a girl who combines all the
+qualities you have imagined in the ideal, and who has added a dozen or
+two on her own account, merely to distract you past all hope, why stand
+up and try to resist her charm? Down on your knees like a man, say I!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm getting to adore aunt Celia. I didn't care for her at first, but she
+is so deliciously blind! Anything more exquisitely unserviceable as a
+chaperon I can't imagine. Absorbed in antiquity, she ignores the babble
+of contemporaneous lovers. That any man could look at Kitty when he
+could look at a cathedral passes her comprehension. I do not presume too
+greatly on her absent-mindedness, however, lest she should turn
+unexpectedly and rend me. I always remember that inscription on the
+backs of the little mechanical French toys,--"Quoiqu'elle soit tres
+solidement montee, il faut ne pas brutaliser la machine."
+
+And so my courtship progresses under aunt Celia's very nose. I say
+"progresses," but it is impossible to speak with any certainty of
+courting, for the essence of that gentle craft is hope, rooted in labor
+and trained by love.
+
+I set out to propose to her during service this afternoon by writing my
+feelings on the fly-leaf of the hymn-book, or something like that; but I
+knew that aunt Celia would never forgive such blasphemy, and I thought
+that Kitty herself might consider it wicked. Besides, if she should
+chance to accept me, there was nothing I could do, in a cathedral, to
+relieve my feelings. No; if she ever accepts me, I wish it to be in a
+large, vacant spot of the universe, peopled by two only, and those two so
+indistinguishably blended, as it were, that they would appear as one to
+the casual observer. So I practiced repression, though the wall of my
+reserve is worn to the thinness of thread-paper, and I tried to keep my
+mind on the droning minor canon, and not to look at her, "for that way
+madness lies."
+
+
+
+
+ SHE
+
+
+ YORK, _June_ 26
+ High Petersgate Street.
+
+My taste is so bad! I just begin to realize it, and I am feeling my
+"growing pains," like Gwendolen in "Daniel Deronda." I admired the
+stained glass in the Lincoln Cathedral, especially the Nuremberg window.
+I thought Mr. Copley looked pained, but he said nothing. When I went to
+my room, I looked in a book and found that all the glass in that
+cathedral is very modern and very bad, and the Nuremberg window is the
+worst of all. Aunt Celia says she hopes that it will be a warning to me
+to read before I speak; but Mr. Copley says no, that the world would lose
+more in one way than it would gain in the other. I tried my quotations
+this morning, and stuck fast in the middle of the first.
+
+Mr. Copley says that aunt Celia has been feeing the vergers altogether
+too much, and I wrote a song about it called "The Ballad of the Vergers
+and the Foolish Virgin," which I sang to my guitar. Mr. Copley says it
+is cleverer than anything he ever did with his pencil, but of course he
+says that only to be agreeable.
+
+We all went to an evening service last night. Coming home, aunt Celia
+walked ahead with Mrs. Benedict, who keeps turning up at the most
+unexpected moments. She's going to build a Gothicky memorial chapel
+somewhere. I don't know for whom, unless it's for Benedict Arnold. I
+don't like her in the least, but four is certainly a more comfortable
+number than three. I scarcely ever have a moment alone with Mr. Copley;
+for go where I will and do what I please, aunt Celia has the most perfect
+confidence in my indiscretion, so she is always _en evidence_.
+
+Just as we were turning into the quiet little street where we are lodging
+I said, "Oh dear, I wish that I knew something about architecture!"
+
+"If you don't know anything about it, you are certainly responsible for a
+good deal of it," said Mr. Copley.
+
+"I? How do you mean?" I asked quite innocently, because I couldn't see
+how he could twist such a remark as that into anything like sentiment.
+
+"I have never built so many castles in my life as since I've known you,
+Miss Schuyler," he said.
+
+"Oh," I answered as lightly as I could, "air-castles don't count."
+
+"The building of air-castles is an innocent amusement enough, I suppose,"
+he said, "but I'm committing the folly of living in mine. I"--
+
+Then I was frightened. When, all at once, you find you have something
+precious you only dimly suspected was to be yours, you almost wish it
+hadn't come so soon. But just at that moment Mrs. Benedict called to us,
+and came tramping back from the gate, and hooked her supercilious,
+patronizing arm in Mr. Copley's, and asked him into the sitting-room to
+talk over the "lady chapel" in her new memorial church. Then aunt Celia
+told me they would excuse me, as I had had a wearisome day; and there was
+nothing for me to do but to go to bed, like a snubbed child, and wonder
+if I should ever know the end of that sentence. And I listened at the
+head of the stairs, shivering, but all that I could hear was that Mrs.
+Benedict asked Mr. Copley to be her own architect. Her architect indeed!
+That woman ought not to be at large!
+
+ DURHAM, _July_ 15
+ At Farmer Hendry's.
+
+We left York this morning, and arrived here about eleven o'clock. It
+seems there is some sort of an election going on in the town, and there
+was not a single fly at the station. Mr. Copley walked about in every
+direction, but neither horse nor vehicle was to be had for love nor
+money. At last we started to walk to the village, Mr. Copley so laden
+with our hand-luggage that he resembled a pack-mule. We made a tour of
+the inns, but not a single room was to be had, not for that night nor for
+three days ahead, on account of that same election.
+
+"Hadn't we better go on to Edinburgh, aunt Celia?" I asked.
+
+"Edinburgh? Never!" she replied. "Do you suppose that I would
+voluntarily spend a Sunday in those bare Presbyterian churches until the
+memory of these past ideal weeks has faded a little from my memory?
+What, leave out Durham and spoil the set?" (She spoke of the cathedrals
+as if they were souvenir spoons.) "I intended to stay here for a week or
+more, and write up a record of our entire trip from Winchester while the
+impressions were fresh in my mind."
+
+"And I had intended doing the same thing," said Mr. Copley. "That is, I
+hoped to finish off my previous sketches, which are in a frightful state
+of incompletion, and spend a good deal of time on the interior of this
+cathedral, which is unusually beautiful." (At this juncture aunt Celia
+disappeared for a moment to ask the barmaid if, in her opinion, the
+constant consumption of malt liquors prevents a more dangerous indulgence
+in brandy and whiskey. She is gathering statistics, but as the barmaids
+can never collect their thoughts while they are drawing ale, aunt Celia
+proceeds slowly.)
+
+"For my part," said I, with mock humility, "I am a docile person who
+never has any intentions of her own, but who yields herself sweetly to
+the intentions of other people in her immediate vicinity."
+
+"Are you?" asked Mr. Copley, taking out his pencil.
+
+"Yes, I said so. What are you doing?"
+
+"Merely taking note of your statement, that's all.--Now, Miss Van Tyck, I
+have a plan to propose. I was here last summer with a couple of Harvard
+men, and we lodged at a farmhouse half a mile from the cathedral. If you
+will step into the coffee-room of the Shoulder of Mutton and Cauliflower
+for an hour, I'll walk up to Farmer Hendry's and see if they will take us
+in. I think we might be fairly comfortable."
+
+"Can aunt Celia have Apollinaris and black coffee after her morning
+bath?" I asked.
+
+"I hope, Katharine," said aunt Celia majestically,--"I hope that I can
+accommodate myself to circumstances. If Mr. Copley can secure lodgings
+for us, I shall be more than grateful."
+
+So here we are, all lodging together in an ideal English farmhouse.
+There is a thatched roof on one of the old buildings, and the dairy house
+is covered with ivy, and Farmer Hendry's wife makes a real English
+courtesy, and there are herds of beautiful sleek Durham cattle, and the
+butter and cream and eggs and mutton are delicious; and I never, never
+want to go home any more. I want to live here forever, and wave the
+American flag on Washington's birthday.
+
+I am so happy that I feel as if something were going to spoil it all.
+Twenty years old to-day! I wish mamma were alive to wish me many happy
+returns.
+
+Memoranda: Casual remark for breakfast table or perhaps for luncheon,--it
+is a trifle heavy for breakfast: "Since the sixteenth century and despite
+the work of Inigo Jones and the great Wren (not Jenny Wren--Christopher),
+architecture has had, in England especially, no legitimate development."
+
+
+
+
+ HE
+
+
+ DURHAM, _July_ 19
+
+O child of fortune, thy name is J. Q. Copley! How did it happen to be
+election time? Why did the inns chance to be full? How did aunt Celia
+relax sufficiently to allow me to find her a lodging? Why did she fall
+in love with the lodging when found? I do not know. I only know Fate
+smiles; that Kitty and I eat our morning bacon and eggs together; that I
+carve Kitty's cold beef and pour Kitty's sparkling ale at luncheon; that
+I go to vespers with Kitty, and dine with Kitty, and walk in the gloaming
+with Kitty--and aunt Celia. And after a day of heaven like this, like
+Lorna Doone's lover,--ay, and like every other lover, I suppose,--I go to
+sleep, and the roof above me swarms with angels, having Kitty under it!
+
+We were coming home from afternoon service, Kitty and I. (I am
+anticipating for she was "Miss Schuyler" then, but never mind.) We were
+walking through the fields, while Mrs. Benedict and aunt Celia were
+driving. As we came across a corner of the bit of meadow land that joins
+the stable and the garden, we heard a muffled roar, and as we looked
+round we saw a creature with tossing horns and waving tail making for us,
+head down, eyes flashing. Kitty gave a shriek. We chanced to be near a
+pair of low bars. I hadn't been a college athlete for nothing. I swung
+Kitty over the bars, and jumped after her. But she, not knowing in her
+fright where she was nor what she was doing; supposing, also, that the
+mad creature, like the villain in the play, would "still pursue her,"
+flung herself bodily into my arms, crying, "Jack! Jack! Save me!"
+
+"It was the first time she had called me Jack," and I needed no second
+invitation. I proceeded to save her,--in the usual way, by holding her
+to my heart and kissing her lovely hair reassuringly, as I murmured: "You
+are safe, my darling; not a hair of your precious head shall be hurt.
+Don't be frightened."
+
+She shivered like a leaf. "I am frightened," she said. "I can't help
+being frightened. He will chase us, I know. Where is he? What is he
+doing now?"
+
+Looking up to determine if I need abbreviate this blissful moment, I saw
+the enraged animal disappearing in the side door of the barn; and it was
+a nice, comfortable Durham cow,--that somewhat rare but possible thing, a
+sportive cow!
+
+"Is he gone?" breathed Kitty from my waistcoat.
+
+"Yes, he is gone--she is gone, darling. But don't move; it may come
+again."
+
+My first too hasty assurance had calmed Kitty's fears, and she raised her
+charming flushed face from its retreat and prepared to withdraw. I did
+not facilitate the preparations, and a moment of awkward silence ensued.
+
+"Might I inquire," I asked, "if the dear little person at present
+reposing in my arms will stay there (with intervals for rest and
+refreshment) for the rest of her natural life?"
+
+She withdrew entirely now, all but her hand, and her eyes sought the
+ground.
+
+"I suppose I shall have to now,--that is, if you think--at least, I
+suppose you do think--at any rate, you look as if you were thinking--that
+this has been giving you encouragement."
+
+"I do indeed,--decisive, undoubted, barefaced encouragement."
+
+"I don't think I ought to be judged as if I were in my sober senses," she
+replied. "I was frightened within an inch of my life. I told you this
+morning that I was dreadfully afraid of bulls, especially mad ones, and I
+told you that my nurse frightened me, when I was a child, with awful
+stories about them, and that I never outgrew my childish terror. I
+looked everywhere about: the barn was too far, the fence too high, I saw
+him coming, and there was nothing but you and the open country; of course
+I took you. It was very natural, I'm sure,--any girl would have done
+it."
+
+"To be sure," I replied soothingly, "any girl would have run after me, as
+you say."
+
+"I didn't say any girl would have run after you,--you needn't flatter
+yourself; and besides, I think I was really trying to protect you as well
+as to gain protection; else why should I have cast myself on you like a
+catamount, or a catacomb, or whatever the thing is?"
+
+"Yes, darling, I thank you for saving my life, and I am willing to devote
+the remainder of it to your service as a pledge of my gratitude; but if
+you should take up life-saving as a profession, dear, don't throw
+yourself on a fellow with"--
+
+"Jack! Jack!" she cried, putting her hand over my lips, and getting it
+well kissed in consequence. "If you will only forget that, and never,
+never taunt me with it afterwards, I'll--I'll--well, I'll do anything in
+reason; yes, even marry you!"
+
+ CANTERBURY, _July_ 31
+ The Royal Fountain.
+
+I was never sure enough of Kitty, at first, to dare risk telling her
+about that little mistake of hers. She is such an elusive person that I
+spend all my time in wooing her, and can never lay flattering unction to
+my soul that she is really won.
+
+But after aunt Celia had looked up my family record and given a
+provisional consent, and papa Schuyler had cabled a reluctant blessing, I
+did not feel capable of any further self-restraint.
+
+It was twilight here in Canterbury, and we were sitting on the
+vine-shaded veranda of aunt Celia's lodging. Kitty's head was on my
+shoulder. There is something very queer about that; when Kitty's head is
+on my shoulder, I am not capable of any consecutive train of thought.
+When she puts it there I see stars, then myriads of stars, then, oh! I
+can't begin to enumerate the steps by which ecstasy mounts to delirium;
+but at all events, any operation which demands exclusive use of the
+intellect is beyond me at these times. Still I gathered my stray wits
+together and said, "Kitty!"
+
+"Yes, Jack?"
+
+"Now that nothing but death or marriage can separate us, I have something
+to confess to you."
+
+"Yes," she said serenely, "I know what you are going to say. He was a
+cow."
+
+I lifted her head from my shoulder sternly, and gazed into her childlike,
+candid eyes.
+
+"You mountain of deceit! How long have you known about it?"
+
+"Ever since the first. Oh, Jack, stop looking at me in that way! Not
+the very first, not when I--not when you--not when we--no, not then, but
+the next morning I said to Farmer Hendry, 'I wish you would keep your
+savage bull chained up while we are here; aunt Celia is awfully afraid of
+them, especially those that go mad, like yours!' 'Lor', miss,' said
+Farmer Hendry, 'he haven't been pastured here for three weeks. I keep
+him six mile away. There ben't nothing but gentle cows in the home
+medder.' But I didn't think that you knew, you secretive person! I dare
+say you planned the whole thing in advance, in order to take advantage of
+my fright!"
+
+"Never! I am incapable of such an unnecessary subterfuge! Besides,
+Kitty, I could not have made an accomplice of a cow, you know."
+
+"Then," she said, with great dignity, "if you had been a gentleman and a
+man of honor, you would have cried, 'Unhand me, girl! You are clinging
+to me under a misunderstanding!'"
+
+
+
+
+ SHE
+
+
+ CHESTER, _August_ 8
+ The Grosvenor.
+
+Jack and I are going over this same ground next summer, on our wedding
+trip. We shall sail for home next week, and we haven't half done justice
+to the cathedrals. After the first two, we saw nothing but each other on
+a general background of architecture. I hope my mind is improved, but
+oh, I am so hazy about all the facts I have read since I knew Jack!
+Winchester and Salisbury stand out superbly in my memory. They acquired
+their ground before it was occupied with other matters. I shall never
+forget, for instance, that Winchester has the longest spire and Salisbury
+the highest nave of all the English cathedrals. And I shall never forget
+so long as I live that Jane Austen and Isaac Newt--Oh dear! was it Isaac
+Newton or Izaak Walton that was buried in Winchester and Salisbury? To
+think that that interesting fact should have slipped from my mind, after
+all the trouble I took with it! But I know that it was Isaac somebody,
+and that he was buried in--well, he was buried in one of those two
+places. I am not certain which, but I can ask Jack; he is sure to know.
+
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A CATHEDRAL COURTSHIP***
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