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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #66635 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/66635)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature,
-Science, and Art, Fifth Series, No. 49, Vol. I, December 6, 1884, by
-Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art,
- Fifth Series, No. 49, Vol. I, December 6, 1884
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: October 31, 2021 [eBook #66635]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Susan Skinner, Eric Hutton and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The Internet
- Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART, FIFTH SERIES, NO. 49, VOL. I, DECEMBER 6,
-1884 ***
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
-CHAMBERS’S JOURNAL
-
-OF
-
-POPULAR
-
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART
-
-FIFTH SERIES
-
-ESTABLISHED BY WILLIAM AND ROBERT CHAMBERS, 1832
-
-CONDUCTED BY R. CHAMBERS (SECUNDUS)
-
-NO. 49.—VOL. I. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1884. PRICE 1½_d._]
-
-
-
-
-POISONING.
-
-
-An examination of the Registrar-general’s annual Report for 1882 gives
-some interesting and suggestive statistics as to cases of poisoning,
-which we think it may not be out of place to call attention to.
-Probably few of our readers will be aware how frequently cases of
-poisoning occur in the ordinary course of events. In the year 1881,
-for example, there were five hundred and sixty-nine deaths recorded
-in England alone from poisoning; while the year 1882 shows a record
-considerably in excess of this, namely, five hundred and ninety-nine,
-or one in every eight hundred and sixty-three of the total deaths
-registered. Fully two-fifths of these cases are classified under the
-heading ‘Accident and Negligence’—the remainder are suicides, of which
-we will have a word to say by-and-by—and as it is not too much to
-assume that in nearly every instance such cases are preventable, we
-purpose calling attention to some of the more common causes of these
-fatalities, in the hope that the suggestions and warnings thrown out
-may not be without their influence in producing more care in the
-handling and use of these dangerous substances.
-
-Glancing over the various poisons, we find that the well-known
-preparations of opium, laudanum, and morphia—opium itself being
-included—head the list, having caused eighty-five deaths through
-accident or negligence. This might have been expected from preparations
-so largely used in domestic remedies; but the seventy-eight deaths from
-lead-poisoning which follow do surprise us, in view of the fact that
-the conditions which produce as well as the conditions which mitigate
-or counteract the effects of this subtle poison, are now so well known.
-Lead is followed by the four stronger acids—hydrochloric, nitric,
-sulphuric, and carbolic, which amongst them have caused thirty-four
-deaths under the same category. Arsenic, again, caused nine;
-phosphorus, eleven; chlorodyne, six; chloral, fourteen; chloroform,
-four; soothing syrup, four; with a host of casualties from substances
-of minor importance.
-
-Reading between the lines of the Registrar-general’s Report, which
-it is not difficult to do, with the help of the medical journals, we
-will find that there are two prolific causes of these accidents—first,
-the giving or taking of overdoses of certain remedies containing
-poisons; and second, the substitution of one bottle or substance for
-another, as, for example, where a number of substances are congregated
-together, as in the case of the domestic cupboard. In the first class
-may be instanced the giving of overdoses of opiates or soothing
-preparations to children; the taking of overdoses of narcotics or
-soothing compounds, such as chloral, by habitual drinkers; and the
-general familiarity which the handling or using of these powerful
-agents frequently begets in those habitually using them. In the second
-class may be instanced such mistakes as the substituting of one bottle
-containing, say, a poisonous liniment, for a mixture intended for
-internal administration; the hasty and foolish practice of quaffing off
-a draught from any jug, bottle, or dish without examining the contents;
-and lastly, mistakes caused from accumulating within easy access
-powerful medicines, in the hope that they may come of future use.
-
-Now, every good housewife may not be a trained nurse, but she is almost
-certain to be called upon at one time or another to act as nurse, and
-she may save herself many a bitter reflection if she would only attend
-to the following simple and easy to be remembered rules:
-
-(1) Never give an infant an opiate or other powerful soothing remedy
-without first obtaining the sanction of the doctor. No practice is more
-common when mothers meet than to talk over their children’s complaints,
-suggest remedies, and magnify their several experiences, with the
-result that domestic recipes are lauded, approved, and tried too often
-in total ignorance either of their suitability or safety. Few mothers
-are aware of the important fact, that a medicine containing a narcotic
-or soothing ingredient may cure one infant and kill another of equal
-strength, age, &c. This varied action of soothing remedies on infants
-cannot be too well known or too strongly impressed upon mothers.
-
-(2) Where powerful remedies, particularly such as contain opiates or
-chloral, are being administered, the patients should not be allowed
-to measure them or repeat the dose for themselves. In the midst of
-racking pain or tossing about with sleeplessness, the chances are
-that the patient will take a larger dose than that prescribed, to
-obtain speedier relief; although it is not even in this that the
-principal risk of accident lies. The great risk is that the patient
-will repeat the dose before the influence of the previous dose has
-exhausted itself; repeating the dose in a state of semi-consciousness
-or of complete recklessness, to the total disregard of either quantity
-or consequence. It would be well if persons in the habit of taking
-laudanum, morphia, chloral, and chlorodyne would keep this danger in
-mind.
-
-(3) Never place bottles or packets containing poison alongside of those
-intended for internal use. This is one of the most prolific causes of
-accidents; and experience has shown that neither the distinctive blue
-corrugated bottles, which are now frequently used to hold poisons,
-nor labels, are sufficient to insure immunity from accident, even
-among trained nurses, where medicines are allowed to be collected
-indiscriminately together. (In the act of writing this, a case in point
-has come under our observation which well illustrates the fearful
-risk that is run in failing to attend to this simple rule. A daughter
-was requested by her mother to give her a dose of her medicine. Only
-two bottles were on the dressing-room table, the one containing the
-medicine required, and the other containing a poisonous liniment. The
-daughter saw the liniment bottle, read the label poison, took up the
-other bottle containing the mixture correctly, but put it down again
-to pick something up, and the second time took up the bottle, but this
-time without reading the label, with the result that the liniment was
-given instead of the mixture, with fatal results. Similar cases might
-be multiplied indefinitely.)
-
-(4) Never put any poison, such as carbolic acid, oxalic acid, or any
-other of the stronger acids into beer-bottles, jugs, cups, or other
-vessels which both children and adults are apt to associate in their
-minds with substances not in themselves dangerous. One can hardly
-take up a medical journal without finding some death recorded in this
-manner. A bottle or cup is standing on a table or in a cupboard, and
-under the impression that it contains beer or spirits, tea or coffee,
-or even pure water, some one quaffs the contents, and only finds when
-it is probably too late that he has drunk some virulent poison. One
-is very apt to say, ‘How stupid!’ on reading such cases, and yet one
-of the earliest experiences of the writer was in connection with a
-mistake in every respect resembling this, and it well illustrates how
-such mistakes may be made by intelligent if not even educated men—men
-trained to exercise eyes, nose, and mouth—without their being detected
-until too late. A student in the dispensary, one hot dusty day,
-feeling thirsty, thought he would slake his thirst not at the tap, but
-from the ‘Aqua fontana’ bottle on the shelf. Next this bottle stood
-another containing turpentine, both bottles being correctly and plainly
-labelled. Feeling confident in his bottle, he carelessly lifted it
-from the shelf, took a long draught, and never discovered that he was
-quaffing the turpentine until the bottle was withdrawn from his mouth.
-Fortunately, nature dealt kindly by the lad, in quickly rejecting the
-nauseous liquid.
-
-Lastly, never accumulate powerful remedies, in the belief that they
-may be required on some future occasion. It is highly probable that
-many of our readers will have a family medicine chest in which there
-is a place for every bottle, and in which every bottle must be in its
-place, and the whole in beautiful order. This is the very idea for a
-medicine cupboard—not only a place for everything, and everything in
-its place, but all plainly and correctly marked. As a rule, however,
-nothing can be further from the reality than such a picture. The
-ordinary domestic medicine cupboard is too frequently a shelf of
-some press or dark closet, where all medicines and remedies not in
-use—poisonous liniments, poisonous mixtures, simples, and so on—are
-all literally huddled together, with nothing to mark their contents
-save the stereotyped directions: ‘The liniment for external use,’ or,
-‘A teaspoonful three times a day.’ It is not difficult under such
-circumstances to picture a typical case of what is almost certain
-sooner or later to occur. Johnny, one of the children, is frequently
-troubled with a cough, but the east winds having for a time been
-propitious, Johnny’s cough mixture is put away in the cupboard.
-By-and-by, however, Johnny overheats himself, is again caught by the
-east wind, and so his mamma goes to the cupboard for his mixture.
-Johnny escapes it may be all the poisonous liniments, for the bottle is
-distinctly marked, ‘A teaspoonful three times a day;’ but Johnny does
-not by any means escape all risk, for it is more than probable that his
-mamma has quite forgotten about his papa’s tonic mixture containing
-strychnine, or her own fever mixture containing aconite, or his older
-brother’s mixture containing arsenic, and probably many others, all
-labelled, ‘A teaspoonful three times a day,’ and all resembling
-Johnny’s as much as two peas do each other. This is no fanciful
-picture, but one which we have experienced again and again—sometimes
-with serious consequences, but more frequently with more fright than
-hurt. Still, such a risk should never be run. The agony which a
-mother feels when she realises either that she has given, or that her
-child has taken an overdose of poison or of some powerful medicine by
-mistake, requires to be witnessed to be understood in all its terrible
-reality; but once witnessed, we think it might be sufficient to act as
-a warning as to getting too familiar or careless in the handling or
-storing of such potent agents.
-
-Nevertheless, it is a remarkable fact that some persons never acquire
-this caution, even with such a bitter experience as that described. We
-remember being called up one midnight to a case of poisoning, where
-an ounce of saltpetre had been given for an ounce of Epsom salts. The
-mother recollected placing the salts in the cupboard, but she forgot
-one other very important fact, that she had also placed the packet of
-saltpetre in the same place some time previously, and so she took the
-first packet that came to her hand and made it up without the slightest
-inspection. Notwithstanding this experience, a week or two later she
-made a similar mistake with another poison from the same cupboard. A
-phial of croton oil, used to produce an eruption on the chest, was
-lifted instead of a phial of olive oil, and poured into the ear to
-relieve earache.
-
-Referring for a moment to suicides, of which there were two hundred
-and eighty-eight for the same period, we find some curious and
-even extraordinary statistics. For example, there is a very great
-difference, as a rule, in the agents employed by men and by women
-to effect suicide. A class of poisons under the generic name of
-vermin-killers, but which in the majority of instances are merely
-arsenic or strychnine disguised, have been the agents used by seventeen
-females and only seven males. The opium preparations, on the other
-hand, very nearly reverse these proportions, having been used by
-twenty males and only twelve females. Carbolic acid, again, has been
-used by thirteen females and only six males; and so on. Apparently,
-the agent used in the majority of cases is determined either by a
-facility in the obtaining of the poison, or by a certain familiarity in
-the every-day use of it, otherwise we cannot account for the general
-use of some slow, uncertain, and frightfully painful poisons such as
-carbolic acid and phosphorus. Of more importance, however, than this
-are the following facts, which we think require some explanation or
-investigation. We find one hundred and one deaths recorded—fifty-eight
-by accident and forty-three by suicide—from seven substances alone, not
-one of which the legislature at present requires to be labelled poison!
-Surely this requires some looking after. We find seventy-eight deaths
-(not suicides) from lead-poisoning. We would like to know how far these
-seventy-eight deaths are to be accounted for from absorption of the
-poison by those working amongst it, and how far they might have been
-avoided by ordinary precautions? Lastly, we find one hundred and two
-deaths—twenty-six by accident and seventy-six by suicide—from poisons
-which should not be sold unless under the strictest regulations. We
-would like to know how far these regulations have been observed in
-these cases, as we have reason to conclude that there is a laxity
-existing somewhere.
-
-
-
-
-ONE WOMAN’S HISTORY.
-
-_A NOVELETTE._
-
-BY T. W. SPEIGHT.
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-The first thing that struck Colonel Woodruffe on entering the room of
-Madame De Vigne was the extreme pallor of her face. She looked like a
-woman newly restored to the world after a long and dangerous illness.
-Although the window was wide open, the venetians were lowered, while
-Mora herself was dressed in black, and in the semi-obscurity of the
-room, her white, set face, with its sorrow-laden eyes, had an effect
-that was almost ghostlike to one coming suddenly out of the glaring
-sunlight. At least so it seemed to Colonel Woodruffe. He felt that at
-such a time all commonplace questions would seem trivial and out of
-place, so he went forward without a word, and lifting her hand, pressed
-it gently to his lips.
-
-‘Read this, please,’ she said as she handed him her husband’s letter.
-Then they both sat down.
-
-He read the note through slowly and carefully. As he handed it back to
-her, he said: ‘What do you mean to do?’
-
-‘I shall see him at the hour he specifies, and shall tell him that I
-have already commissioned you to seek out Sir William Ridsdale and tell
-him everything.’
-
-‘Everything?’ he asked.
-
-‘Everything,’ she answered in the same hard, dry voice; a slight
-trembling of her long, thin fingers was the only sign that betrayed
-the emotion pent up within. ‘Dear friend,’ she went on, ‘I want you at
-once to find Sir William and tell him everything as I told it to you on
-Wednesday. It will then be for him to decide whether he can accept the
-sister of an ex-convict’s wife for his daughter-in-law. If he cannot,
-then God help my poor Clarice! But nothing must be kept back from him,
-whatever the result may be.’ Then after a little pause, she said,
-looking earnestly into his face: ‘Do you not agree with me?’
-
-‘I do,’ he answered. ‘The right thing is always the best thing to do,
-whatever consequences may follow. Depend upon it, you will lose nothing
-in the eyes of Sir William by throwing yourself on his generosity in
-the way you propose doing.—But I have had news. Sir William will be
-here—at the _Palatine_—in the course of a few hours.’
-
-‘Ah! So much the better. So will the climax come all the more quickly.
-But, my poor Clari! Oh, my poor, darling Clari!’ Her lips quivered, a
-stifled sob broke from her heart, but her eyes were as dry and tearless
-as before.
-
-The colonel waited a moment, and then he said: ‘What you purpose
-telling a certain person at your interview this evening will enable you
-to set him at defiance—will it not?’
-
-‘It will—thoroughly and completely. I shall have taken the initiative
-out of his hands, and he will be powerless to harm me.’
-
-‘Your fortune?’ he said.
-
-‘Is settled strictly on myself. He cannot touch a penny of it.’ Then,
-after a pause, she added: ‘Not that I want him to starve; not that I
-would refuse him a certain share of my money—if I could only feel sure
-it would keep him from evil courses. But it would never do that—never!
-In such as he, there is no possibility of change.’
-
-‘I will make a point of seeing Sir William as soon as he arrives,’ said
-the colonel as he rose and pushed back his chair. ‘I suppose that is
-what you would like me to do?’
-
-‘The sooner the better,’ answered Mora, also rising. ‘You will come to
-me the moment you have any news?’
-
-‘I will not fail to do so. For the present, I presume you will say
-nothing to your sister?’
-
-‘Why trouble her till the time comes? Let her linger in her love-dream
-while she may. The waking will be a cruel one when it comes.’
-
-‘With all my heart, I hope not!’ answered the colonel fervently. Then,
-as he took her hand, he added: ‘We shall meet again in a few hours.’
-
-‘How good you are!’ she murmured, with a little break in her voice.
-
-He shook his head, but would not trust himself to speak. He was more
-moved than he would have cared to own. Once more he lifted her fingers
-to his lips. Next moment she was alone.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Mr Dulcimer and Miss Wynter went gaily on their way to the lake. To
-hear them talking and laughing, no one would have thought that they had
-a care beyond the enjoyment of the passing hour, yet each was secretly
-conscious that for them that day might perchance prove one of the
-most momentous in their lives. They found a boat with fishing-tackle
-awaiting them. Bella shook a little as she bade farewell to _terra
-firma_. She felt as an ancient Greek might have felt—that the Fates
-were against her—that destiny was stronger than she, and urged her
-forward whether she wished it or not. She who had heretofore been so
-wilful seemed to have no power of will left in her.
-
-Before long they found themselves at a point near the head of the lake
-where Dick had been told that he might possibly find some fish. For a
-quarter of an hour or so he plied his rod industriously, but not even a
-nibble rewarded his perseverance. ‘Ah,’ said he at last, ‘the fish are
-evidently off their feed this morning.’
-
-He did not seem in the least put about by his ill-luck, but laying
-his rod across the thwarts, he proceeded leisurely to light his pipe.
-Bella watched him nervously. As soon as his pipe was fairly under way,
-he looked straight into Bella’s eyes and said: ‘I did not so much come
-out here this morning to fish as to secure an opportunity for a little
-quiet talk with you.’
-
-‘I can quite believe it. There is something underhand about most things
-that you do,’ she answered as she dipped one of her hands carelessly
-into the water.
-
-Dick smiled amiably. He delighted in a skirmish.
-
-‘Am I to go back to London to-morrow morning, or am I not? That’s the
-question.’
-
-‘Really, Mr Dulcimer, or Mr Golightly, or whatever your name may be, I
-am at a loss to know why you should put such a question to me.’
-
-Dick burst into a guffaw.
-
-‘May I ask, sir, what you are laughing at?’
-
-‘At you, of course.’
-
-‘Oh!’ It came out with a sort of snap.
-
-‘You look so comical when you put on that mock-dignified air, that it
-always sets me off. Of course I know you can’t help it.’
-
-‘Wretch!’ she retorted, half-starting to her feet. Next moment she sat
-down again in mortal terror. The boat was swaying ominously, or so it
-seemed to her.
-
-‘Please not to flop about so much,’ he said drily, ‘unless you wish
-to find yourself in the water. I’m a tolerable swimmer, and I might,
-perhaps, be able to lug you ashore, but I wouldn’t like to guarantee
-it.’
-
-Her temper vanished like a flash of summer lightning. ‘Oh, do please
-take me back!’ she said, looking at him with a pitiful appeal in her
-eyes. Like many town-bred girls, she had an unconquerable dread of
-water.
-
-‘You are just as safe here as on shore, so long as you sit still,’ he
-answered re-assuringly. And with that he changed his seat and went and
-sat down close in front of her.
-
-The colour began to return to her cheeks. He looked so strong and brave
-and handsome as he sat there, that she felt ashamed of her fears. What
-harm could happen to her while he was there to protect her!
-
-‘Look here, Bella,’ he presently began; ‘where’s the use of you and I
-beating any longer about the bush? I must have a distinct answer from
-you to-day, Yes or No, whether you will promise to become my wife or
-whether you won’t. You know that I love you, just as well as if I told
-you so a thousand times. You know that my love is the genuine article,
-that there’s nothing sham or pinchbeck about it. Your own heart has
-told you that before to-day. There’s something else, too, that it has
-told you.’ He paused.
-
-‘Indeed!’ she said, thrusting out her saucy chin a little way. ‘And
-what may that be, if you please?’ Her spirit was coming back. She was
-not inclined to strike her colours without a struggle.
-
-‘It has told you that you love me,’ he answered slowly and
-deliberately, still looking straight into her eyes.
-
-She was silent for a moment. A little spot of deepest red flashed into
-each of her cheeks. ‘Indeed, sir, you are mistaken,’ she answered with
-a sort of supercilious politeness. ‘I am not aware that my heart has
-told me anything of the kind.’
-
-‘Then it’s high time it did tell you,’ was the cool rejoinder. ‘You
-love me, Bella, whether you know it or not, and the best of it is that
-you can’t help yourself.’
-
-‘Oh! this is too much,’ she cried, and again she half-started to her
-feet. The boat rocked a little.
-
-‘You seem to have made up your mind for a ducking,’ said Dick, although
-in reality there was not the slightest danger. Next moment she was as
-still as a mouse.
-
-He knocked the ashes out of his pipe. ‘Yes, _ma petite_, I’ve got your
-heart in my safe keeping; and what’s more, I don’t mean to let you have
-it back at any price. The pretty toy is not for sale.’
-
-His audacity took her breath away, yet it may be that she did not like
-him less on that account. Certainly Dick’s love-making was of a kind of
-which she had had no previous experience.
-
-‘You have got me here by a mean and shabby subterfuge,’ she cried. ‘You
-have made a prisoner of me, and now you think you can say what you like
-to me.’
-
-‘That’s so,’ he answered equably. ‘Now that I’ve got you here, I mean
-to say my say. Idiot if I didn’t!’
-
-Bella had never felt so helpless in her life. This man seemed to turn
-all her weapons against herself. And she was afraid even to stamp her
-foot!
-
-Richard proceeded to fill his pipe. ‘Don’t you think, _carissima_,
-that we have had enough of fencing, you and I?’ he asked as he struck
-a match. ‘Don’t you think we had better put the foils aside for the
-present and talk a little quiet common-sense?’ His voice had softened
-strangely. All his flippancy seemed to have vanished in a moment.
-
-She did not answer. Her eyes were gazing straight over his shoulder
-at the great solemn hills in the background—not that she saw them in
-reality. He let his match burn itself out, and laid down his unlighted
-pipe. Then he leaned forward and took one of her hands in his strong
-brown palms. His touch thrilled her. All power of resistance seemed
-taken from her. Her bosom rose and fell more quickly, a tender radiance
-suffused her eyes, the roses in her cheeks grew larger, and their tints
-deepened. Love’s sorcery was upon her. She had drunk of the potion, and
-was lost. Never again could she be quite the same as she had been.
-
-What was the ‘quiet common-sense’ he was going to talk? she wondered.
-She had her doubts already as to the accuracy of his definition.
-
-‘There comes a time in the lives of most of us,’ he began with unwonted
-seriousness and still holding one of her hands, ‘when we are confronted
-by two diverging paths, and are called upon to make our choice between
-them. At such a crisis you, my dearest, have now arrived. Before you
-lie two widely diverging paths, one only of which you can take, and
-from which there can be no return. With one of these paths you are
-already familiar; you have trodden it for two years; you know whither
-it leads, or fancy that you know. If you believe that you will find
-your happiness at the end of it, for heaven’s sake, keep to it still!
-But if you don’t so believe—why, then, the other path is open to you.’
-
-He paused. She withdrew her hand. He at once began to feel for his
-match-box. She regretted that she had not allowed him to retain her
-fingers.
-
-‘And that other path leads—whither?’ she asked softly, and with her
-eyes still fixed vaguely on the hills behind him.
-
-‘To love in a cottage—or, say, in a semi-detached villa at Camden Town
-or Peckham Rye, with one small servant, not overclean.’ Evidently he
-had not forgotten what she had said to him on Wednesday. Their eyes
-met, and they both broke into a laugh. He put the match-box back in his
-pocket and took possession of her hand again.
-
-‘You know that all I can offer you is a warm heart and a slender
-purse,’ he said. ‘Not much, I grant, from a worldly point of view;
-still, I believe cases have been known where two people have been
-venturesome enough to start in life together on a capital as
-ridiculously insignificant as that just named, and have not been
-unhappy afterwards. On the other hand, you know the brilliant future
-which your aunt predicts for you, if you will only be an obedient girl
-and do as she wants you to do; that is to say, if you will only marry
-the first rich man who proposes to you, whether you care for him or
-whether you don’t. Well, there are many young ladies nowadays who seem
-to find their happiness in that direction. Why shouldn’t you? As you
-said yourself the other day, you are a piece of human bric-à-brac to
-be knocked down to the highest bidder.’
-
-‘Don’t, don’t!’ she cried with quivering lips.
-
-‘Be mine, then!’ exclaimed Dick passionately. ‘Become the wife of the
-man who loves you, and save yourself from further degradation. At
-present you are a slave—a chattel. Break your fetters, cast them behind
-you for ever, and come to my arms: there is your proper home!’
-
-‘O Dick, what would my aunt say—what would she do?’ she asked in an
-uncertain, tremulous voice.
-
-‘There! now you’ve done it!’ he exclaimed with a laugh, that yet
-sounded as if there were a tear in it.
-
-‘Done—what?’ she asked in amaze.
-
-‘Told me all that I want to know!’ he cried in triumph. ‘If your aunt
-is the only obstacle—I don’t care for ten thousand aunts! You are
-mine—my own—and all the she-dragons in the world shall not tear you
-from me!’
-
-Bella saw the uselessness of further resistance, and, like a sensible
-girl, she capitulated without another word.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When Friday morning broke clear and sunny, Lady Renshaw’s good temper,
-which seemed somehow to have evaporated in the rain and fog of the
-previous day, came back to her in a lump as it were. She spent an extra
-half-hour over the mysteries of her toilet, donned one of her most
-becoming costumes, and descended to the breakfast-room, on conquest
-bent. But, alas, when she reached the room she found no one there
-to conquer; the enemy was nowhere to be seen. She had the _salle_
-almost to herself. Then it began to dawn upon her that there was
-just a possibility that both Dr Mac and the vicar might have ‘made
-tracks’ thus early in the day on purpose to escape her. And yet such
-an idea was almost too preposterous for belief. Had they not both been
-unmistakably infatuated on Wednesday, each in his own peculiar way?
-Had they not both been palpably jealous of each other? Why, then,
-should they try to shun her on Friday? Why should forty-eight hours
-make such a vast difference in their feelings? But, perhaps, there was
-something in the background of which she knew nothing. Perhaps some one
-had been prejudicing the two gentlemen against her. If such were the
-case, she could only set it down as the handiwork of that obnoxious
-Miss Gaisford. She had felt from the first that she could never like
-the vicar’s sister; and besides, was it not just possible that Miss
-Gaisford herself might be setting her cap at the doctor? If so, poor
-thing, it evidently would be labour in vain.
-
-This thought put her ladyship into a somewhat better humour. Matters
-should be altered on the morrow. She would make an heroic effort, and
-rise with the lark, or at least early enough to breakfast at the same
-time that the gentlemen partook of that meal. It would be her own
-fault, then, if she allowed them to slip through her fingers. The poor
-dear vicar might go as soon as he had served her purpose in keeping
-alive the doctor’s jealousy; but the latter individual she meant to
-bring, metaphorically, to his knees before he was many days older, and
-she never for a moment doubted her ability to do so. Miss Gaisford,
-indeed! Ah ha! let those laugh who win.
-
-She found herself in the sitting-room by the time she arrived at this
-triumphant peroration. It was empty. Lady Renshaw, in accordance
-with her usual tactics when no one was about, began to pry and peer
-here and there, opening such drawers in the writing-table as did not
-happen to be locked, turning over the paper and envelopes, and even
-submitting the blotting-pad to a careful examination; she had heard
-that strange secrets had sometimes been revealed by the agency of a
-sheet of blotting-paper. Nothing, however, rewarded her perquisition.
-She next crossed to the chimney-piece. Careless people occasionally
-left envelopes, and even letters, on that convenient shelf. Here, too,
-her search was without success. She felt somewhat aggrieved.
-
-Suddenly her eye was caught by a gleam of something white just inside
-the scroll-work of the fender. She had pounced upon it in an instant.
-It proved to be merely a scrap of half-charred paper; but when she
-had opened it, which she did very carefully, she found it to be
-covered with writing. It was, in fact, a fragment of the letter given
-by Madame De Vigne to Colonel Woodruffe. The colonel had watched
-the flames devour the letter, till it was all gone except the small
-portion held between his thumb and finger. This he had dropped without
-thought into the fender, where it had till now remained, untouched by
-the housemaid’s brush. Lady Renshaw went to the window, and having
-first satisfied herself that no one was watching her, she put on her
-glasses, and tenderly straightening out the paper on the palm of one
-hand, she proceeded to decipher it. The fire had left nothing save a
-few brief sentences, which lacked both beginning and end. Such as they
-were, however, they seemed pregnant with a sinister significance. Her
-ladyship’s colour changed as she read. She was nearly certain that
-the writing was that of Madame De Vigne; but in order to make herself
-certain on the point, she turned to an album belonging to Clarice which
-lay on the table, in which were some verses written by her sister and
-signed with her name. Yes—the writing was indisputably that of Madame
-De Vigne!
-
-Once more she turned to the scrap of paper and read the words. She
-wanted to fix them in her memory. They ran as follows:
-
-‘My husband ... five years ago ... sentenced to penal servitude.... You
-now know all.’
-
-‘The key of the mystery, as I live!’ cried Lady Renshaw triumphantly.
-‘The widow of a convict! Well might she not care to speak about her
-past life. Ah ha! my fine madam, your reign is nearly at an end. I
-wonder what Mr Etheridge will say to this. He may be back by now. I
-will go in search of him at once. But for whom can the letter have been
-intended? In any case, she seems to have repented writing it, and to
-have burnt it rather than send it.’
-
-She took a book off the table and placed the fragment carefully between
-the leaves, so as to preserve it intact. She then went in search of
-Mr Etheridge. That gentleman and Clarice had just returned from their
-excursion. Their first care was to examine the letter-rack in the
-hall. There they each found a telegram. Clarice tore hers open with a
-fluttering heart. This is what it said:
-
-‘Nothing seen here of governor. Telegram from him to Blatchett. Am to
-return to Windermere by first train. Hurrah! Governor will meet me at
-_Palatine_ to night. Queer, very. No matter. Shall see you as well.’
-
-Clarice turned first red and then white. The terrible Sir William
-coming to the _Palatine_—and to-night! It was enough to flutter any
-girl’s nerves. She turned to Mr Etheridge and put the message into his
-hands. ‘Read it,’ was all she could say.
-
-He had just finished reading his own message, which seemed to be a very
-brief one.
-
-‘Well, what do you think?’ she asked nervously, as he returned the
-paper to her with a smile.
-
-‘I think it’s about the wisest thing Sir William could do. He
-ought to come and see with his own eyes, instead of sending other
-people. Of course, the fact of his summoning Mr Archie to London,
-and then declining to see him, can only be put down to the score of
-eccentricity—though I have no doubt the boy has enjoyed his little trip
-to town.’
-
-Clarice looked at him a little reproachfully. As if Archie could enjoy
-being anywhere where she was not!
-
-‘I must go and tell Mora the news,’ she said. ‘But oh! Mr Etheridge, do
-you think Sir William will want to see me?’
-
-‘I think it very likely indeed.’
-
-‘I was never so frightened in my life. I wish I could hide myself
-somewhere till to-morrow.’
-
-‘Pooh, pooh, my dear young lady; Sir William is not an ogre. He is only
-a man, like the rest of us.’
-
-‘But he is Archie’s papa.’
-
-‘Is that any reason why you should be frightened at him?’
-
-She nodded her head with considerable emphasis. But at this juncture
-Lady Renshaw was seen approaching, and Clarice fled.
-
-‘Can you favour me with a few minutes’ private conversation, Mr
-Etheridge?’ said her ladyship.
-
-‘Willingly, madam. Shall we take a stroll on the lawn, as we did
-before? There seems to be no one about.’
-
-‘That will do very nicely. I will just fetch my sunshade and then join
-you.’ Which she accordingly did. ‘You may recollect, Mr Etheridge, that
-one portion of our conversation this morning had reference to Madame De
-Vigne?’ began her ladyship in her most confidential manner.
-
-‘I have not forgotten, madam.’
-
-‘Since that time I have made a most surprising discovery—a discovery
-I feel bound to say which only tends to confirm the opinion I then
-ventured to express. Will you be good enough, my dear sir, to look at
-this, and then tell me what you think?’
-
-She opened the book at the page where she had inserted the scrap of
-paper, and placed it in his hands.
-
-He stopped in his walk while he read it; but his face was inscrutable,
-and Lady Renshaw could gather nothing from it. Presently he lifted his
-eyes from the paper and stared at her for a moment or two, his bushy
-eyebrows meeting across the deep furrow in his forehead.
-
-‘Where did you obtain this from, may I ask? And what is the meaning of
-it?’
-
-‘As you will have observed, it is evidently a fragment of a burnt
-letter. I picked it up quite by accident on the floor of the
-sitting-room. The writing I know for a fact to be that of Madame De
-Vigne. As for the meaning of it—your penetration, my dear sir, is
-surely not at fault as regards that?’
-
-‘It is a curious document, certainly—a very curious document,’ remarked
-the old man drily.
-
-‘It is more than that, Mr Etheridge,’ remarked her ladyship in her most
-tragic tones—‘it is a revelation! Who is this husband of whom mention
-is made? Who is this convict who is so openly alluded to? Are they, or
-are they not, one and the same man, and if so, is he alive or dead?
-Those are points, I should imagine, on which Sir William will require
-to be fully enlightened; for, of course, Mr Etheridge, you will see how
-imperative it is that the paper should at once be laid before him. What
-a very, very fortunate thing that I happened to find it in the way I
-did!’
-
-‘Yes, madam, Sir William shall see the paper, undoubtedly. A very
-fortunate thing, as you say, that your ladyship happened to find it,
-and not any one else, for you, madam, I am quite sure, are discretion
-itself.’
-
-‘Just so—just so,’ responded her ladyship uneasily.—‘What a strange
-old man!’ she said to herself. ‘I don’t know what to make of him this
-morning.’
-
-‘Permit me to whisper a secret in your ladyship’s ear,’ resumed Mr
-Etheridge with his odd little smile. ‘I have had a message. Sir William
-will be here—here at the _Palatine_—in the course of a few hours.’
-
-Her ladyship could not repress a start. Here was news indeed!
-
-‘But not a word to any one at present, I beg,’ continued the old
-gentleman. ‘I want Sir William’s arrival to be a surprise.’
-
-‘Ah, just so,’ answered her ladyship with a complacent nod.—‘It will be
-like a bombshell thrown into their midst,’ she added to herself. Then
-aloud: ‘Not a word shall pass my lips, Mr Etheridge. By-the-bye, do you
-think it at all likely that Sir William will require to see me—I mean
-with regard to the scrap of paper?’
-
-‘I think it very likely indeed, madam.’
-
-‘In that case, I will hold myself in readiness. I have long desired the
-pleasure of Sir William’s acquaintance. We could scarcely meet under
-more agreeable auspices.’ Then suddenly grasping Mr Etheridge by the
-sleeve, she said in her deepest tones: ‘I felt sure from the first
-moment I set eyes on her that this Madame De Vigne was an impostor!’
-
-‘Dear me!’ ejaculated the old gentleman with uplifted hands. ‘What
-acumen—what acumen!’
-
-Her ladyship smiled a superior smile. ‘For the present I will say
-Ta-ta. You will not forget that I shall be in readiness to see Sir
-William at any moment?’
-
-‘I will be sure not to forget. _Au revoir_, madam—_au revoir_.’
-
-Lady Renshaw walked back to the hotel with the serene consciousness of
-having performed a meritorious action. Through her instrumentality an
-impostor would be unmasked, and in so far, Society would owe her a debt
-of gratitude. The service, too, was such a one as Sir William would not
-be likely to forget. Suddenly, a great, an overwhelming thought flashed
-across her mind. Sir William was a widower, but by no means a very old
-man—at least, so she had been given to understand; and in any case, he
-was not too old to marry again, if the whim were to take him. What if
-he were to—— The mere idea of such a thing made her heart go pit-a-pat.
-There was a mirror in the corridor. She simpered at herself in it as
-she passed and gave a tug at one or two of her ribbons. Undeniably, she
-was still a fine-looking woman. Far more unlikely things had happened
-than that which her thoughts had barely hinted at. What was it that the
-parrot in its gilded cage at the top of the stairs said to her as she
-passed? Did her ears deceive her, or was it a fact that it screamed
-after her, ‘Lady—Lady—La-dy Ridsdale?’
-
-
-
-
-COOKING CLASSES FOR CHILDREN.
-
-
-‘I have been reproaching myself,’ was the piteous plaint of Mrs Butler
-(Fanny Kemble) in her _Records of Later Life_, ‘and reproving others,
-and honestly regretting that, instead of Italian and music, I had not
-learned a little domestic economy, and how much bread, butter, flour,
-eggs, milk, sugar, and meat ought to be consumed per week by a family
-of eight persons.’ This is the lesson that great part of the world
-of women has still to learn. We have allowed mere accomplishments,
-the fringe and lace of life, to draw our attention from those solid
-and necessary things which a woman must know if her home is to be
-comfortable, and which a man knows nothing about except that in their
-results they make him contentedly happy or utterly miserable. A woman
-can obtain a more sensible, more thorough, in every way a better
-education in book-knowledge now than at almost any previous period of
-our national life; but the gain has been made at a price. Reaction is
-required, and indeed has set in already. We may see its fruits in the
-schools of Cookery for Ladies established in all our great towns; in
-the classes for dressmaking, clear-starching, and ironing; in the newly
-awakened interest in domestic economy as a science, in the countless
-books on that subject and on cookery published during the last few
-years.
-
-The work is by no means done yet. That there are many to be taught and
-much to be learned, we may gather from a glance at the questions asked
-on such subjects in our principal ladies’ papers; where but the other
-day we find a newly married lady wishing to know if, on an income of
-five hundred pounds a year, without house-rent, she can keep a butler,
-a cook-housekeeper, a housemaid, a carriage and pair of horses, and a
-pony and cart!
-
-But we wish to turn now to the wants of another class, and see what has
-been done and what can be done for our poorer sisters, who sorely need
-our help in this matter.
-
-If it be true that education is the work of drawing out the mental
-powers of children so as to fit them thoroughly for their work in life,
-then we certainly for a time overshot our mark in elementary schools,
-so far as the girls were concerned. We taught them many things which
-they did not need to know, and could not learn thoroughly for want
-of time—much which almost unfitted them for their probable places
-in life as working-men’s wives; and we left untaught altogether all
-the womanly and useful arts of life except sewing. Good management
-has become rarer and rarer in the homes of town working-men; the
-thrifty, careful housewives seem as units among scores of careless,
-bad—because ignorant—mismanagers. The early age at which girls go to
-work in factories increases the evil; and, till lately, nothing which
-was taught at school helped to remedy it. Here, too, however, the
-change has begun, and now, in the Board Schools of London, Liverpool,
-Birmingham, Glasgow, and other large towns, the practical teaching of
-cookery holds almost as important a place in the education of girls as
-the teaching of sewing. But the question remains for the managers of
-voluntary schools: Is cooking worth teaching? Can it be successfully
-taught in our schools? Will it pay?
-
-These are important questions; but they may all—even the last, which
-comes very near to the hearts of all managers—be answered, we believe,
-with a simple ‘Yes.’ Within the writer’s own knowledge, since the
-establishment of cookery classes in elementary schools, case after
-case has occurred where a girl of ten, eleven, or twelve has been
-able to cook food well for a whole family; or in sickness, has been
-the only person able to make beef-tea or gruel or to beat an egg. No
-one who has not seen could guess or would believe what the cooking
-in working-men’s homes too often is, or what waste and extravagance
-arise out of utter ignorance; and even where the mother has not been
-laid aside, it has been found that the girl’s knowledge, brought fresh
-from school, has worked a reformation in the family management. Nor
-is this all. The influence of the classes upon the girls attending
-them is very good, especially when the children are drawn from the
-very lowest ranks. The girls brighten up. Perhaps for the first time
-they are learning something that really interests them, and seems a
-link between home-life and school; they learn to weigh, to measure,
-to calculate quantities, and they see the use of these things. Let no
-one imagine that a cookery class is not educational. In the hands of
-a competent teacher, it is an object lesson, an arithmetic lesson,
-a general-knowledge lesson, and a lesson in common-sense. Even the
-personal appearance of the children often improves; cleanliness,
-neatness, orderliness are all encouraged; and in some schools, the
-effect upon the scholars has been most curiously marked.
-
-If this be so, surely we may admit that cookery is worth teaching. Can
-it be taught successfully? We believe it can. But before attempting to
-prove this, we must give a quotation from the Code of March 1882: ‘In
-schools in which the inspector reports that special and appropriate
-provision is made for the practical teaching of cookery, a grant of
-four shillings is made on account of any girl over twelve years of age
-who has attended not less than forty hours during the school-year at
-the cooking class, and is presented for examination in the elementary
-subjects in any standard.’
-
-The forty hours allowed by government are divided into twenty lessons
-of two hours each, which, taken once a week, can be finished in half
-a year. The lessons given are found to succeed best if they are
-alternately demonstration and practice—that is, at one lesson the
-children watch the teacher, who shows them how to cook any given
-dishes, carefully explaining the processes and the nature of the food;
-and at the next lesson the children put what they have learned in
-practice, and cook the same dishes themselves under the superintendence
-of the teacher. Fifteen children are sufficient for a practice class,
-though of course more can attend a demonstration. A very moderate-sized
-classroom is large enough; and tables can be formed of boards on
-tressels or on the backs of desks. Many classrooms already contain a
-range large enough for all purposes; but if not, one can be fitted
-up at a cost of three pounds, or a portable stove can be had for
-thirty shillings. The utensils are few and simple; but of course the
-first cost of them is considerable—about five pounds.[1] A teacher is
-supplied by any of the principal training Schools of Cookery for a
-fee of five pounds for twenty lessons and her travelling expenses. If
-several schools in the same neighbourhood take lessons during the same
-period, this last item can be much reduced.
-
-The children work in five sets of three each. They are taught all the
-simple processes of cooking, and the reason in any given case for using
-one in preference to another. They are furnished with printed recipes
-for each dish they cook; they are taught—and this is most important—to
-clean properly and to put away all the utensils they use. They are
-questioned as they proceed, to see that they understand what they are
-doing; and at the end of the course, they go through both a verbal and
-a practical examination; and certificates are awarded by the School of
-Cookery, independent of examinations by Her Majesty’s inspector.
-
-Here are a few sample recipes; and it must be remembered that special
-pains are taken to suit the dishes taught to the requirements of the
-district, many ways of cooking fish being taught in seaports, for
-instance; while in country places, vegetables, bacon, and eggs are more
-used.
-
-_Brown Lentil Soup._—Half-pound brown lentils, 1½d.; one carrot, four
-cloves, an ounce and a half of dripping, 1½d.; two quarts of water;
-small bunch sweet herbs, three onions, pepper and salt, 1d. Wash the
-lentils well in several waters; leave to soak in two quarts of water
-for twenty-four hours. Slice and fry the onions in the dripping; let
-them take a nice brown, but not burn. Cut up the carrot into small
-pieces; fry it lightly also. Now put in the lentils and the two quarts
-of water in which they were steeped; add the herbs and the cloves, but
-not the pepper and salt. Boil all for three hours, adding more water,
-to make up the waste from boiling. Add pepper and salt to taste. If
-possible, put the soup through a coarse wire-sieve.
-
-_Savoury Rice._—Rice, half-pound, 2d.; dripping, half-ounce, 1½d.; two
-onions, one carrot, pepper and salt, 1d.; cloves, parsley, and thyme,
-½d. Wash the rice, throw it into a saucepan full of boiling water and
-a little salt. Add an onion stuck with four cloves and the carrot cut
-up. Let it boil fast for fifteen or twenty minutes. Take care there is
-plenty of water. To try the rice, take a grain and rub it between the
-thumb and finger. When it will rub quite away, drain off all the water,
-and let the rice dry before the fire. While the rice is boiling, put
-half an ounce of dripping in a saucepan on the fire, and when quite
-hot, fry in it a sliced onion. Take a tablespoonful of flour, sprinkle
-it over the fried onion in the pan, stirring it with a spoon. When the
-flour is brown, add half a pint of water, the parsley and thyme well
-chopped, with salt and pepper. Boil it up; stir in the rice, and serve.
-
-_Exeter Stew._—Meat, 9d.; flour, 1½d.; suet, 1d.; dripping, 1d.; herbs
-and onion, 1½d. Put into a pan two ounces of dripping; set it on the
-fire; and when it is quite hot and a faint blue smoke arises from it,
-put in an onion, cut small. Let it brown well; then add a tablespoonful
-of flour, and when that is browned also, one pint of cold water,
-pepper, salt, four cloves, and a little mace. Cut one pound of beef
-into small pieces; put them in, and let it simmer, not boil, for two
-hours. Put in a bowl a quarter-pound of flour; a little salt, pepper,
-chopped parsley, thyme, and marjoram; two ounces of finely chopped
-suet, and half a teaspoonful of baking-powder. Make into a paste with
-cold water; form into small balls, and drop them into the stew half an
-hour before it is wanted.
-
-_Christmas Pudding._—Flour, one pound, 2d.; baking-powder, a
-teaspoonful and a half, ¼d.; ginger, half a teaspoonful, ¼d.; suet,
-quarter-pound, 2d.; treacle, half-pound, 1d.; raisins, two ounces, ½d.;
-currants, two ounces, ½d.; milk (skim), ½d. Chop the suet finely; stir
-all the dry ingredients well together; add the treacle, warmed, and
-about a teacupful of skim-milk. Stir well; put it into a greased tin or
-basin; cover with paper; steam it in a pan of boiling water for an hour
-and a half or two hours.
-
-No one who has seen how well these and many other dishes are cooked
-by the children entirely without assistance at their practical
-examination—no one who has heard how well and intelligently they
-answer questions on the subject, can doubt that cooking can be taught
-successfully in our schools. The one question remains, Does it pay? The
-outlay is of two kinds—the primary outlay, which will not recur, for
-stove and utensils; and the recurring expenses of teacher’s salary,
-food, and fuel. In many places, friends of education, learning the
-need, have fitted up classrooms with all that was required at a cost
-of about seven to eight pounds. In Liverpool, the Education Council
-offered to fit up six classrooms in voluntary schools as centres at
-which several neighbouring schools could attend; but as many poor
-schools are without such benevolent friends, the Northern Union of
-Schools of Cookery has petitioned the Science and Art Department to
-give grants for this purpose.
-
-The teacher’s salary, as already mentioned, is about five pounds, with
-a varying sum in addition for travelling expenses. The average cost of
-the food to be cooked is about thirty-seven shillings for the whole
-course. The additional amount of fuel used is very trifling; therefore,
-the expenses stand: Teacher’s salary, £5; food, £1, 17s.; travelling
-expenses, say 10s.—Total, seven guineas. To meet these expenses,
-there are the following sources of income: The government grant of
-four shillings a head for fifteen girls, £3; extra pence paid by the
-children for their cooking lessons, twopence each for twenty lessons,
-£2, 10s. This payment cannot be enforced; but it is found that in most
-cases, even among the poorest, it is willingly paid, as the parents
-value the lessons. Sale of food cooked, at cost price, £1, 17s.—Total,
-seven guineas.
-
-It may be mentioned that the food sells more readily among the very
-poor children than among those who are better off. There is little or
-no difficulty in disposing of it without loss.
-
-It will be seen that this calculation allows of no margin whatever.
-If all goes well, there is neither profit nor loss. But it cannot be
-expected that everything will be perfectly successful; the children
-will miss a lesson now and then, or some dish will be spoiled. We would
-wish, therefore, to remind managers that there is another source of
-income open to them. It is both easier and better to teach cookery
-and domestic economy together than separately; and every girl who in
-the cooking class is earning a grant of four shillings, may also earn
-another four shillings if she passes in domestic economy, without
-any additional outlay or cost. Only, we would urge all managers to
-be careful always to secure a properly qualified teacher, holding
-a diploma from some good School of Cookery, and trained to teach
-children. Lastly, the experience of the manager of a large Roman
-Catholic school in a very poor district may be quoted. ‘I would hardly
-hesitate to say’—we give his own words—‘that not only will a class
-of cookery in elementary schools pay itself, but will even become a
-pecuniary advantage; and for this reason, parents look with much favour
-upon the teaching of cookery; and whereas it is too often the case that
-they withdraw their children from school the moment they are free to
-do so, and so prevent a school from receiving a grant for them by their
-passing an examination, I can say from experience that my class of
-cookery has been the means of retaining at school several children who
-would otherwise have left, and for each of them I expect a substantial
-grant. I have also observed that since the introduction of this
-subject, the children who attend this class attend much more regularly.’
-
-With this testimony we may conclude, hoping that some at least of
-those who glance at this paper may agree with the words of an old
-working-woman, a grandmother, and herself a model of thrift, care, and
-good management, who, when the cookery classes at the Board Schools
-were mentioned before her, exclaimed: ‘Deed, and that’s the sensiblest
-thing I ever heard of them Boards doing!’ and may therefore be willing
-to do a little, either by giving time, money, or influence, to help
-forward this good and greatly needed work.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] _List of Utensils for an Artisan Practice Class._—Three tin
-saucepans, two quarts, 6s.; three do., three pints, 4s. 6d.; three do.,
-one pint, 1s. 6d.; one fish-kettle, 3s.; three small frying-pans, 1s.
-9d.; one colander, 1s.; three strainers, 1s. 6d.; one set measures, 1s.
-6d.; one scale and weights, quarter-ounce to one pound, 8s. 6d.; three
-dripping-tins, 2s. 6d.; two small wire-sieves, 3s.; three graters,
-1s. 6d.; six wooden spoons, 1s.; six iron tablespoons, 1s.; six do.
-teaspoons, 3d.; six round tin moulds, 3s.; twelve knives, 7s. 6d.; six
-vegetable knives, 2s.; three forks, 1s. 6d.; six chopping-boards, 9s.;
-three rolling-pins, 2s.; one spice-box, 6d.; one handbowl, 1s. 3d.;
-one knifeboard, 9d.; two galvanised tubs, 4s.; one galvanised bucket,
-1s. 3d.; one water-can, 3s.; three scrubbing-brushes, 2s.; three
-sink-brushes, 1s.; one set blacklead brushes, 2s.
-
-_Crockery._—Three large bowls, 3s. 6d.; three smaller do., 2s. 6d.; six
-small basins, 1s.; twelve handless cups, 6d.; twelve plates, 1s. 6d.;
-three round baker’s, 9d.; three larger do., 1s. 3d.; three jugs, 1s.
-6d.; three pie-dishes, 9d.
-
-_Linen._—Six kitchen cloths, 3s.; one roller towel, 1s. 3d.; one hand
-do., 4d.; three dishcloths, 6d.
-
-_Sundries._—Kitchen paper, house flannel, soap, soda, blacklead,
-bath-brick, oil, 5s.—Total, £5, 2s. 7d.
-
-
-
-
-AN AMATEUR ‘CABBY.’
-
-
-In ‘my salad days’ I was a striking example of that class of young
-men who are unfortunately weighted with an extra crop of wild-oats to
-dispose of ere they are transformed into conventional, steady-going,
-tax-paying members of the community. My personal allowance being
-considerable, I was able to indulge in all the follies of a man about
-town. Fortunately or unfortunately, I soon probed to the bottom of
-things, and speedily tasted the ashes in the cup of pleasure, so that
-one folly after another was discarded and relegated to the limbo of the
-past, until, like Heliogabalus, I sighed for a new delight, and would
-have paid liberally for a fresh sensation. The turf and its wretched
-gambling associations palled upon me; I was weary of the theatre,
-both before and behind the curtain. The senseless chatter of my young
-associates in the club smoking-room roused a feeling of boredom almost
-intolerable. At this period, the great Cab question was the topic of
-the hour. The character and remuneration of the London cabman were
-discussed at every dinner-table in the metropolis. There were two
-parties in this discussion, which advocated views totally opposed to
-each other. On the one hand, the earnings of Cabby were described
-as wealth; on the other, as poverty. He was portrayed as drunken,
-extravagant, uncivil, and in fact as only fit to be the associate of
-the most vile. The reverse side of the medal was that of a man sober,
-frugal, civil, and so courteous in his intercourse with his fares,
-that the late Lord Chesterfield might have taken lessons of him in
-politeness.
-
-A sudden determination possessed me. I would be a cabman for the nonce.
-At all events, for twelve hours I would don the badge and learn for
-myself the truth of the matter. I frequently employed the same cabman
-on the rank in Piccadilly. He drove a thoroughbred mare, and his hansom
-was a model of neatness and elegance. So I took an early opportunity
-of interviewing the man, whose name was Smith; although in those days
-‘interview’ was not classed as an active verb. I told him I wished to
-hire his cab for a night. At first, Mr Smith was hazy as to my meaning.
-I asked him how much he paid for the hire of his vehicle. He replied:
-‘Seventeen shillings per night.’
-
-‘Very well,’ I said; ‘I will give you that sum for the use of your cab
-for twelve hours, and hand you over besides, the amount in fares I may
-chance to receive during that period.’
-
-I could see that my friend entertained doubts for a moment as to my
-sanity; but I speedily explained matters to him.
-
-Mr Smith shook his head, and said he might lose his license if the fact
-became known to the police that he had lent his badge, and so on, and
-that an intimate knowledge of London streets was indispensable.
-
-I pooh-poohed both these objections, especially the last, asserting
-that I was capable of making a map of Western London, if circumstances
-required it.
-
-Eventually, Mr Smith agreed to my proposal, giving me several hints as
-to my conduct; I remember one of these being, that I must on no account
-ply for hire, as it is termed, while driving through the streets, but
-wait till I was hailed.
-
-The eventful hour arrived in due course, and at nine o’clock I met Mr
-Smith by appointment in a quiet street in the parish of St James. It
-was October; and the night being chilly, I wore an overcoat, somewhat
-the worse for wear, and a wide-awake, which I could slouch over my
-eyes, if occasion required; for my chief fear was, that I might, by an
-unlucky chance, be recognised by some of my numerous acquaintances. I
-mounted the box, and nodding gaily to Mr Smith, left that individual
-transfixed with wonder that a gentleman of means and position should
-voluntarily undergo the pains and penalties of a cabman’s life, even
-for so brief a period as twelve hours.
-
-I have stated that the mare was a thoroughbred, and in doing so I am
-only recording a literal fact. In the famous days when Andrew Ducrow
-reigned supreme at Astley’s Theatre, there was a very popular drama
-which depicted the life of a racehorse through all its vicissitudes,
-till it found itself in the shafts of a sand-cart. There is an
-undoubted instance of a horse (Black Tommy, 1857) which only lost the
-Derby by a short head, figuring subsequently in the shafts of a cab in
-Camden Town.
-
-For a time I imagined that I was the centre of observation, especially
-by the cabmen on the ranks. Suddenly I was hailed by a short thick-set
-man with a very red face, who in an imperious tone shouted ‘Orme
-Square,’ and plunged into the recesses of my cab. I was floored
-completely! My boasted knowledge of the topography of the metropolis
-was at fault. I had never heard of Orme Square. I ventured to ask my
-fare if he could direct me to the place. His surprise and indignation
-were so excessive that I feared for a moment he would succumb to a fit
-of apoplexy. But he relieved himself by a burst of strong language
-such as I had rarely listened to in my life before. My first impulse
-was an angry reply, but I fortunately nipped that impulse in the bud.
-The line of Jerrold the dramatist occurred to me: ‘A rich man feels
-through his glove, and thinks all things are soft.’ For the first
-time I realised what a cabman has occasionally to submit to, and what
-a Janus-headed thing Society was in its intercourse with the rich
-and the poor. But it is a remarkable fact that although Orme Square
-is situated in the Bayswater Road, immediately opposite Kensington
-Gardens, not one Londoner in ten can define its locality. It is a small
-unpretending square, with three sides only, the fourth side being the
-great thoroughfare I have mentioned. I excused my ignorance by saying
-that I was new to the neighbourhood. As I drove along, I placed my
-present experience to the credit of the much-abused cabby. I received
-my exact fare, for which I politely thanked my irritable friend, for
-I was resolved I would do nothing to increase the prejudice existing
-in so many quarters, against my brother-cabmen, but practise civility
-under all temptations to the contrary.
-
-I suppose it was about one o’clock, and I was proceeding leisurely
-along Oxford Street, the ‘stony-hearted step-mother,’ as De Quincey
-styles it in his immortal work, admiring the effect of the long vista
-of gas lamps in the deserted street, when I heard a woman’s voice: ‘Are
-you going Pimlico-way?’ I turned, and beheld two young girls, in gaudy
-finery and painted cheeks. I replied that my services were at their
-disposal. I suppose there was something in the words and manner of my
-answer which created surprise in their minds, for they stared curiously
-in my face before jumping into the cab.
-
-In a few seconds I was careering along at the rate of ten miles an
-hour. What a situation for the son of the much-esteemed rector of
-Cawley-cum-Mortlock! My fares sang snatches of the popular melodies
-of the day, sometimes as a solo, sometimes as a duet. When we arrived
-at our destination, they sprang out of the cab and inquired my fare.
-I replied: ‘Two shillings.’ The countenance of the younger assumed a
-plaintive expression as she whispered: ‘Give the poor cabby an extra
-tanner, Loo; I daresay he has a wife and children at home.’
-
-As I did not wish to obtain money under false pretences, I modestly
-disclaimed the honour of paternity, at the same time pocketing my fare.
-As I did so, two gentlemen approached, and my feelings of dismay may
-be imagined when I recognised in one of them Mr Spalland, my father’s
-curate! There was a gas-lamp close at hand, so that my features must
-have been plainly discernible. The girls had just bidden me good-night.
-Observing the look of wonder and horror on Mr Spalland’s features, I
-boldly took the bull by the horns, and exclaimed: ‘Cab, sir?’
-
-‘The very voice!’ cried the curate. ‘What a marvellous resemblance!’
-Then he whispered a few words to his companion, who was a stranger to
-me.
-
-‘Nonsense!’ came from his lips. ‘The thing is impossible.—What is your
-name, cabby?’
-
-‘Here is my ticket, sir,’ I promptly replied. ‘John Smith, Lisson
-Grove.’
-
-The curate indulged in another prolonged stare, and then they both
-entered the cab, and I drove them to an address where I was as well
-known as in my own home. I managed to drive rapidly away as soon as I
-had deposited the worthy curate and his friend, as I did not wish to
-undergo the critical examination of the hall porter, who might not have
-been put off so easily.
-
-At this moment I observed a crimson glow in the sky, which was clearly
-caused by some conflagration, but evidently at a very considerable
-distance. Notwithstanding, a man almost insisted on my driving him to
-the scene of the fire, no matter what might be the distance. This I
-declined to do, alleging that my horse was tired; and after a volley
-of objurgations, the fellow departed, making some strong remarks about
-the independence of cabmen and their large earnings. Up to this time, I
-had not earned the amount of the hire of the horse and cab. Whether my
-experience on this point was special or normal, I am unable to judge,
-but I could easily picture the despair of a cabman who in similar
-circumstances would have but a gloomy outlook for the morrow. True,
-there were several hours remaining, and it was impossible to tell what
-they might produce.
-
-The aspect of a mighty slumbering city at early dawn is a remarkable
-spectacle. The line of Wordsworth involuntarily recurred to me:
-
- And all that mighty heart is lying still.
-
-London at sunrise was by no means a novel sight to one who had kept
-‘early hours’ for some years; but I do not think I was ever so
-impressed with the sight as I was when perched on that elevated seat
-at the back of a hansom cab. The first faint streaks of red in the
-distant east, succeeded by a pale primrose light, and then the gradual
-dispersal of the midnight gloom, was inexpressibly lovely. The scenes
-I had witnessed had aroused certain trains of thought, more or less
-painful, as I beheld the varied fortunes of my fellow-creatures, the
-struggle for a bare existence, the sins and follies created in a great
-measure by ‘iron circumstance.’
-
-With the history of my final fare I must conclude this veritable
-account of my experience as a cab-driver. It was exactly a quarter
-to six, and I was crawling along Holborn, when a man of gentlemanly
-appearance and address emerged rapidly from a side-street, and
-springing into my cab, said: ‘Cabman—Victoria. If you can catch the six
-o’clock train for Newhaven, I will pay you double fare.’
-
-I glanced at the church clock, and found I had exactly a quarter of an
-hour to accomplish a distance of nearly three miles. Fortunately, the
-streets were comparatively empty, and I sent the mare along at a pace
-of something like twelve miles an hour. Although I had only seen the
-face of my fare for a couple of seconds, the expression and features
-are indelibly impressed on my memory. It was a handsome face, but the
-eyes were more like those of a hunted stag than of a human being. The
-colour of the face was ashen gray, and I fancied the teeth chattered
-somewhat as he addressed me. But the last circumstance I attributed
-to the cold raw October morning. I felt so curious about my fare that
-I cautiously lifted the small wooden flap in the roof of the cab, and
-felt almost pleased to behold him imbibing brandy from a flask. One or
-two policemen peered at the cab as it flew past, apparently undecided
-whether or not to take cognisance of the excessive speed; but I cared
-not; I felt as anxious to catch the train for Newhaven as if my life
-depended on it. At length I sighted Victoria Station. The minute-hand
-wanted two minutes to six. Passing a half-sovereign through the trap,
-my fare shouted: ‘Never mind the change!’ and sprang out of the cab.
-
-Involuntarily, I paused to watch the end of the affair. I saw him leave
-the pay-box with the ticket, and then in half a minute I heard the
-shriek of the engine, and congratulated myself on having accomplished
-my task. Ere I could drive from the entrance of the booking-office,
-another hansom deposited two men, who simultaneously rushed to the
-booking-office. The horse of the cab was covered with lather, and
-seemed completely blown. The men appeared again on the pavement with
-vexation and disappointment plainly written on their features. Suddenly
-their eyes lighted on the cab which I drove. They advanced, and the
-shorter man of the two said: ‘Cabman, we are police-officers. Have you
-just brought any one who was anxious to catch the six o’clock express?’
-
-I had felt certain they were officers of justice. How is it that
-policemen out of uniform and servants out of livery are always
-distinguishable? There is a hall-mark, so to say, which stamps them.
-
-I stated all I knew, which, as the reader knows, was not much. Then
-they left me.
-
-Whether they utilised the telegraph for the arrest of the unhappy
-fugitive—a forger, as they told me—I never knew.
-
-I examined my takings, and found they amounted to one pound five
-shillings, making a profit of eight shillings. But it is not the luck
-of every cabman to have as a fare a runaway forger who will pay so
-liberally as ten shillings for three miles.
-
-Mr Smith was quite satisfied with the result, and expressed his
-willingness to lend his horse and cab again on similar terms. But this
-was my first and last cab-drive. I cannot explain it, but that night
-was a turning-point in my career. I married soon afterwards; and not
-even the wife of my bosom is aware that her husband once officiated in
-the character of a London cab-driver!
-
-
-
-
-COLONEL REDGRAVE’S LEGACY.
-
-
-IN FOUR CHAPTERS.—CHAPTER I.
-
-Mr Septimus Redgrave had attained the mature age of fifty without
-losing either of his pet theories—that this world is anything but a
-vale of tears, and that the wicked people in it are decidedly in the
-minority. These comfortable doctrines were no doubt attributable to the
-fact that Mr Redgrave was in the enjoyment of a small independence,
-was master of his own time, possessed of good health, and had never
-ventured on the uncertain voyage of matrimony. He had occupied the same
-chambers in Bury Street, St James’s, for nearly a quarter of a century,
-was a member of one of the oldest clubs in Pall Mall, a virtuoso
-on a small scale, and a regular attendant at the picture-sales at
-Christie’s. His natty, well-costumed figure was always to the fore
-on the view-days, elbowing millionaires and picture-dealers in the
-inspection of works of art, although his modest income precluded him
-from becoming a purchaser, except in very exceptional cases.
-
-His only near relatives were two maiden sisters, who were several years
-his senior, and resided at Shanklin, in the Isle of Wight. Their names
-were Penelope and Lavinia respectively, and they were generous in
-their advice on all occasions to their brother, whom they could never
-realise as anything but a child, and consequently requiring guidance
-and sisterly control. In truth, the intellect of their brother was none
-of the brightest, of which fact he himself had a dim suspicion; but as
-a slight compensation in lieu thereof, he availed himself of no small
-share of a quality which could only be described as cunning, in the
-ordinary acceptation of the word.
-
-He had resided in Bury Street for some ten years, when his landlady,
-Mrs Jones, announced that in consequence of her failing strength and
-increasing years, her daughter Martha was about to resign her position
-as companion to an old lady at Bristol, and assist in the management
-of the house in Bury Street. Miss Jones duly arrived, and presented
-a very agreeable spectacle. A florid-complexioned, black-eyed girl
-of twenty, very vivacious and energetic, and by no means devoid of
-education or natural ability. The domestic comforts of Mr Redgrave were
-materially increased by the advent of Miss Jones, and he showed his
-gratitude at certain times and seasons in a very marked and material
-manner. Her birthday was always remembered by the precise bachelor on
-the first floor; nor were Christmas or the New Year forgotten. It will
-never be known whether the brain of Mrs Jones had originally conceived
-the ambitious scheme of a union between the family of Redgrave and
-that of Jones; but it is certain that as time went on, such a plan was
-entertained by both mother and daughter. There was but fifteen years’
-difference in their ages, and Martha was not only possessed of good
-looks, but educated and accomplished. But the lynx eyes of the landlady
-could never detect the smallest peg on which to hang a claim on behalf
-of the incomparable Martha. Although frank and free in his intercourse
-with the good-looking Hebe who ministered to his comforts, the actions
-of Mr Redgrave were always regulated by the rules of the strictest
-decorum; and if, during his occasional absences from town, the epistles
-of Martha were couched in a somewhat sentimental tone, they met with
-no response in the replies of the cautious and simple lodger of Bury
-Street. Probably neither Mrs Jones nor her daughter had ever heard of
-the celebrated French proverb, that ‘all comes to him who waits,’ but
-it is nevertheless certain that they mutually acted on this maxim.
-
-Years rolled on, and no change occurred in the relations existing
-between lodger and landlady; Mr Redgrave was now fifty, and Miss Jones
-thirty-five. The roses had long since departed from her cheeks, and the
-sparkle from her black eyes, but, like Claude Melnotte in the play, she
-still ‘hoped on.’ She felt that she was practically indispensable to
-the unsusceptible and phlegmatic bachelor, and trusted that he would
-eventually realise the fact, and reward his faithful housekeeper by
-making her his wife.
-
-About this time, Colonel Redgrave, a cousin of Septimus, arrived
-from India, accompanied by two ladies named Fraser, of whom we shall
-presently have occasion to speak. Colonel Redgrave had for many years
-maintained a somewhat desultory correspondence with our bachelor. The
-officer was an elderly man, and not in the enjoyment of very good
-health. On his arrival at Southampton, he proceeded to the residence of
-his female cousins at Shanklin, and accepted their invitation to make
-Oswald Villa his temporary home until he could decide on his future
-arrangements. Naturally, Mr Redgrave paid a visit to his military
-cousin. They had not met since they were boys; and the astute colonel
-was evidently much perplexed at the singular combination of simplicity
-and shrewdness presented by his London kinsman. Whether the impression
-created was favourable or the reverse, it is the object of this
-narrative to show.
-
-Six weeks after the arrival of Colonel Redgrave in England, his cousin
-was seated at breakfast in his apartments in Bury Street, seriously
-cogitating the advisability or the reverse of a lengthened tour on the
-continent for his autumn holiday, when the question was settled in a
-somewhat unexpected manner. Miss Jones appeared with a black-edged
-letter in her hand. The writing was that of Miss Redgrave, and the
-post-mark ‘Shanklin.’ With trembling fingers, Septimus opened the
-envelope. ‘Colonel Redgrave had died suddenly of heart disease at
-Oswald Villa.’ This was the gist of the epistle; and Mr Redgrave was
-required forthwith at Shanklin, to be present at the funeral and to
-hear the contents of the will of the deceased. Miss Jones was duly
-acquainted with the sad news; and in response to her inquiry as to
-the probable destination of the wealth of the late Colonel Redgrave,
-Septimus professed entire ignorance; and having given vent to some
-expressions of impatience and vexation at this marring of his Swiss and
-Italian tour, gave instructions to Miss Jones to see to the packing
-of his portmanteau without any delay; for the fair Martha was not
-only a quasi-valet, but secretary and librarian, the catalogue of Mr
-Redgrave’s books being carefully kept up to date.
-
-In less than a week, the funeral obsequies of the late Colonel Redgrave
-had been duly performed, the will read; and Septimus Redgrave,
-considerably to his astonishment, found himself sole legatee, and the
-fortunate possessor in round figures of twenty thousand pounds!
-
- * * * * *
-
-Two months have elapsed since the death of Colonel Redgrave, and
-Septimus is still in residence at Shanklin. His continental tour
-has been indefinitely postponed; but his soul now yearns for his
-accustomed London haunts, in spite of the attentions lavished upon him
-by his sisters. And if the truth must be told, he misses the constant
-watchfulness of Martha, that keen anticipation of his slightest wish,
-so uniformly displayed by the housekeeper of St James’s. It is a lovely
-morning in September, and from the drawing-room windows of Oswald
-Villa, the blue waters of Sandown Bay can be seen in charming contrast
-to the white cliffs of Culver, while above, the sky rivals that of
-Naples in its cerulean tint. Miss Redgrave and her sister Lavinia are
-nominally engaged in crewel-work, but actually their attention is
-concentrated on the immediate future of their beloved brother under
-the altered condition of his affairs. Miss Redgrave is tall and thin,
-with a severe expression of countenance, which belies her excellent
-qualities of head and heart. Her sister Lavinia is short and stout,
-with a very submissive manner, and presents a striking contrast to her
-somewhat imperious sister. Her vocation in life appears to consist of
-approving and indorsing the views and plans of her elder sister. Like
-the French Senate during the Imperial _régime_, she never originated a
-course of action, but expressed entire approval of the acts submitted
-to her. Occasionally, when especially pressed by her sister for an
-opinion, she would give vent to an original notion, which excited the
-outward contempt of Miss Redgrave, but inwardly created considerable
-feelings of alarm, as these occasional lapses from her ordinary course
-by Lavinia were of the nature of second-sight, and the prophecies of
-the younger sister invariably came to pass.
-
-‘Septimus talks of returning to London,’ exclaimed the elder sister
-with a keen glance at Lavinia, who smiled assent. ‘You do not seem to
-realise what mighty issues hang on that event,’ continued Miss Redgrave
-in a tone of considerable asperity.
-
-Lavinia still remained mute, though her countenance expressed keen
-interest.
-
-‘You are very provoking, Lavinia, considering you are by no means
-deficient in penetration as to motive, and analysis of character.’
-
-‘Explain, dear Penelope.’
-
-‘Septimus must not return to London a free man. I mean, he must present
-himself in Bury Street an engaged man.’
-
-‘I am afraid that will be a somewhat difficult task to accomplish,’
-replied Lavinia with an irritating acid smile.
-
-‘Nevertheless, it must be done,’ said Penelope with a tone of decision
-worthy of the Iron Duke.
-
-‘But how?’ inquired Lavinia.
-
-‘Surely you remember the existence of that creature—Martha Jones. The
-fact of our brother having inherited a fortune will inspire her with
-fresh courage. New methods of attack will at once be resorted to, and
-the assault will never cease till she has reduced the fortress to
-submission. I never saw Miss Jones but once, but that was sufficient.’
-
-‘I fully agree with you, my dear sister,’ said Lavinia; ‘but where do
-you propose to find a suitable partner for Septimus?’
-
-‘We have no occasion to look far. Under this very roof is a lady
-adapted in every sense to make dear Septimus a suitable partner.’
-
-‘I suppose you mean Mrs Fraser?’ mildly observed Lavinia.
-
-‘Precisely. Mrs Fraser is, I should say, forty, possessed of a
-comfortable income, clever, and just the kind of woman to shield our
-brother from all the evils and temptations of this mortal life.’
-
-‘I only see two difficulties,’ responded Lavinia: ‘Septimus may not
-like Mrs Fraser, and Mrs Fraser may not like Septimus.’
-
-‘Ridiculous!’ said Penelope. ‘Who ever heard of a widow scarcely out
-of her thirties who would not jump at a man of fifty with nearly two
-thousand a year!’
-
-‘I admit the chief difficulty will lie with Septimus,’ placidly replied
-Lavinia. ‘He is very self-willed at times.’
-
-‘Leave that part of the affair to _me_,’ exclaimed Penelope with
-haughty confidence.
-
-Further discussion was summarily put an end to by the entrance of
-the individual in question. We must confess that although he wore
-‘the livery of woe,’ the countenance of Septimus was not expressive
-of any considerable grief for the loss of his ‘well-beloved cousin.’
-Constantly before his mental vision floated the Bank Stock, India
-Bonds, and Three per Cents of which he had so recently become the
-possessor. Frequently during the day he checked himself in the middle
-of a lively air of Offenbach or Sullivan, which he found himself
-humming with considerable gusto. He would pause suddenly, and mould his
-features into a becoming expression accordingly. Mr Redgrave looked
-considerably older than his years, his hair and whiskers being quite
-gray, and his features somewhat wrinkled. But he was always dressed
-with scrupulous care, and in the days of the Regency would have been
-dubbed a ‘buck’ of the first water.
-
-‘Have you seen the Frasers this morning, Septimus?’ inquired Penelope.
-‘I mean, since breakfast.’
-
-‘They have gone as far as Luccombe Chine with young Lockwood. I
-preferred a quiet read of the _Times_.’
-
-‘Septimus, will you give us a few minutes of your valuable time?’
-
-Mr Redgrave, accustomed to defer to the wishes of his elder sister
-in most things, submissively seated himself in front of Penelope and
-prepared to listen accordingly.
-
-‘Lavinia and I have been discussing your improved fortune and
-prospects. Although your sisters have led a very retired and secluded
-life, they have some knowledge of human nature, and are quite prepared
-to learn that their only brother has been the target for every selfish
-and intriguing woman with whom he has been brought in contact. The only
-safeguard appears to us to be an engagement with some suitable person.’
-
-The aquiline features of Septimus flushed somewhat as he replied: ‘If
-you mean that I am to sacrifice my liberty when I am best prepared
-to enjoy it, you will excuse my saying that you are tilting at a
-windmill. If you think so highly of matrimony, why don’t you swallow
-the prescription yourself?’
-
-If it be objected that this retort can scarcely be considered such as
-should proceed from the lips of a gentleman, it must be borne in mind
-that Septimus was an irascible man, and that when he lost command of
-his temper he always lost at the same time command of his tongue.
-
-‘The relative positions of a woman and a man are vastly different, so
-far as matrimony is concerned,’ replied Penelope. ‘The woman must sit
-at home till she receives an offer; the man can seek a wife in every
-circle of society.’
-
-This was a great admission on the part of Penelope, who would never
-have avowed to any man—except a brother—that her spinsterhood was aught
-but the result of her own free-will. It will be observed that both the
-sisters ignored all danger from such a quarter as the ambitious damsel
-of St James’s; at anyrate they would have considered it derogatory to
-their own self-respect to own (to Septimus) such a fear.
-
-‘You are no longer a young man, Septimus. We are both your seniors. Our
-last days would be inexpressibly soothed if we could feel that your lot
-in life was fixed, and that the fortune you have inherited would not
-become the prey of intriguing adventuresses. There is a lady in this
-house who entertains strong feelings of regard for you. She is young,
-handsome, and accomplished. You do not require money in a wife; but
-the lady we allude to is not by any means a beggar. Let us both advise
-you to lose no time in making up your mind, or a certain good-looking
-lawyer may be before you. No more at present. The lady, who will, I
-devoutly trust, eventually become our sister, is even now approaching
-the house.’
-
-Septimus turned his eyes in the direction of the garden. Two ladies and
-a gentleman were slowly walking along the path. Presently, the younger
-one suddenly left her companions and tripped into the drawing-room
-through the open French-window.
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-Mrs Fraser was the widow of Major Fraser, and quite came under the
-description of being ‘fat, fair, and forty.’ Her late husband had
-been the lifelong associate of Colonel Redgrave; so, when the widow
-announced her intention of quitting India for England, there to take
-up her permanent abode, her sole companion being her only child, a
-girl of some nineteen years, the colonel decided to accompany her.
-The gossips in the cantonments had quite decided that after a decent
-interval Mrs Fraser would become the wife of Colonel Redgrave; but all
-such speculations were put an end to by his sudden death. The Frasers
-were now staying at Oswald Villa, the elder Miss Redgrave, as the
-reader has just seen, having formed a plan of uniting her brother in
-marriage to the handsome widow. Blanche Fraser was a miniature copy
-of her mother. The same dazzlingly fair complexion, the same laughing
-blue eyes, the same luxuriant light hair; and, if the truth must be
-told, the same love of admiration and flirting, distinguished alike
-both mother and daughter. There was only one alloy to the happiness
-of the widow—the dreadful conviction that youth was slowly but surely
-deserting her. The fact might perhaps have been concealed somewhat, but
-for the visible presence of a marriageable daughter. So, with many a
-sigh, the widow yielded to the inevitable, and determined to choose a
-partner in life while a certain portion of youth and good looks still
-remained to her. At the present moment, her choice had fallen on the
-handsome companion of her walk to Luccombe Chine. Mr Frank Lockwood
-had been the lawyer of the Redgrave family ever since his father had
-vacated that position by death. He was now about three-and-thirty, was
-agreeable and good-looking. As it was now the vacation, the lawyer
-was staying at Oswald Villa, in response to the pressing invitation
-of Miss Redgrave. The widow had acted on the principle of making hay
-while the sun shines, and had exerted all her fascinations on the man
-of law; but in vain. Mr Lockwood was very gallant, but the heart of Mrs
-Fraser whispered that hitherto her efforts had been void of success.
-Still, perseverance, as we all know, achieves wonders, and so the widow
-resolved to adopt as her motto—_Perseverando vinces_, and hope for the
-best. Blanche, as we have said, tripped into the room, exclaiming as
-she did so, ‘O Mr Redgrave, you have lost such a treat! I did so miss
-you; you were the one thing needful to complete our enjoyment during
-our delightful walk.’
-
-Septimus gazed keenly at the fair speaker; she was certainly very
-pretty, and decidedly clever, and palpably partial to his society.
-He might do worse than pass the remainder of his days with such a
-delightful companion. To be sure, there was a certain disparity in
-years; but every one knows that women age faster than men, and there
-were innumerable instances in public life of similar disproportions as
-to age. He would certainly treasure up the advice of his sister as to
-the choice of a wife. So it was with more than his customary urbanity
-that Septimus replied: ‘An old man such as I am would have been but a
-poor acquisition, Miss Fraser.’
-
-Blanche peered with an expression of mock gravity into the gray eyes of
-Septimus. ‘An old man! Have you never heard of the old saying?—A man is
-as old as he feels, a woman as old as she looks. How old do you feel,
-Mr Redgrave?’
-
-‘I feel almost a boy, Miss Fraser, when in your society; I feel a
-centenarian when I am ill in my solitary rooms in London.’
-
-‘Then the deduction from that observation,’ replied Blanche, ‘is, that
-to enjoy perpetual youth, you should be perpetually in my society.’
-
-‘A charming prescription, Miss Fraser; I wish it were a possible one.’
-
-Mrs Fraser and Mr Lockwood here entered the room. ‘Take care, Mr
-Redgrave,’ said the widow; ‘you will find Blanche a sad flirt. I have
-only just been warning Mr Lockwood against her.’
-
-This was a double shot, intended equally for Blanche and Mr Lockwood,
-who had, in the widow’s opinion, been somewhat too attentive to Blanche
-recently.
-
-Penelope here intervened. ‘My brother is hankering after the fleshpots
-of Egypt, Mrs Fraser; in other words, is longing for “the sweet shady
-side of Pall Mall.” Can you not persuade him to remain?’
-
-‘Let me try _my_ influence,’ interposed Blanche coquettishly. ‘You will
-remain, will you not, _dear_ Mr Redgrave?’
-
-Septimus felt a thrill pass through his frame as Miss Fraser took
-hold of one of his hands and looked up in his face with a beseeching
-look, while Mr Lockwood threw himself with an air of vexation into an
-armchair and made an attempt to read yesterday’s _Times_.
-
-‘You _must_ promise, Mr Redgrave,’ said Blanche.
-
-‘I promise to obey you in all things,’ said Septimus, as, with an air
-of old-world gallantry, he raised her fingers to his lips.
-
-From that hour, one thought and one only occupied the mind of Mr
-Redgrave: Should he adopt the advice of Penelope, and make Miss Fraser
-an offer of his hand and heart? It was a tremendous step for one who
-had passed the greater part of his life in studying how best he could
-minister to his own selfish comfort and happiness. But on the morning
-of the second day after the scene we have just described, Septimus
-determined to put his fortune to the test. He chanced to find the fair
-Blanche alone sitting under the jessamine-covered veranda, engaged in
-reading a novel. Attired in white, with a blue sash round her slender
-waist, her light brown hair falling in careless profusion on her
-well-turned shoulders, Miss Fraser presented a bewitching spectacle.
-As Septimus approached, Blanche shot a captivating glance from beneath
-her long dark lashes, and with a graceful movement, invited Septimus to
-seat himself beside her on the bench.
-
-‘I hope you are not in the crisis of your tale, Miss Fraser?’
-
-‘No; I am in the second volume only, which is always flat and
-uninteresting and skippable.’
-
-‘I am glad to hear it, for I am anxious to have a little serious chat
-with you.’
-
-Blanche placed her hands together in the form of supplication. ‘Oh,
-please, don’t, Mr Redgrave! I have just had a lecture of half an hour’s
-duration from mamma, and that was serious enough, in all conscience.
-Why will our parents and guardians expect us to have the wisdom of
-Solomon and the virtues of Dorcas before we are out of our teens!’
-
-‘Perhaps I used a wrong word; I wished to speak to you about love.’
-
-‘Oh! how delightful! Have you fallen in love _at last_, Mr Redgrave?’
-
-Septimus did not like the phrase ‘at last,’ but he continued: ‘Also I
-wished to speak about matrimony.’
-
-Blanche shook her head gravely. ‘That is a very serious subject.’
-
-‘And yet matrimony is the natural sequence of love.’
-
-‘Alas! yes,’ sighed Blanche.
-
-So far the discussion was not encouraging; but Septimus resolved to
-persevere. ‘I have fallen in love with a lady who is at present under
-this roof.’
-
-Blanche clasped her hands in wondering surprise, and gasped forth one
-word—‘Mamma!’
-
-‘No, Miss Fraser; my affections are settled on her lovely daughter.’
-
-‘Me!’ exclaimed Blanche. ‘Impossible! Oh, Mr Redgrave, you are joking!’
-
-‘I was never more serious in my life, Miss Fraser. Why should you think
-it impossible that I should have fallen in love with you? I am in the
-prime of life; I have sufficient means’——
-
-‘O pray, Mr Redgrave, forbear! What you ask is impossible; I am
-engaged, indeed I am, although mamma does not know it. You won’t tell
-her, will you, Mr Redgrave? Promise me you will not.’
-
-‘Certainly not; but I must inform my sisters, for it was owing to their
-encouragement that I have made this proposal. They led me to suppose
-that you were favourable to my suit.’
-
-‘What a singular delusion! no; I don’t mean that—misapprehension.’
-
-Septimus rose from the seat. ‘Then we resume our former relations, Miss
-Fraser?’
-
-Blanche rose, and as she made a low courtesy, said: ‘If you please, Mr
-Redgrave.’
-
-Septimus strode away in a towering rage with his sisters for having
-inflicted upon him such unnecessary humiliation, and entering
-the drawing-room, found Penelope and Lavinia calmly engaged in
-tambour-work. One glance was sufficient to inform the sisters that
-their brother was not in the best of tempers.
-
-‘Septimus, what has happened?’
-
-‘Everything that is disgusting and unpleasant. I have been fool enough
-to take your advice. I have proposed to the lady selected by you for my
-wife two days ago, and have been refused with ridicule and contempt.’
-
-‘Impossible, Septimus!’
-
-‘The lady is already engaged.’
-
-‘Impossible, Septimus!’
-
-‘But I have promised to keep her engagement a secret from her mother.’
-
-‘From her mother! Of whom are you speaking, Septimus?’
-
-‘Why, of Blanche Fraser, to be sure.’
-
-‘Blanche! It was her mother we alluded to as our future sister-in-law!’
-
-Tableau!
-
- * * * * *
-
-By a singular coincidence, Mrs Fraser was closeted with Mr Lockwood
-in the library of Oswald Villa during the love-scene of Septimus with
-Blanche. The widow had gone to the library under the pretence of
-fetching a particular volume, well knowing that she would find the
-handsome solicitor in that apartment. Mr Lockwood was deeply immersed
-in Burton’s _Anatomy of Melancholy_, but rose from his seat as Mrs
-Fraser entered.
-
-‘I did not mean to disturb you, Mr Lockwood; I merely wanted a volume
-of Tennyson.’
-
-‘Pray, don’t apologise, Mrs Fraser. Your visit is very apropos, for I
-was very anxious to have a few minutes’ private conversation with you
-on a matter affecting all my future life.’
-
-The widow gracefully accepted the chair Mr Lockwood placed for her, her
-cheek flushing, and her pulse throbbing as a small voice whispered:
-‘The moment has at length arrived; and Frank is neither made of stone,
-nor so impervious to my fascinations as I supposed.’
-
-‘It is in your power, my dear Mrs Fraser, to make me the happiest of
-men.’
-
-A film passed over the eyes of the widow at this sudden statement of
-the lawyer.
-
-‘With your keen penetration and knowledge of the human heart, you must
-have long since perceived that I am hopelessly in love, and that the
-object of my affections is at this moment a resident of Oswald Villa.’
-
-‘I suspected as much; I will not deny it, dear Frank.’
-
-Mr Lockwood took the plump and trembling fingers of the widow in his
-own and gently pressed them. The widow cordially and instinctively
-returned the squeeze. ‘May I hope, dear Mrs Fraser?’
-
-‘Dear youth, you may!’ murmured the widow, as her head gently sank on
-his shoulders.
-
-The countenance of Mr Lockwood expressed some considerable surprise
-at the phraseology adopted by Mrs Fraser, but he attributed it to the
-natural emotion of the situation.
-
-‘Then I may tell dear Blanche at once?’ said Frank.
-
-‘Yes; she must know it sooner or later,’ said Mrs Fraser.
-
-‘Blanche already knows of my attachment,’ said Mr Lockwood.
-
-‘Was she not very much surprised, dear Frank?’
-
-‘Well, I cannot say that she was, exactly.’
-
-‘I feared she might think there was too much disparity of age,’ said
-the widow.
-
-‘Only fourteen years,’ replied Lockwood.
-
-‘No, Frank, you are joking,’ said the widow, playfully tapping his
-cheek; ‘not more than seven.’
-
-‘Pardon me, Mrs Fraser. I am thirty-three, and Blanche is nineteen.’
-
-The room and its contents spun round before the horrified gaze of the
-unhappy widow. All was clear to her now. For a few brief happy moments
-she had been living in a fool’s paradise. The dream was over. But,
-like a judicious woman of the world, Mrs Fraser collected her agitated
-thoughts and rapidly executed a change of front.
-
-‘You will make some allowance, Mr Lockwood, for my natural agitation at
-the idea of losing a beloved daughter. Blanche is a dear good child,
-and you gained a treasure when you won her young affections. But you
-must have patience. I cannot afford to lose her yet, she is still so
-young.’
-
-‘My dear Mrs Fraser, I am the happiest of men,’ replied the enraptured
-Lockwood, overjoyed at the speedy success of his suit.
-
-
-
-
-MISTLETOE.
-
-
- A cold dark night,
- Some falling snow;
- A gleam of light,
- A ruddy glow.
-
- A quaint old hall,
- Some warriors grim,
- Whose shadows fall
- Grotesque and dim.
-
- A maiden fair,
- A gleam of gold
- Upon her hair—
- The story old.
-
- While the storm’s breath
- Sweeps o’er the snow,
- One kiss beneath
- The mistletoe.
-
- Ten Christmas Eves
- Have come and gone,
- And each one leaves
- Me still alone.
-
- That fair sweet maid
- Of years ago
- Has long been laid
- Beneath the snow.
-
- While the wind drives
- Against the pane,
- In fancy lives
- My love again.
-
- The firelight fades,
- The embers glow,
- One kiss beneath
- The mistletoe.
-
- NORA C. USHER.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Printed and Published by W. & R. CHAMBERS, 47 Paternoster Row, LONDON,
-and 339 High Street, EDINBURGH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_All Rights Reserved._
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, Fifth Series, No. 49, Vol. I, December 6, 1884, by Various</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, Fifth Series, No. 49, Vol. I, December 6, 1884</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Various</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: October 31, 2021 [eBook #66635]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Susan Skinner, Eric Hutton and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART, FIFTH SERIES, NO. 49, VOL. I, DECEMBER 6, 1884 ***</div>
-
-<h1>CHAMBERS’S JOURNAL<br />
-OF<br />
-POPULAR<br />
-LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART.</h1>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='center'>
-
-<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
-
-<a href="#POISONING">POISONING.</a><br />
-<a href="#ONE_WOMANS_HISTORY">ONE WOMAN’S HISTORY.</a><br />
-<a href="#COOKING_CLASSES_FOR_CHILDREN">COOKING CLASSES FOR CHILDREN.</a><br />
-<a href="#AN_AMATEUR_CABBY">AN AMATEUR ‘CABBY.’</a><br />
-<a href="#COLONEL_REDGRAVES_LEGACY">COLONEL REDGRAVE’S LEGACY.</a><br />
-<a href="#MISTLETOE">MISTLETOE.</a><br />
-
-<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
-
-</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_769">{769}</span></p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter w100" id="header" style="max-width: 43.75em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/header.jpg" alt="Chambers’s Journal of Popular Literature, Science,
-and Art. Fifth Series. Established by William and Robert Chambers, 1832. Conducted by R. Chambers (Secundus)." />
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<div class="center">
-<div class="header">
-<p class="floatl"><span class="smcap">No. 49.—Vol. I.</span></p>
-<p class="floatr"><span class="smcap">Price</span> 1½<em>d.</em></p>
-<p class="floatc">SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1884.</p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="POISONING">POISONING.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">An</span> examination of the Registrar-general’s annual
-Report for 1882 gives some interesting and suggestive
-statistics as to cases of poisoning, which
-we think it may not be out of place to call
-attention to. Probably few of our readers will
-be aware how frequently cases of poisoning occur
-in the ordinary course of events. In the year
-1881, for example, there were five hundred and
-sixty-nine deaths recorded in England alone
-from poisoning; while the year 1882 shows a
-record considerably in excess of this, namely,
-five hundred and ninety-nine, or one in every
-eight hundred and sixty-three of the total deaths
-registered. Fully two-fifths of these cases are
-classified under the heading ‘Accident and Negligence’—the
-remainder are suicides, of which we
-will have a word to say by-and-by—and as
-it is not too much to assume that in nearly
-every instance such cases are preventable, we
-purpose calling attention to some of the more
-common causes of these fatalities, in the hope
-that the suggestions and warnings thrown out
-may not be without their influence in producing
-more care in the handling and use of these
-dangerous substances.</p>
-
-<p>Glancing over the various poisons, we find
-that the well-known preparations of opium,
-laudanum, and morphia—opium itself being
-included—head the list, having caused eighty-five
-deaths through accident or negligence. This
-might have been expected from preparations so
-largely used in domestic remedies; but the
-seventy-eight deaths from lead-poisoning which
-follow do surprise us, in view of the fact that
-the conditions which produce as well as the
-conditions which mitigate or counteract the
-effects of this subtle poison, are now so well
-known. Lead is followed by the four stronger
-acids—hydrochloric, nitric, sulphuric, and carbolic,
-which amongst them have caused thirty-four
-deaths under the same category. Arsenic,
-again, caused nine; phosphorus, eleven; chlorodyne,
-six; chloral, fourteen; chloroform, four;
-soothing syrup, four; with a host of casualties
-from substances of minor importance.</p>
-
-<p>Reading between the lines of the Registrar-general’s
-Report, which it is not difficult to do,
-with the help of the medical journals, we will
-find that there are two prolific causes of these
-accidents—first, the giving or taking of overdoses
-of certain remedies containing poisons; and
-second, the substitution of one bottle or substance
-for another, as, for example, where a number
-of substances are congregated together, as in the
-case of the domestic cupboard. In the first class
-may be instanced the giving of overdoses of opiates
-or soothing preparations to children; the taking
-of overdoses of narcotics or soothing compounds,
-such as chloral, by habitual drinkers; and the
-general familiarity which the handling or using
-of these powerful agents frequently begets in
-those habitually using them. In the second
-class may be instanced such mistakes as the
-substituting of one bottle containing, say, a
-poisonous liniment, for a mixture intended for
-internal administration; the hasty and foolish
-practice of quaffing off a draught from any jug,
-bottle, or dish without examining the contents;
-and lastly, mistakes caused from accumulating
-within easy access powerful medicines, in the
-hope that they may come of future use.</p>
-
-<p>Now, every good housewife may not be a
-trained nurse, but she is almost certain to be
-called upon at one time or another to act as nurse,
-and she may save herself many a bitter reflection
-if she would only attend to the following simple
-and easy to be remembered rules:</p>
-
-<p>(1) Never give an infant an opiate or other
-powerful soothing remedy without first obtaining
-the sanction of the doctor. No practice is more
-common when mothers meet than to talk over
-their children’s complaints, suggest remedies, and
-magnify their several experiences, with the result
-that domestic recipes are lauded, approved, and
-tried too often in total ignorance either of their
-suitability or safety. Few mothers are aware of
-the important fact, that a medicine containing
-a narcotic or soothing ingredient may cure one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_770">{770}</span>
-infant and kill another of equal strength, age,
-&amp;c. This varied action of soothing remedies
-on infants cannot be too well known or too
-strongly impressed upon mothers.</p>
-
-<p>(2) Where powerful remedies, particularly such
-as contain opiates or chloral, are being administered,
-the patients should not be allowed to
-measure them or repeat the dose for themselves.
-In the midst of racking pain or tossing about
-with sleeplessness, the chances are that the patient
-will take a larger dose than that prescribed, to
-obtain speedier relief; although it is not even
-in this that the principal risk of accident lies.
-The great risk is that the patient will repeat
-the dose before the influence of the previous
-dose has exhausted itself; repeating the dose in
-a state of semi-consciousness or of complete recklessness,
-to the total disregard of either quantity
-or consequence. It would be well if persons in
-the habit of taking laudanum, morphia, chloral,
-and chlorodyne would keep this danger in
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>(3) Never place bottles or packets containing
-poison alongside of those intended for internal
-use. This is one of the most prolific causes of
-accidents; and experience has shown that neither
-the distinctive blue corrugated bottles, which are
-now frequently used to hold poisons, nor labels,
-are sufficient to insure immunity from accident,
-even among trained nurses, where medicines are
-allowed to be collected indiscriminately together.
-(In the act of writing this, a case in point has
-come under our observation which well illustrates
-the fearful risk that is run in failing to attend
-to this simple rule. A daughter was requested
-by her mother to give her a dose of her medicine.
-Only two bottles were on the dressing-room table,
-the one containing the medicine required, and
-the other containing a poisonous liniment. The
-daughter saw the liniment bottle, read the label
-poison, took up the other bottle containing the
-mixture correctly, but put it down again to
-pick something up, and the second time took
-up the bottle, but this time without reading
-the label, with the result that the liniment was
-given instead of the mixture, with fatal results.
-Similar cases might be multiplied indefinitely.)</p>
-
-<p>(4) Never put any poison, such as carbolic acid,
-oxalic acid, or any other of the stronger acids
-into beer-bottles, jugs, cups, or other vessels
-which both children and adults are apt to associate
-in their minds with substances not in
-themselves dangerous. One can hardly take up
-a medical journal without finding some death
-recorded in this manner. A bottle or cup is
-standing on a table or in a cupboard, and under
-the impression that it contains beer or spirits,
-tea or coffee, or even pure water, some one quaffs
-the contents, and only finds when it is probably
-too late that he has drunk some virulent poison.
-One is very apt to say, ‘How stupid!’ on reading
-such cases, and yet one of the earliest experiences
-of the writer was in connection with a mistake
-in every respect resembling this, and it well
-illustrates how such mistakes may be made by
-intelligent if not even educated men—men trained
-to exercise eyes, nose, and mouth—without their
-being detected until too late. A student in the
-dispensary, one hot dusty day, feeling thirsty,
-thought he would slake his thirst not at the tap,
-but from the ‘Aqua fontana’ bottle on the shelf.
-Next this bottle stood another containing turpentine,
-both bottles being correctly and plainly
-labelled. Feeling confident in his bottle, he
-carelessly lifted it from the shelf, took a long
-draught, and never discovered that he was quaffing
-the turpentine until the bottle was withdrawn
-from his mouth. Fortunately, nature
-dealt kindly by the lad, in quickly rejecting
-the nauseous liquid.</p>
-
-<p>Lastly, never accumulate powerful remedies,
-in the belief that they may be required on
-some future occasion. It is highly probable that
-many of our readers will have a family medicine
-chest in which there is a place for every
-bottle, and in which every bottle must be
-in its place, and the whole in beautiful order.
-This is the very idea for a medicine cupboard—not
-only a place for everything, and everything
-in its place, but all plainly and correctly marked.
-As a rule, however, nothing can be further from
-the reality than such a picture. The ordinary
-domestic medicine cupboard is too frequently a
-shelf of some press or dark closet, where all
-medicines and remedies not in use—poisonous
-liniments, poisonous mixtures, simples, and so on—are
-all literally huddled together, with nothing
-to mark their contents save the stereotyped directions:
-‘The liniment for external use,’ or, ‘A
-teaspoonful three times a day.’ It is not difficult
-under such circumstances to picture a typical
-case of what is almost certain sooner or later to
-occur. Johnny, one of the children, is frequently
-troubled with a cough, but the east winds having
-for a time been propitious, Johnny’s cough mixture
-is put away in the cupboard. By-and-by,
-however, Johnny overheats himself, is again
-caught by the east wind, and so his mamma
-goes to the cupboard for his mixture. Johnny
-escapes it may be all the poisonous liniments,
-for the bottle is distinctly marked, ‘A teaspoonful
-three times a day;’ but Johnny does not by any
-means escape all risk, for it is more than probable
-that his mamma has quite forgotten about
-his papa’s tonic mixture containing strychnine,
-or her own fever mixture containing aconite, or
-his older brother’s mixture containing arsenic,
-and probably many others, all labelled, ‘A teaspoonful
-three times a day,’ and all resembling
-Johnny’s as much as two peas do each other.
-This is no fanciful picture, but one which we
-have experienced again and again—sometimes
-with serious consequences, but more frequently
-with more fright than hurt. Still, such a risk
-should never be run. The agony which a mother
-feels when she realises either that she has given,
-or that her child has taken an overdose of poison
-or of some powerful medicine by mistake, requires
-to be witnessed to be understood in all its terrible
-reality; but once witnessed, we think it might
-be sufficient to act as a warning as to getting
-too familiar or careless in the handling or storing
-of such potent agents.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, it is a remarkable fact that some
-persons never acquire this caution, even with
-such a bitter experience as that described. We
-remember being called up one midnight to a
-case of poisoning, where an ounce of saltpetre
-had been given for an ounce of Epsom salts.
-The mother recollected placing the salts in the
-cupboard, but she forgot one other very important
-fact, that she had also placed the packet<span class="pagenum" id="Page_771">{771}</span>
-of saltpetre in the same place some time previously,
-and so she took the first packet that
-came to her hand and made it up without the
-slightest inspection. Notwithstanding this experience,
-a week or two later she made a similar
-mistake with another poison from the same
-cupboard. A phial of croton oil, used to produce
-an eruption on the chest, was lifted instead of
-a phial of olive oil, and poured into the ear to
-relieve earache.</p>
-
-<p>Referring for a moment to suicides, of which
-there were two hundred and eighty-eight for
-the same period, we find some curious and even
-extraordinary statistics. For example, there is
-a very great difference, as a rule, in the agents
-employed by men and by women to effect suicide.
-A class of poisons under the generic name of
-vermin-killers, but which in the majority of
-instances are merely arsenic or strychnine disguised,
-have been the agents used by seventeen
-females and only seven males. The opium preparations,
-on the other hand, very nearly reverse
-these proportions, having been used by twenty
-males and only twelve females. Carbolic acid,
-again, has been used by thirteen females and
-only six males; and so on. Apparently, the
-agent used in the majority of cases is determined
-either by a facility in the obtaining of the poison,
-or by a certain familiarity in the every-day use
-of it, otherwise we cannot account for the general
-use of some slow, uncertain, and frightfully painful
-poisons such as carbolic acid and phosphorus.
-Of more importance, however, than this are the
-following facts, which we think require some
-explanation or investigation. We find one hundred
-and one deaths recorded—fifty-eight by
-accident and forty-three by suicide—from seven
-substances alone, not one of which the legislature
-at present requires to be labelled poison! Surely
-this requires some looking after. We find
-seventy-eight deaths (not suicides) from lead-poisoning.
-We would like to know how far
-these seventy-eight deaths are to be accounted
-for from absorption of the poison by those
-working amongst it, and how far they might
-have been avoided by ordinary precautions?
-Lastly, we find one hundred and two deaths—twenty-six
-by accident and seventy-six by suicide—from
-poisons which should not be sold unless
-under the strictest regulations. We would like
-to know how far these regulations have been
-observed in these cases, as we have reason to
-conclude that there is a laxity existing somewhere.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="ONE_WOMANS_HISTORY">ONE WOMAN’S HISTORY.</h2>
-</div>
-<p class="ph3"><i>A NOVELETTE.</i></p>
-
-<p class="ph3">BY T. W. SPEIGHT.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER XI.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> first thing that struck Colonel Woodruffe
-on entering the room of Madame De Vigne was
-the extreme pallor of her face. She looked like
-a woman newly restored to the world after a
-long and dangerous illness. Although the window
-was wide open, the venetians were lowered,
-while Mora herself was dressed in black, and
-in the semi-obscurity of the room, her white,
-set face, with its sorrow-laden eyes, had an effect
-that was almost ghostlike to one coming suddenly
-out of the glaring sunlight. At least so it seemed
-to Colonel Woodruffe. He felt that at such a
-time all commonplace questions would seem
-trivial and out of place, so he went forward
-without a word, and lifting her hand, pressed it
-gently to his lips.</p>
-
-<p>‘Read this, please,’ she said as she handed
-him her husband’s letter. Then they both sat
-down.</p>
-
-<p>He read the note through slowly and carefully.
-As he handed it back to her, he said: ‘What do
-you mean to do?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I shall see him at the hour he specifies, and
-shall tell him that I have already commissioned
-you to seek out Sir William Ridsdale and tell
-him everything.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Everything?’ he asked.</p>
-
-<p>‘Everything,’ she answered in the same hard,
-dry voice; a slight trembling of her long, thin
-fingers was the only sign that betrayed the
-emotion pent up within. ‘Dear friend,’ she went
-on, ‘I want you at once to find Sir William
-and tell him everything as I told it to you on
-Wednesday. It will then be for him to decide
-whether he can accept the sister of an ex-convict’s
-wife for his daughter-in-law. If he cannot, then
-God help my poor Clarice! But nothing must
-be kept back from him, whatever the result may
-be.’ Then after a little pause, she said, looking
-earnestly into his face: ‘Do you not agree with
-me?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I do,’ he answered. ‘The right thing is
-always the best thing to do, whatever consequences
-may follow. Depend upon it, you will
-lose nothing in the eyes of Sir William by
-throwing yourself on his generosity in the way
-you propose doing.—But I have had news. Sir
-William will be here—at the <i>Palatine</i>—in the
-course of a few hours.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah! So much the better. So will the climax
-come all the more quickly. But, my poor Clari!
-Oh, my poor, darling Clari!’ Her lips quivered,
-a stifled sob broke from her heart, but her eyes
-were as dry and tearless as before.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel waited a moment, and then he
-said: ‘What you purpose telling a certain person
-at your interview this evening will enable you to
-set him at defiance—will it not?’</p>
-
-<p>‘It will—thoroughly and completely. I shall
-have taken the initiative out of his hands, and
-he will be powerless to harm me.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Your fortune?’ he said.</p>
-
-<p>‘Is settled strictly on myself. He cannot
-touch a penny of it.’ Then, after a pause, she
-added: ‘Not that I want him to starve; not
-that I would refuse him a certain share of my
-money—if I could only feel sure it would keep
-him from evil courses. But it would never do
-that—never! In such as he, there is no possibility
-of change.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I will make a point of seeing Sir William as
-soon as he arrives,’ said the colonel as he rose
-and pushed back his chair. ‘I suppose that is
-what you would like me to do?’</p>
-
-<p>‘The sooner the better,’ answered Mora, also
-rising. ‘You will come to me the moment you
-have any news?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I will not fail to do so. For the present, I
-presume you will say nothing to your sister?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_772">{772}</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Why trouble her till the time comes? Let
-her linger in her love-dream while she may.
-The waking will be a cruel one when it comes.’</p>
-
-<p>‘With all my heart, I hope not!’ answered the
-colonel fervently. Then, as he took her hand, he
-added: ‘We shall meet again in a few hours.’</p>
-
-<p>‘How good you are!’ she murmured, with a
-little break in her voice.</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head, but would not trust himself
-to speak. He was more moved than he would
-have cared to own. Once more he lifted her
-fingers to his lips. Next moment she was
-alone.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Mr Dulcimer and Miss Wynter went gaily on
-their way to the lake. To hear them talking
-and laughing, no one would have thought that
-they had a care beyond the enjoyment of the
-passing hour, yet each was secretly conscious that
-for them that day might perchance prove one of
-the most momentous in their lives. They found
-a boat with fishing-tackle awaiting them. Bella
-shook a little as she bade farewell to <i>terra
-firma</i>. She felt as an ancient Greek might have
-felt—that the Fates were against her—that destiny
-was stronger than she, and urged her forward
-whether she wished it or not. She who had
-heretofore been so wilful seemed to have no
-power of will left in her.</p>
-
-<p>Before long they found themselves at a point
-near the head of the lake where Dick had been
-told that he might possibly find some fish. For
-a quarter of an hour or so he plied his rod
-industriously, but not even a nibble rewarded
-his perseverance. ‘Ah,’ said he at last, ‘the fish
-are evidently off their feed this morning.’</p>
-
-<p>He did not seem in the least put about by his
-ill-luck, but laying his rod across the thwarts,
-he proceeded leisurely to light his pipe. Bella
-watched him nervously. As soon as his pipe was
-fairly under way, he looked straight into Bella’s
-eyes and said: ‘I did not so much come out here
-this morning to fish as to secure an opportunity
-for a little quiet talk with you.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I can quite believe it. There is something
-underhand about most things that you do,’ she
-answered as she dipped one of her hands carelessly
-into the water.</p>
-
-<p>Dick smiled amiably. He delighted in a
-skirmish.</p>
-
-<p>‘Am I to go back to London to-morrow
-morning, or am I not? That’s the question.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Really, Mr Dulcimer, or Mr Golightly, or
-whatever your name may be, I am at a loss to
-know why you should put such a question to me.’</p>
-
-<p>Dick burst into a guffaw.</p>
-
-<p>‘May I ask, sir, what you are laughing at?’</p>
-
-<p>‘At you, of course.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh!’ It came out with a sort of snap.</p>
-
-<p>‘You look so comical when you put on that
-mock-dignified air, that it always sets me off. Of
-course I know you can’t help it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Wretch!’ she retorted, half-starting to her
-feet. Next moment she sat down again in mortal
-terror. The boat was swaying ominously, or so
-it seemed to her.</p>
-
-<p>‘Please not to flop about so much,’ he said
-drily, ‘unless you wish to find yourself in the
-water. I’m a tolerable swimmer, and I might,
-perhaps, be able to lug you ashore, but I wouldn’t
-like to guarantee it.’</p>
-
-<p>Her temper vanished like a flash of summer
-lightning. ‘Oh, do please take me back!’ she
-said, looking at him with a pitiful appeal in her
-eyes. Like many town-bred girls, she had an
-unconquerable dread of water.</p>
-
-<p>‘You are just as safe here as on shore, so long
-as you sit still,’ he answered re-assuringly. And
-with that he changed his seat and went and sat
-down close in front of her.</p>
-
-<p>The colour began to return to her cheeks. He
-looked so strong and brave and handsome as he
-sat there, that she felt ashamed of her fears.
-What harm could happen to her while he was
-there to protect her!</p>
-
-<p>‘Look here, Bella,’ he presently began; ‘where’s
-the use of you and I beating any longer about
-the bush? I must have a distinct answer from
-you to-day, Yes or No, whether you will promise
-to become my wife or whether you won’t. You
-know that I love you, just as well as if I told
-you so a thousand times. You know that my
-love is the genuine article, that there’s nothing
-sham or pinchbeck about it. Your own heart
-has told you that before to-day. There’s something
-else, too, that it has told you.’ He paused.</p>
-
-<p>‘Indeed!’ she said, thrusting out her saucy
-chin a little way. ‘And what may that be, if
-you please?’ Her spirit was coming back. She
-was not inclined to strike her colours without a
-struggle.</p>
-
-<p>‘It has told you that you love me,’ he answered
-slowly and deliberately, still looking straight into
-her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>She was silent for a moment. A little spot
-of deepest red flashed into each of her cheeks.
-‘Indeed, sir, you are mistaken,’ she answered
-with a sort of supercilious politeness. ‘I am
-not aware that my heart has told me anything
-of the kind.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Then it’s high time it did tell you,’ was the
-cool rejoinder. ‘You love me, Bella, whether
-you know it or not, and the best of it is that
-you can’t help yourself.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh! this is too much,’ she cried, and again
-she half-started to her feet. The boat rocked
-a little.</p>
-
-<p>‘You seem to have made up your mind for
-a ducking,’ said Dick, although in reality there
-was not the slightest danger. Next moment she
-was as still as a mouse.</p>
-
-<p>He knocked the ashes out of his pipe. ‘Yes,
-<i>ma petite</i>, I’ve got your heart in my safe keeping;
-and what’s more, I don’t mean to let you have
-it back at any price. The pretty toy is not for
-sale.’</p>
-
-<p>His audacity took her breath away, yet it may
-be that she did not like him less on that account.
-Certainly Dick’s love-making was of a kind of
-which she had had no previous experience.</p>
-
-<p>‘You have got me here by a mean and shabby
-subterfuge,’ she cried. ‘You have made a prisoner
-of me, and now you think you can say what you
-like to me.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s so,’ he answered equably. ‘Now that
-I’ve got you here, I mean to say my say. Idiot
-if I didn’t!’</p>
-
-<p>Bella had never felt so helpless in her life.
-This man seemed to turn all her weapons against
-herself. And she was afraid even to stamp her
-foot!</p>
-
-<p>Richard proceeded to fill his pipe. ‘Don’t you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_773">{773}</span>
-think, <i>carissima</i>, that we have had enough of
-fencing, you and I?’ he asked as he struck a
-match. ‘Don’t you think we had better put the
-foils aside for the present and talk a little quiet
-common-sense?’ His voice had softened strangely.
-All his flippancy seemed to have vanished in a
-moment.</p>
-
-<p>She did not answer. Her eyes were gazing
-straight over his shoulder at the great solemn
-hills in the background—not that she saw them
-in reality. He let his match burn itself out, and
-laid down his unlighted pipe. Then he leaned
-forward and took one of her hands in his strong
-brown palms. His touch thrilled her. All power
-of resistance seemed taken from her. Her bosom
-rose and fell more quickly, a tender radiance
-suffused her eyes, the roses in her cheeks grew
-larger, and their tints deepened. Love’s sorcery
-was upon her. She had drunk of the potion,
-and was lost. Never again could she be quite
-the same as she had been.</p>
-
-<p>What was the ‘quiet common-sense’ he was
-going to talk? she wondered. She had her doubts
-already as to the accuracy of his definition.</p>
-
-<p>‘There comes a time in the lives of most of
-us,’ he began with unwonted seriousness and still
-holding one of her hands, ‘when we are confronted
-by two diverging paths, and are called
-upon to make our choice between them. At
-such a crisis you, my dearest, have now arrived.
-Before you lie two widely diverging paths, one
-only of which you can take, and from which
-there can be no return. With one of these paths
-you are already familiar; you have trodden it
-for two years; you know whither it leads, or
-fancy that you know. If you believe that you
-will find your happiness at the end of it, for
-heaven’s sake, keep to it still! But if you don’t
-so believe—why, then, the other path is open
-to you.’</p>
-
-<p>He paused. She withdrew her hand. He
-at once began to feel for his match-box. She
-regretted that she had not allowed him to
-retain her fingers.</p>
-
-<p>‘And that other path leads—whither?’ she
-asked softly, and with her eyes still fixed vaguely
-on the hills behind him.</p>
-
-<p>‘To love in a cottage—or, say, in a semi-detached
-villa at Camden Town or Peckham Rye,
-with one small servant, not overclean.’ Evidently
-he had not forgotten what she had said
-to him on Wednesday. Their eyes met, and
-they both broke into a laugh. He put the match-box
-back in his pocket and took possession of her
-hand again.</p>
-
-<p>‘You know that all I can offer you is a warm
-heart and a slender purse,’ he said. ‘Not much,
-I grant, from a worldly point of view; still, I
-believe cases have been known where two people
-have been venturesome enough to start in life
-together on a capital as ridiculously insignificant
-as that just named, and have not been unhappy
-afterwards. On the other hand, you know the
-brilliant future which your aunt predicts for you,
-if you will only be an obedient girl and do as
-she wants you to do; that is to say, if you will
-only marry the first rich man who proposes to
-you, whether you care for him or whether you
-don’t. Well, there are many young ladies nowadays
-who seem to find their happiness in that
-direction. Why shouldn’t you? As you said
-yourself the other day, you are a piece of human
-bric-à-brac to be knocked down to the highest
-bidder.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t, don’t!’ she cried with quivering lips.</p>
-
-<p>‘Be mine, then!’ exclaimed Dick passionately.
-‘Become the wife of the man who loves you,
-and save yourself from further degradation. At
-present you are a slave—a chattel. Break your
-fetters, cast them behind you for ever, and come
-to my arms: there is your proper home!’</p>
-
-<p>‘O Dick, what would my aunt say—what
-would she do?’ she asked in an uncertain,
-tremulous voice.</p>
-
-<p>‘There! now you’ve done it!’ he exclaimed
-with a laugh, that yet sounded as if there were
-a tear in it.</p>
-
-<p>‘Done—what?’ she asked in amaze.</p>
-
-<p>‘Told me all that I want to know!’ he cried
-in triumph. ‘If your aunt is the only obstacle—I
-don’t care for ten thousand aunts! You are
-mine—my own—and all the she-dragons in the
-world shall not tear you from me!’</p>
-
-<p>Bella saw the uselessness of further resistance,
-and, like a sensible girl, she capitulated without
-another word.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When Friday morning broke clear and sunny,
-Lady Renshaw’s good temper, which seemed somehow
-to have evaporated in the rain and fog of
-the previous day, came back to her in a lump
-as it were. She spent an extra half-hour over
-the mysteries of her toilet, donned one of her
-most becoming costumes, and descended to the
-breakfast-room, on conquest bent. But, alas,
-when she reached the room she found no one
-there to conquer; the enemy was nowhere to be
-seen. She had the <i>salle</i> almost to herself. Then
-it began to dawn upon her that there was just
-a possibility that both Dr Mac and the vicar
-might have ‘made tracks’ thus early in the
-day on purpose to escape her. And yet such
-an idea was almost too preposterous for belief.
-Had they not both been unmistakably infatuated
-on Wednesday, each in his own peculiar way?
-Had they not both been palpably jealous of each
-other? Why, then, should they try to shun her
-on Friday? Why should forty-eight hours make
-such a vast difference in their feelings? But,
-perhaps, there was something in the background
-of which she knew nothing. Perhaps some one
-had been prejudicing the two gentlemen against
-her. If such were the case, she could only set
-it down as the handiwork of that obnoxious Miss
-Gaisford. She had felt from the first that she
-could never like the vicar’s sister; and besides,
-was it not just possible that Miss Gaisford herself
-might be setting her cap at the doctor? If so,
-poor thing, it evidently would be labour in
-vain.</p>
-
-<p>This thought put her ladyship into a somewhat
-better humour. Matters should be altered on the
-morrow. She would make an heroic effort, and
-rise with the lark, or at least early enough to
-breakfast at the same time that the gentlemen
-partook of that meal. It would be her own fault,
-then, if she allowed them to slip through her
-fingers. The poor dear vicar might go as soon
-as he had served her purpose in keeping alive
-the doctor’s jealousy; but the latter individual
-she meant to bring, metaphorically, to his knees
-before he was many days older, and she never<span class="pagenum" id="Page_774">{774}</span>
-for a moment doubted her ability to do so.
-Miss Gaisford, indeed! Ah ha! let those laugh
-who win.</p>
-
-<p>She found herself in the sitting-room by the
-time she arrived at this triumphant peroration.
-It was empty. Lady Renshaw, in accordance
-with her usual tactics when no one was about,
-began to pry and peer here and there, opening
-such drawers in the writing-table as did not
-happen to be locked, turning over the paper
-and envelopes, and even submitting the blotting-pad
-to a careful examination; she had heard
-that strange secrets had sometimes been revealed
-by the agency of a sheet of blotting-paper. Nothing,
-however, rewarded her perquisition. She
-next crossed to the chimney-piece. Careless
-people occasionally left envelopes, and even
-letters, on that convenient shelf. Here, too, her
-search was without success. She felt somewhat
-aggrieved.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly her eye was caught by a gleam of
-something white just inside the scroll-work of
-the fender. She had pounced upon it in an
-instant. It proved to be merely a scrap of half-charred
-paper; but when she had opened it,
-which she did very carefully, she found it to
-be covered with writing. It was, in fact, a fragment
-of the letter given by Madame De Vigne
-to Colonel Woodruffe. The colonel had watched
-the flames devour the letter, till it was all gone
-except the small portion held between his thumb
-and finger. This he had dropped without thought
-into the fender, where it had till now remained,
-untouched by the housemaid’s brush. Lady Renshaw
-went to the window, and having first satisfied
-herself that no one was watching her, she
-put on her glasses, and tenderly straightening
-out the paper on the palm of one hand, she proceeded
-to decipher it. The fire had left nothing
-save a few brief sentences, which lacked both
-beginning and end. Such as they were, however,
-they seemed pregnant with a sinister significance.
-Her ladyship’s colour changed as she read.
-She was nearly certain that the writing was that
-of Madame De Vigne; but in order to make herself
-certain on the point, she turned to an album
-belonging to Clarice which lay on the table, in
-which were some verses written by her sister and
-signed with her name. Yes—the writing was
-indisputably that of Madame De Vigne!</p>
-
-<p>Once more she turned to the scrap of paper
-and read the words. She wanted to fix them
-in her memory. They ran as follows:</p>
-
-<p>‘My husband ... five years ago ... sentenced
-to penal servitude.... You now know
-all.’</p>
-
-<p>‘The key of the mystery, as I live!’ cried
-Lady Renshaw triumphantly. ‘The widow of
-a convict! Well might she not care to speak
-about her past life. Ah ha! my fine madam,
-your reign is nearly at an end. I wonder what
-Mr Etheridge will say to this. He may be back
-by now. I will go in search of him at once. But
-for whom can the letter have been intended?
-In any case, she seems to have repented writing
-it, and to have burnt it rather than send it.’</p>
-
-<p>She took a book off the table and placed the
-fragment carefully between the leaves, so as to
-preserve it intact. She then went in search
-of Mr Etheridge. That gentleman and Clarice
-had just returned from their excursion. Their
-first care was to examine the letter-rack in the
-hall. There they each found a telegram. Clarice
-tore hers open with a fluttering heart. This is
-what it said:</p>
-
-<p>‘Nothing seen here of governor. Telegram
-from him to Blatchett. Am to return to Windermere
-by first train. Hurrah! Governor will
-meet me at <i>Palatine</i> to night. Queer, very.
-No matter. Shall see you as well.’</p>
-
-<p>Clarice turned first red and then white. The
-terrible Sir William coming to the <i>Palatine</i>—and
-to-night! It was enough to flutter any
-girl’s nerves. She turned to Mr Etheridge and
-put the message into his hands. ‘Read it,’ was
-all she could say.</p>
-
-<p>He had just finished reading his own message,
-which seemed to be a very brief one.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, what do you think?’ she asked nervously,
-as he returned the paper to her with a
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>‘I think it’s about the wisest thing Sir
-William could do. He ought to come and see
-with his own eyes, instead of sending other
-people. Of course, the fact of his summoning
-Mr Archie to London, and then declining to see
-him, can only be put down to the score of eccentricity—though
-I have no doubt the boy has
-enjoyed his little trip to town.’</p>
-
-<p>Clarice looked at him a little reproachfully.
-As if Archie could enjoy being anywhere where
-she was not!</p>
-
-<p>‘I must go and tell Mora the news,’ she said.
-‘But oh! Mr Etheridge, do you think Sir
-William will want to see me?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I think it very likely indeed.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I was never so frightened in my life. I wish
-I could hide myself somewhere till to-morrow.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Pooh, pooh, my dear young lady; Sir William
-is not an ogre. He is only a man, like the rest
-of us.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But he is Archie’s papa.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Is that any reason why you should be
-frightened at him?’</p>
-
-<p>She nodded her head with considerable emphasis.
-But at this juncture Lady Renshaw was
-seen approaching, and Clarice fled.</p>
-
-<p>‘Can you favour me with a few minutes’
-private conversation, Mr Etheridge?’ said her
-ladyship.</p>
-
-<p>‘Willingly, madam. Shall we take a stroll
-on the lawn, as we did before? There seems to
-be no one about.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That will do very nicely. I will just fetch
-my sunshade and then join you.’ Which she
-accordingly did. ‘You may recollect, Mr Etheridge,
-that one portion of our conversation this
-morning had reference to Madame De Vigne?’
-began her ladyship in her most confidential
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>‘I have not forgotten, madam.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Since that time I have made a most surprising
-discovery—a discovery I feel bound to say which
-only tends to confirm the opinion I then ventured
-to express. Will you be good enough,
-my dear sir, to look at this, and then tell me
-what you think?’</p>
-
-<p>She opened the book at the page where she
-had inserted the scrap of paper, and placed it
-in his hands.</p>
-
-<p>He stopped in his walk while he read it; but
-his face was inscrutable, and Lady Renshaw could<span class="pagenum" id="Page_775">{775}</span>
-gather nothing from it. Presently he lifted his
-eyes from the paper and stared at her for a
-moment or two, his bushy eyebrows meeting
-across the deep furrow in his forehead.</p>
-
-<p>‘Where did you obtain this from, may I ask?
-And what is the meaning of it?’</p>
-
-<p>‘As you will have observed, it is evidently
-a fragment of a burnt letter. I picked it up
-quite by accident on the floor of the sitting-room.
-The writing I know for a fact to be that of
-Madame De Vigne. As for the meaning of it—your
-penetration, my dear sir, is surely not at
-fault as regards that?’</p>
-
-<p>‘It is a curious document, certainly—a very
-curious document,’ remarked the old man drily.</p>
-
-<p>‘It is more than that, Mr Etheridge,’ remarked
-her ladyship in her most tragic tones—‘it is a
-revelation! Who is this husband of whom mention
-is made? Who is this convict who is so
-openly alluded to? Are they, or are they not,
-one and the same man, and if so, is he alive
-or dead? Those are points, I should imagine,
-on which Sir William will require to be fully
-enlightened; for, of course, Mr Etheridge, you
-will see how imperative it is that the paper
-should at once be laid before him. What a very,
-very fortunate thing that I happened to find it
-in the way I did!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, madam, Sir William shall see the paper,
-undoubtedly. A very fortunate thing, as you
-say, that your ladyship happened to find it,
-and not any one else, for you, madam, I am quite
-sure, are discretion itself.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Just so—just so,’ responded her ladyship
-uneasily.—‘What a strange old man!’ she said
-to herself. ‘I don’t know what to make of him
-this morning.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Permit me to whisper a secret in your ladyship’s
-ear,’ resumed Mr Etheridge with his odd
-little smile. ‘I have had a message. Sir William
-will be here—here at the <i>Palatine</i>—in the course
-of a few hours.’</p>
-
-<p>Her ladyship could not repress a start. Here
-was news indeed!</p>
-
-<p>‘But not a word to any one at present, I beg,’
-continued the old gentleman. ‘I want Sir
-William’s arrival to be a surprise.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah, just so,’ answered her ladyship with a
-complacent nod.—‘It will be like a bombshell
-thrown into their midst,’ she added to herself.
-Then aloud: ‘Not a word shall pass my lips,
-Mr Etheridge. By-the-bye, do you think it at
-all likely that Sir William will require to see
-me—I mean with regard to the scrap of paper?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I think it very likely indeed, madam.’</p>
-
-<p>‘In that case, I will hold myself in readiness.
-I have long desired the pleasure of Sir William’s
-acquaintance. We could scarcely meet under
-more agreeable auspices.’ Then suddenly grasping
-Mr Etheridge by the sleeve, she said in her
-deepest tones: ‘I felt sure from the first moment
-I set eyes on her that this Madame De Vigne was
-an impostor!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Dear me!’ ejaculated the old gentleman with
-uplifted hands. ‘What acumen—what acumen!’</p>
-
-<p>Her ladyship smiled a superior smile. ‘For the
-present I will say Ta-ta. You will not forget that
-I shall be in readiness to see Sir William at any
-moment?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I will be sure not to forget. <i>Au revoir</i>,
-madam—<i>au revoir</i>.’</p>
-
-<p>Lady Renshaw walked back to the hotel with
-the serene consciousness of having performed a
-meritorious action. Through her instrumentality
-an impostor would be unmasked, and in so far,
-Society would owe her a debt of gratitude. The
-service, too, was such a one as Sir William would
-not be likely to forget. Suddenly, a great, an
-overwhelming thought flashed across her mind.
-Sir William was a widower, but by no means a
-very old man—at least, so she had been given
-to understand; and in any case, he was not too
-old to marry again, if the whim were to take him.
-What if he were to—— The mere idea of such
-a thing made her heart go pit-a-pat. There was
-a mirror in the corridor. She simpered at herself
-in it as she passed and gave a tug at one or two
-of her ribbons. Undeniably, she was still a fine-looking
-woman. Far more unlikely things had
-happened than that which her thoughts had
-barely hinted at. What was it that the parrot
-in its gilded cage at the top of the stairs said to
-her as she passed? Did her ears deceive her, or
-was it a fact that it screamed after her, ‘Lady—Lady—La-dy
-Ridsdale?’</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="COOKING_CLASSES_FOR_CHILDREN">COOKING CLASSES FOR CHILDREN.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">I have</span> been reproaching myself,’ was the piteous
-plaint of Mrs Butler (Fanny Kemble) in her
-<i>Records of Later Life</i>, ‘and reproving others, and
-honestly regretting that, instead of Italian and
-music, I had not learned a little domestic economy,
-and how much bread, butter, flour, eggs, milk,
-sugar, and meat ought to be consumed per
-week by a family of eight persons.’ This is the
-lesson that great part of the world of women
-has still to learn. We have allowed mere accomplishments,
-the fringe and lace of life, to draw
-our attention from those solid and necessary
-things which a woman must know if her home
-is to be comfortable, and which a man knows
-nothing about except that in their results they
-make him contentedly happy or utterly miserable.
-A woman can obtain a more sensible, more
-thorough, in every way a better education in
-book-knowledge now than at almost any previous
-period of our national life; but the gain has been
-made at a price. Reaction is required, and indeed
-has set in already. We may see its fruits in
-the schools of Cookery for Ladies established in
-all our great towns; in the classes for dressmaking,
-clear-starching, and ironing; in the
-newly awakened interest in domestic economy
-as a science, in the countless books on that
-subject and on cookery published during the last
-few years.</p>
-
-<p>The work is by no means done yet. That
-there are many to be taught and much to be
-learned, we may gather from a glance at the
-questions asked on such subjects in our principal
-ladies’ papers; where but the other day
-we find a newly married lady wishing to know
-if, on an income of five hundred pounds a year,
-without house-rent, she can keep a butler, a
-cook-housekeeper, a housemaid, a carriage and
-pair of horses, and a pony and cart!</p>
-
-<p>But we wish to turn now to the wants of
-another class, and see what has been done and
-what can be done for our poorer sisters, who
-sorely need our help in this matter.</p>
-
-<p>If it be true that education is the work of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_776">{776}</span>
-drawing out the mental powers of children so
-as to fit them thoroughly for their work in
-life, then we certainly for a time overshot our
-mark in elementary schools, so far as the girls
-were concerned. We taught them many things
-which they did not need to know, and could
-not learn thoroughly for want of time—much
-which almost unfitted them for their probable
-places in life as working-men’s wives;
-and we left untaught altogether all the womanly
-and useful arts of life except sewing. Good
-management has become rarer and rarer in the
-homes of town working-men; the thrifty, careful
-housewives seem as units among scores of careless,
-bad—because ignorant—mismanagers. The
-early age at which girls go to work in factories
-increases the evil; and, till lately, nothing
-which was taught at school helped to remedy
-it. Here, too, however, the change has begun,
-and now, in the Board Schools of London,
-Liverpool, Birmingham, Glasgow, and other
-large towns, the practical teaching of cookery
-holds almost as important a place in the education
-of girls as the teaching of sewing. But
-the question remains for the managers of voluntary
-schools: Is cooking worth teaching? Can
-it be successfully taught in our schools? Will it
-pay?</p>
-
-<p>These are important questions; but they may
-all—even the last, which comes very near to
-the hearts of all managers—be answered, we
-believe, with a simple ‘Yes.’ Within the writer’s
-own knowledge, since the establishment of cookery
-classes in elementary schools, case after case has
-occurred where a girl of ten, eleven, or twelve
-has been able to cook food well for a whole
-family; or in sickness, has been the only person
-able to make beef-tea or gruel or to beat an
-egg. No one who has not seen could guess or
-would believe what the cooking in working-men’s
-homes too often is, or what waste and
-extravagance arise out of utter ignorance; and
-even where the mother has not been laid aside,
-it has been found that the girl’s knowledge,
-brought fresh from school, has worked a reformation
-in the family management. Nor is this
-all. The influence of the classes upon the girls
-attending them is very good, especially when
-the children are drawn from the very lowest
-ranks. The girls brighten up. Perhaps for the
-first time they are learning something that
-really interests them, and seems a link between
-home-life and school; they learn to weigh, to
-measure, to calculate quantities, and they see
-the use of these things. Let no one imagine
-that a cookery class is not educational. In the
-hands of a competent teacher, it is an object
-lesson, an arithmetic lesson, a general-knowledge
-lesson, and a lesson in common-sense. Even
-the personal appearance of the children often
-improves; cleanliness, neatness, orderliness are
-all encouraged; and in some schools, the effect
-upon the scholars has been most curiously
-marked.</p>
-
-<p>If this be so, surely we may admit that cookery
-is worth teaching. Can it be taught successfully?
-We believe it can. But before attempting to
-prove this, we must give a quotation from the
-Code of March 1882: ‘In schools in which the
-inspector reports that special and appropriate
-provision is made for the practical teaching of
-cookery, a grant of four shillings is made on
-account of any girl over twelve years of age who
-has attended not less than forty hours during
-the school-year at the cooking class, and is presented
-for examination in the elementary subjects
-in any standard.’</p>
-
-<p>The forty hours allowed by government are
-divided into twenty lessons of two hours each,
-which, taken once a week, can be finished in
-half a year. The lessons given are found to
-succeed best if they are alternately demonstration
-and practice—that is, at one lesson the children
-watch the teacher, who shows them how to cook
-any given dishes, carefully explaining the processes
-and the nature of the food; and at the
-next lesson the children put what they have
-learned in practice, and cook the same dishes
-themselves under the superintendence of the
-teacher. Fifteen children are sufficient for a
-practice class, though of course more can attend
-a demonstration. A very moderate-sized classroom
-is large enough; and tables can be formed
-of boards on tressels or on the backs of desks.
-Many classrooms already contain a range large
-enough for all purposes; but if not, one can
-be fitted up at a cost of three pounds, or a
-portable stove can be had for thirty shillings.
-The utensils are few and simple; but of course
-the first cost of them is considerable—about five
-pounds.<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> A teacher is supplied by any of the
-principal training Schools of Cookery for a fee
-of five pounds for twenty lessons and her travelling
-expenses. If several schools in the same
-neighbourhood take lessons during the same
-period, this last item can be much reduced.</p>
-
-<p>The children work in five sets of three each.
-They are taught all the simple processes of cooking,
-and the reason in any given case for using
-one in preference to another. They are furnished
-with printed recipes for each dish they cook;
-they are taught—and this is most important—to
-clean properly and to put away all the utensils
-they use. They are questioned as they proceed,
-to see that they understand what they are doing;
-and at the end of the course, they go through
-both a verbal and a practical examination; and
-certificates are awarded by the School of Cookery,
-independent of examinations by Her Majesty’s
-inspector.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_777">{777}</span></p>
-
-<p>Here are a few sample recipes; and it must
-be remembered that special pains are taken to
-suit the dishes taught to the requirements of the
-district, many ways of cooking fish being taught
-in seaports, for instance; while in country places,
-vegetables, bacon, and eggs are more used.</p>
-
-<p><i>Brown Lentil Soup.</i>—Half-pound brown lentils,
-1½d.; one carrot, four cloves, an ounce and a
-half of dripping, 1½d.; two quarts of water; small
-bunch sweet herbs, three onions, pepper and
-salt, 1d. Wash the lentils well in several waters;
-leave to soak in two quarts of water for twenty-four
-hours. Slice and fry the onions in the
-dripping; let them take a nice brown, but not
-burn. Cut up the carrot into small pieces; fry
-it lightly also. Now put in the lentils and the
-two quarts of water in which they were steeped;
-add the herbs and the cloves, but not the pepper
-and salt. Boil all for three hours, adding more
-water, to make up the waste from boiling. Add
-pepper and salt to taste. If possible, put the
-soup through a coarse wire-sieve.</p>
-
-<p><i>Savoury Rice.</i>—Rice, half-pound, 2d.; dripping,
-half-ounce, 1½d.; two onions, one carrot, pepper
-and salt, 1d.; cloves, parsley, and thyme, ½d. Wash
-the rice, throw it into a saucepan full of boiling
-water and a little salt. Add an onion stuck
-with four cloves and the carrot cut up. Let it
-boil fast for fifteen or twenty minutes. Take
-care there is plenty of water. To try the rice,
-take a grain and rub it between the thumb and
-finger. When it will rub quite away, drain off
-all the water, and let the rice dry before the
-fire. While the rice is boiling, put half an ounce
-of dripping in a saucepan on the fire, and when
-quite hot, fry in it a sliced onion. Take a
-tablespoonful of flour, sprinkle it over the fried
-onion in the pan, stirring it with a spoon.
-When the flour is brown, add half a pint of
-water, the parsley and thyme well chopped, with
-salt and pepper. Boil it up; stir in the rice,
-and serve.</p>
-
-<p><i>Exeter Stew.</i>—Meat, 9d.; flour, 1½d.; suet, 1d.;
-dripping, 1d.; herbs and onion, 1½d. Put into
-a pan two ounces of dripping; set it on the fire;
-and when it is quite hot and a faint blue smoke
-arises from it, put in an onion, cut small. Let
-it brown well; then add a tablespoonful of flour,
-and when that is browned also, one pint of cold
-water, pepper, salt, four cloves, and a little mace.
-Cut one pound of beef into small pieces; put
-them in, and let it simmer, not boil, for two
-hours. Put in a bowl a quarter-pound of flour;
-a little salt, pepper, chopped parsley, thyme,
-and marjoram; two ounces of finely chopped
-suet, and half a teaspoonful of baking-powder.
-Make into a paste with cold water; form into
-small balls, and drop them into the stew half
-an hour before it is wanted.</p>
-
-<p><i>Christmas Pudding.</i>—Flour, one pound, 2d.;
-baking-powder, a teaspoonful and a half, ¼d.;
-ginger, half a teaspoonful, ¼d.; suet, quarter-pound,
-2d.; treacle, half-pound, 1d.; raisins, two
-ounces, ½d.; currants, two ounces, ½d.; milk
-(skim), ½d. Chop the suet finely; stir all the
-dry ingredients well together; add the treacle,
-warmed, and about a teacupful of skim-milk.
-Stir well; put it into a greased tin or basin;
-cover with paper; steam it in a pan of boiling
-water for an hour and a half or two hours.</p>
-
-<p>No one who has seen how well these and
-many other dishes are cooked by the children
-entirely without assistance at their practical
-examination—no one who has heard how well
-and intelligently they answer questions on the
-subject, can doubt that cooking can be taught
-successfully in our schools. The one question
-remains, Does it pay? The outlay is of two
-kinds—the primary outlay, which will not recur,
-for stove and utensils; and the recurring expenses
-of teacher’s salary, food, and fuel. In many
-places, friends of education, learning the need,
-have fitted up classrooms with all that was
-required at a cost of about seven to eight pounds.
-In Liverpool, the Education Council offered to
-fit up six classrooms in voluntary schools as
-centres at which several neighbouring schools
-could attend; but as many poor schools are
-without such benevolent friends, the Northern
-Union of Schools of Cookery has petitioned the
-Science and Art Department to give grants for
-this purpose.</p>
-
-<p>The teacher’s salary, as already mentioned, is
-about five pounds, with a varying sum in addition
-for travelling expenses. The average cost
-of the food to be cooked is about thirty-seven
-shillings for the whole course. The additional
-amount of fuel used is very trifling; therefore,
-the expenses stand: Teacher’s salary, £5; food,
-£1, 17s.; travelling expenses, say 10s.—Total, seven
-guineas. To meet these expenses, there are the
-following sources of income: The government
-grant of four shillings a head for fifteen girls,
-£3; extra pence paid by the children for their
-cooking lessons, twopence each for twenty lessons,
-£2, 10s. This payment cannot be enforced; but
-it is found that in most cases, even among the
-poorest, it is willingly paid, as the parents value
-the lessons. Sale of food cooked, at cost price,
-£1, 17s.—Total, seven guineas.</p>
-
-<p>It may be mentioned that the food sells more
-readily among the very poor children than among
-those who are better off. There is little or no
-difficulty in disposing of it without loss.</p>
-
-<p>It will be seen that this calculation allows
-of no margin whatever. If all goes well, there
-is neither profit nor loss. But it cannot be
-expected that everything will be perfectly successful;
-the children will miss a lesson now and
-then, or some dish will be spoiled. We would
-wish, therefore, to remind managers that there
-is another source of income open to them. It
-is both easier and better to teach cookery
-and domestic economy together than separately;
-and every girl who in the cooking class is
-earning a grant of four shillings, may also earn
-another four shillings if she passes in domestic
-economy, without any additional outlay or cost.
-Only, we would urge all managers to be careful
-always to secure a properly qualified teacher,
-holding a diploma from some good School of
-Cookery, and trained to teach children. Lastly,
-the experience of the manager of a large Roman
-Catholic school in a very poor district may be
-quoted. ‘I would hardly hesitate to say’—we
-give his own words—‘that not only will a class
-of cookery in elementary schools pay itself, but
-will even become a pecuniary advantage; and
-for this reason, parents look with much favour
-upon the teaching of cookery; and whereas it
-is too often the case that they withdraw their
-children from school the moment they are free<span class="pagenum" id="Page_778">{778}</span>
-to do so, and so prevent a school from receiving
-a grant for them by their passing an examination,
-I can say from experience that my
-class of cookery has been the means of retaining
-at school several children who would otherwise
-have left, and for each of them I expect a substantial
-grant. I have also observed that since
-the introduction of this subject, the children
-who attend this class attend much more regularly.’</p>
-
-<p>With this testimony we may conclude, hoping
-that some at least of those who glance at this
-paper may agree with the words of an old working-woman,
-a grandmother, and herself a model
-of thrift, care, and good management, who, when
-the cookery classes at the Board Schools were
-mentioned before her, exclaimed: ‘Deed, and
-that’s the sensiblest thing I ever heard of them
-Boards doing!’ and may therefore be willing to
-do a little, either by giving time, money, or
-influence, to help forward this good and greatly
-needed work.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="AN_AMATEUR_CABBY">AN AMATEUR ‘CABBY.’</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> ‘my salad days’ I was a striking example of
-that class of young men who are unfortunately
-weighted with an extra crop of wild-oats to
-dispose of ere they are transformed into conventional,
-steady-going, tax-paying members of the
-community. My personal allowance being considerable,
-I was able to indulge in all the follies
-of a man about town. Fortunately or unfortunately,
-I soon probed to the bottom of things,
-and speedily tasted the ashes in the cup of
-pleasure, so that one folly after another was discarded
-and relegated to the limbo of the past,
-until, like Heliogabalus, I sighed for a new
-delight, and would have paid liberally for a fresh
-sensation. The turf and its wretched gambling
-associations palled upon me; I was weary of
-the theatre, both before and behind the curtain.
-The senseless chatter of my young associates
-in the club smoking-room roused a feeling of
-boredom almost intolerable. At this period, the
-great Cab question was the topic of the hour.
-The character and remuneration of the London
-cabman were discussed at every dinner-table in
-the metropolis. There were two parties in this
-discussion, which advocated views totally opposed
-to each other. On the one hand, the earnings
-of Cabby were described as wealth; on the other,
-as poverty. He was portrayed as drunken,
-extravagant, uncivil, and in fact as only fit to
-be the associate of the most vile. The reverse
-side of the medal was that of a man sober,
-frugal, civil, and so courteous in his intercourse
-with his fares, that the late Lord
-Chesterfield might have taken lessons of him
-in politeness.</p>
-
-<p>A sudden determination possessed me. I would
-be a cabman for the nonce. At all events, for
-twelve hours I would don the badge and learn
-for myself the truth of the matter. I frequently
-employed the same cabman on the rank in
-Piccadilly. He drove a thoroughbred mare, and
-his hansom was a model of neatness and
-elegance. So I took an early opportunity of
-interviewing the man, whose name was Smith;
-although in those days ‘interview’ was not
-classed as an active verb. I told him I wished
-to hire his cab for a night. At first, Mr Smith
-was hazy as to my meaning. I asked him how
-much he paid for the hire of his vehicle. He
-replied: ‘Seventeen shillings per night.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Very well,’ I said; ‘I will give you that
-sum for the use of your cab for twelve hours,
-and hand you over besides, the amount in fares
-I may chance to receive during that period.’</p>
-
-<p>I could see that my friend entertained doubts
-for a moment as to my sanity; but I speedily
-explained matters to him.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Smith shook his head, and said he might
-lose his license if the fact became known to
-the police that he had lent his badge, and so
-on, and that an intimate knowledge of London
-streets was indispensable.</p>
-
-<p>I pooh-poohed both these objections, especially
-the last, asserting that I was capable of making
-a map of Western London, if circumstances
-required it.</p>
-
-<p>Eventually, Mr Smith agreed to my proposal,
-giving me several hints as to my conduct; I
-remember one of these being, that I must on
-no account ply for hire, as it is termed, while
-driving through the streets, but wait till I was
-hailed.</p>
-
-<p>The eventful hour arrived in due course, and
-at nine o’clock I met Mr Smith by appointment
-in a quiet street in the parish of St James. It
-was October; and the night being chilly, I wore
-an overcoat, somewhat the worse for wear, and
-a wide-awake, which I could slouch over my
-eyes, if occasion required; for my chief fear
-was, that I might, by an unlucky chance, be
-recognised by some of my numerous acquaintances.
-I mounted the box, and nodding gaily to
-Mr Smith, left that individual transfixed with
-wonder that a gentleman of means and position
-should voluntarily undergo the pains and penalties
-of a cabman’s life, even for so brief a period
-as twelve hours.</p>
-
-<p>I have stated that the mare was a thoroughbred,
-and in doing so I am only recording a
-literal fact. In the famous days when Andrew
-Ducrow reigned supreme at Astley’s Theatre,
-there was a very popular drama which depicted
-the life of a racehorse through all its vicissitudes,
-till it found itself in the shafts of a sand-cart.
-There is an undoubted instance of a horse (Black
-Tommy, 1857) which only lost the Derby by
-a short head, figuring subsequently in the shafts
-of a cab in Camden Town.</p>
-
-<p>For a time I imagined that I was the
-centre of observation, especially by the cabmen
-on the ranks. Suddenly I was hailed by a
-short thick-set man with a very red face, who
-in an imperious tone shouted ‘Orme Square,’
-and plunged into the recesses of my cab. I
-was floored completely! My boasted knowledge
-of the topography of the metropolis was
-at fault. I had never heard of Orme Square.
-I ventured to ask my fare if he could direct me
-to the place. His surprise and indignation were
-so excessive that I feared for a moment he would
-succumb to a fit of apoplexy. But he relieved
-himself by a burst of strong language such as I
-had rarely listened to in my life before. My first
-impulse was an angry reply, but I fortunately
-nipped that impulse in the bud. The line of
-Jerrold the dramatist occurred to me: ‘A rich
-man feels through his glove, and thinks all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_779">{779}</span>
-things are soft.’ For the first time I realised
-what a cabman has occasionally to submit to,
-and what a Janus-headed thing Society was in its
-intercourse with the rich and the poor. But it
-is a remarkable fact that although Orme Square
-is situated in the Bayswater Road, immediately
-opposite Kensington Gardens, not one Londoner
-in ten can define its locality. It is a small
-unpretending square, with three sides only, the
-fourth side being the great thoroughfare I have
-mentioned. I excused my ignorance by saying
-that I was new to the neighbourhood. As I
-drove along, I placed my present experience to
-the credit of the much-abused cabby. I received
-my exact fare, for which I politely thanked my
-irritable friend, for I was resolved I would do
-nothing to increase the prejudice existing in so
-many quarters, against my brother-cabmen, but
-practise civility under all temptations to the
-contrary.</p>
-
-<p>I suppose it was about one o’clock, and I was
-proceeding leisurely along Oxford Street, the
-‘stony-hearted step-mother,’ as De Quincey styles
-it in his immortal work, admiring the effect
-of the long vista of gas lamps in the deserted
-street, when I heard a woman’s voice: ‘Are
-you going Pimlico-way?’ I turned, and beheld
-two young girls, in gaudy finery and painted
-cheeks. I replied that my services were at
-their disposal. I suppose there was something
-in the words and manner of my answer which
-created surprise in their minds, for they stared
-curiously in my face before jumping into the
-cab.</p>
-
-<p>In a few seconds I was careering along at the
-rate of ten miles an hour. What a situation for
-the son of the much-esteemed rector of Cawley-cum-Mortlock!
-My fares sang snatches of the
-popular melodies of the day, sometimes as a solo,
-sometimes as a duet. When we arrived at our
-destination, they sprang out of the cab and
-inquired my fare. I replied: ‘Two shillings.’
-The countenance of the younger assumed a
-plaintive expression as she whispered: ‘Give the
-poor cabby an extra tanner, Loo; I daresay he
-has a wife and children at home.’</p>
-
-<p>As I did not wish to obtain money under
-false pretences, I modestly disclaimed the honour
-of paternity, at the same time pocketing my
-fare. As I did so, two gentlemen approached,
-and my feelings of dismay may be imagined
-when I recognised in one of them Mr Spalland,
-my father’s curate! There was a gas-lamp
-close at hand, so that my features must have
-been plainly discernible. The girls had just
-bidden me good-night. Observing the look of
-wonder and horror on Mr Spalland’s features,
-I boldly took the bull by the horns, and
-exclaimed: ‘Cab, sir?’</p>
-
-<p>‘The very voice!’ cried the curate. ‘What a
-marvellous resemblance!’ Then he whispered a
-few words to his companion, who was a stranger
-to me.</p>
-
-<p>‘Nonsense!’ came from his lips. ‘The thing
-is impossible.—What is your name, cabby?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Here is my ticket, sir,’ I promptly replied.
-‘John Smith, Lisson Grove.’</p>
-
-<p>The curate indulged in another prolonged
-stare, and then they both entered the cab, and
-I drove them to an address where I was as
-well known as in my own home. I managed
-to drive rapidly away as soon as I had deposited
-the worthy curate and his friend, as I did not
-wish to undergo the critical examination of the
-hall porter, who might not have been put off
-so easily.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment I observed a crimson glow
-in the sky, which was clearly caused by some
-conflagration, but evidently at a very considerable
-distance. Notwithstanding, a man almost
-insisted on my driving him to the scene of the
-fire, no matter what might be the distance.
-This I declined to do, alleging that my horse
-was tired; and after a volley of objurgations,
-the fellow departed, making some strong
-remarks about the independence of cabmen
-and their large earnings. Up to this time,
-I had not earned the amount of the hire of
-the horse and cab. Whether my experience on
-this point was special or normal, I am unable
-to judge, but I could easily picture the despair
-of a cabman who in similar circumstances would
-have but a gloomy outlook for the morrow.
-True, there were several hours remaining, and
-it was impossible to tell what they might produce.</p>
-
-<p>The aspect of a mighty slumbering city at
-early dawn is a remarkable spectacle. The line
-of Wordsworth involuntarily recurred to me:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">And all that mighty heart is lying still.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>London at sunrise was by no means a novel
-sight to one who had kept ‘early hours’ for some
-years; but I do not think I was ever so impressed
-with the sight as I was when perched on that
-elevated seat at the back of a hansom cab. The
-first faint streaks of red in the distant east,
-succeeded by a pale primrose light, and then the
-gradual dispersal of the midnight gloom, was
-inexpressibly lovely. The scenes I had witnessed
-had aroused certain trains of thought, more or
-less painful, as I beheld the varied fortunes of
-my fellow-creatures, the struggle for a bare
-existence, the sins and follies created in a great
-measure by ‘iron circumstance.’</p>
-
-<p>With the history of my final fare I must
-conclude this veritable account of my experience
-as a cab-driver. It was exactly a quarter
-to six, and I was crawling along Holborn, when
-a man of gentlemanly appearance and address
-emerged rapidly from a side-street, and springing
-into my cab, said: ‘Cabman—Victoria. If you
-can catch the six o’clock train for Newhaven, I
-will pay you double fare.’</p>
-
-<p>I glanced at the church clock, and found I had
-exactly a quarter of an hour to accomplish a
-distance of nearly three miles. Fortunately, the
-streets were comparatively empty, and I sent
-the mare along at a pace of something like
-twelve miles an hour. Although I had only
-seen the face of my fare for a couple of seconds,
-the expression and features are indelibly impressed
-on my memory. It was a handsome face,
-but the eyes were more like those of a hunted
-stag than of a human being. The colour of
-the face was ashen gray, and I fancied the teeth
-chattered somewhat as he addressed me. But
-the last circumstance I attributed to the cold
-raw October morning. I felt so curious about
-my fare that I cautiously lifted the small wooden
-flap in the roof of the cab, and felt almost pleased
-to behold him imbibing brandy from a flask.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_780">{780}</span>
-One or two policemen peered at the cab as it
-flew past, apparently undecided whether or not
-to take cognisance of the excessive speed; but
-I cared not; I felt as anxious to catch the train
-for Newhaven as if my life depended on it. At
-length I sighted Victoria Station. The minute-hand
-wanted two minutes to six. Passing a
-half-sovereign through the trap, my fare shouted:
-‘Never mind the change!’ and sprang out of
-the cab.</p>
-
-<p>Involuntarily, I paused to watch the end of
-the affair. I saw him leave the pay-box with
-the ticket, and then in half a minute I heard the
-shriek of the engine, and congratulated myself
-on having accomplished my task. Ere I could
-drive from the entrance of the booking-office,
-another hansom deposited two men, who simultaneously
-rushed to the booking-office. The
-horse of the cab was covered with lather, and
-seemed completely blown. The men appeared
-again on the pavement with vexation and disappointment
-plainly written on their features.
-Suddenly their eyes lighted on the cab which I
-drove. They advanced, and the shorter man
-of the two said: ‘Cabman, we are police-officers.
-Have you just brought any one who was anxious
-to catch the six o’clock express?’</p>
-
-<p>I had felt certain they were officers of justice.
-How is it that policemen out of uniform and
-servants out of livery are always distinguishable?
-There is a hall-mark, so to say, which stamps
-them.</p>
-
-<p>I stated all I knew, which, as the reader knows,
-was not much. Then they left me.</p>
-
-<p>Whether they utilised the telegraph for the
-arrest of the unhappy fugitive—a forger, as they
-told me—I never knew.</p>
-
-<p>I examined my takings, and found they
-amounted to one pound five shillings, making a
-profit of eight shillings. But it is not the luck
-of every cabman to have as a fare a runaway
-forger who will pay so liberally as ten shillings
-for three miles.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Smith was quite satisfied with the result,
-and expressed his willingness to lend his horse
-and cab again on similar terms. But this was
-my first and last cab-drive. I cannot explain it,
-but that night was a turning-point in my career.
-I married soon afterwards; and not even the wife
-of my bosom is aware that her husband once
-officiated in the character of a London cab-driver!</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="COLONEL_REDGRAVES_LEGACY">COLONEL REDGRAVE’S LEGACY.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3 title="CHAPTER I.">IN FOUR CHAPTERS.—CHAPTER I.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr Septimus Redgrave</span> had attained the mature
-age of fifty without losing either of his pet theories—that
-this world is anything but a vale of tears,
-and that the wicked people in it are decidedly
-in the minority. These comfortable doctrines
-were no doubt attributable to the fact that Mr
-Redgrave was in the enjoyment of a small independence,
-was master of his own time, possessed
-of good health, and had never ventured on the
-uncertain voyage of matrimony. He had occupied
-the same chambers in Bury Street, St James’s,
-for nearly a quarter of a century, was a member
-of one of the oldest clubs in Pall Mall, a virtuoso
-on a small scale, and a regular attendant at
-the picture-sales at Christie’s. His natty, well-costumed
-figure was always to the fore on the
-view-days, elbowing millionaires and picture-dealers
-in the inspection of works of art, although
-his modest income precluded him from becoming
-a purchaser, except in very exceptional cases.</p>
-
-<p>His only near relatives were two maiden sisters,
-who were several years his senior, and resided
-at Shanklin, in the Isle of Wight. Their names
-were Penelope and Lavinia respectively, and they
-were generous in their advice on all occasions
-to their brother, whom they could never realise
-as anything but a child, and consequently requiring
-guidance and sisterly control. In truth,
-the intellect of their brother was none of the
-brightest, of which fact he himself had a dim
-suspicion; but as a slight compensation in lieu
-thereof, he availed himself of no small share
-of a quality which could only be described as
-cunning, in the ordinary acceptation of the
-word.</p>
-
-<p>He had resided in Bury Street for some ten
-years, when his landlady, Mrs Jones, announced
-that in consequence of her failing strength and
-increasing years, her daughter Martha was about
-to resign her position as companion to an old
-lady at Bristol, and assist in the management
-of the house in Bury Street. Miss Jones duly
-arrived, and presented a very agreeable spectacle.
-A florid-complexioned, black-eyed girl
-of twenty, very vivacious and energetic, and
-by no means devoid of education or natural
-ability. The domestic comforts of Mr Redgrave
-were materially increased by the advent of Miss
-Jones, and he showed his gratitude at certain
-times and seasons in a very marked and material
-manner. Her birthday was always remembered
-by the precise bachelor on the first floor; nor
-were Christmas or the New Year forgotten. It will
-never be known whether the brain of Mrs Jones
-had originally conceived the ambitious scheme of
-a union between the family of Redgrave and that
-of Jones; but it is certain that as time went
-on, such a plan was entertained by both mother
-and daughter. There was but fifteen years’ difference
-in their ages, and Martha was not only
-possessed of good looks, but educated and accomplished.
-But the lynx eyes of the landlady could
-never detect the smallest peg on which to hang
-a claim on behalf of the incomparable Martha.
-Although frank and free in his intercourse with
-the good-looking Hebe who ministered to his
-comforts, the actions of Mr Redgrave were always
-regulated by the rules of the strictest decorum;
-and if, during his occasional absences from town,
-the epistles of Martha were couched in a somewhat
-sentimental tone, they met with no response in
-the replies of the cautious and simple lodger of
-Bury Street. Probably neither Mrs Jones nor
-her daughter had ever heard of the celebrated
-French proverb, that ‘all comes to him who
-waits,’ but it is nevertheless certain that they
-mutually acted on this maxim.</p>
-
-<p>Years rolled on, and no change occurred in
-the relations existing between lodger and landlady;
-Mr Redgrave was now fifty, and Miss
-Jones thirty-five. The roses had long since
-departed from her cheeks, and the sparkle from
-her black eyes, but, like Claude Melnotte in the
-play, she still ‘hoped on.’ She felt that she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_781">{781}</span>
-was practically indispensable to the unsusceptible
-and phlegmatic bachelor, and trusted that he
-would eventually realise the fact, and reward
-his faithful housekeeper by making her his
-wife.</p>
-
-<p>About this time, Colonel Redgrave, a cousin
-of Septimus, arrived from India, accompanied
-by two ladies named Fraser, of whom we shall
-presently have occasion to speak. Colonel
-Redgrave had for many years maintained a
-somewhat desultory correspondence with our
-bachelor. The officer was an elderly man, and
-not in the enjoyment of very good health.
-On his arrival at Southampton, he proceeded
-to the residence of his female cousins at
-Shanklin, and accepted their invitation to make
-Oswald Villa his temporary home until he could
-decide on his future arrangements. Naturally,
-Mr Redgrave paid a visit to his military cousin.
-They had not met since they were boys; and
-the astute colonel was evidently much perplexed
-at the singular combination of simplicity and
-shrewdness presented by his London kinsman.
-Whether the impression created was favourable
-or the reverse, it is the object of this narrative
-to show.</p>
-
-<p>Six weeks after the arrival of Colonel Redgrave
-in England, his cousin was seated at breakfast
-in his apartments in Bury Street, seriously
-cogitating the advisability or the reverse of a
-lengthened tour on the continent for his autumn
-holiday, when the question was settled in a somewhat
-unexpected manner. Miss Jones appeared
-with a black-edged letter in her hand. The
-writing was that of Miss Redgrave, and the
-post-mark ‘Shanklin.’ With trembling fingers,
-Septimus opened the envelope. ‘Colonel Redgrave
-had died suddenly of heart disease at Oswald
-Villa.’ This was the gist of the epistle; and Mr
-Redgrave was required forthwith at Shanklin, to
-be present at the funeral and to hear the contents
-of the will of the deceased. Miss Jones was duly
-acquainted with the sad news; and in response
-to her inquiry as to the probable destination of
-the wealth of the late Colonel Redgrave, Septimus
-professed entire ignorance; and having given vent
-to some expressions of impatience and vexation
-at this marring of his Swiss and Italian tour,
-gave instructions to Miss Jones to see to the
-packing of his portmanteau without any delay;
-for the fair Martha was not only a quasi-valet,
-but secretary and librarian, the catalogue of Mr
-Redgrave’s books being carefully kept up to date.</p>
-
-<p>In less than a week, the funeral obsequies of
-the late Colonel Redgrave had been duly performed,
-the will read; and Septimus Redgrave,
-considerably to his astonishment, found himself
-sole legatee, and the fortunate possessor in round
-figures of twenty thousand pounds!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Two months have elapsed since the death
-of Colonel Redgrave, and Septimus is still in
-residence at Shanklin. His continental tour
-has been indefinitely postponed; but his soul
-now yearns for his accustomed London haunts,
-in spite of the attentions lavished upon him by
-his sisters. And if the truth must be told, he
-misses the constant watchfulness of Martha, that
-keen anticipation of his slightest wish, so uniformly
-displayed by the housekeeper of St James’s.
-It is a lovely morning in September, and from
-the drawing-room windows of Oswald Villa, the
-blue waters of Sandown Bay can be seen in
-charming contrast to the white cliffs of Culver,
-while above, the sky rivals that of Naples in its
-cerulean tint. Miss Redgrave and her sister
-Lavinia are nominally engaged in crewel-work,
-but actually their attention is concentrated on
-the immediate future of their beloved brother
-under the altered condition of his affairs. Miss
-Redgrave is tall and thin, with a severe expression
-of countenance, which belies her excellent
-qualities of head and heart. Her sister Lavinia
-is short and stout, with a very submissive manner,
-and presents a striking contrast to her somewhat
-imperious sister. Her vocation in life appears
-to consist of approving and indorsing the views
-and plans of her elder sister. Like the French
-Senate during the Imperial <i>régime</i>, she never
-originated a course of action, but expressed entire
-approval of the acts submitted to her. Occasionally,
-when especially pressed by her sister
-for an opinion, she would give vent to an original
-notion, which excited the outward contempt of
-Miss Redgrave, but inwardly created considerable
-feelings of alarm, as these occasional lapses from
-her ordinary course by Lavinia were of the nature
-of second-sight, and the prophecies of the younger
-sister invariably came to pass.</p>
-
-<p>‘Septimus talks of returning to London,’
-exclaimed the elder sister with a keen glance at
-Lavinia, who smiled assent. ‘You do not seem
-to realise what mighty issues hang on that event,’
-continued Miss Redgrave in a tone of considerable
-asperity.</p>
-
-<p>Lavinia still remained mute, though her
-countenance expressed keen interest.</p>
-
-<p>‘You are very provoking, Lavinia, considering
-you are by no means deficient in penetration as
-to motive, and analysis of character.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Explain, dear Penelope.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Septimus must not return to London a free
-man. I mean, he must present himself in Bury
-Street an engaged man.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I am afraid that will be a somewhat difficult
-task to accomplish,’ replied Lavinia with an
-irritating acid smile.</p>
-
-<p>‘Nevertheless, it must be done,’ said Penelope
-with a tone of decision worthy of the Iron
-Duke.</p>
-
-<p>‘But how?’ inquired Lavinia.</p>
-
-<p>‘Surely you remember the existence of that
-creature—Martha Jones. The fact of our brother
-having inherited a fortune will inspire her with
-fresh courage. New methods of attack will at
-once be resorted to, and the assault will never
-cease till she has reduced the fortress to submission.
-I never saw Miss Jones but once, but
-that was sufficient.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I fully agree with you, my dear sister,’ said
-Lavinia; ‘but where do you propose to find a
-suitable partner for Septimus?’</p>
-
-<p>‘We have no occasion to look far. Under this
-very roof is a lady adapted in every sense to
-make dear Septimus a suitable partner.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I suppose you mean Mrs Fraser?’ mildly
-observed Lavinia.</p>
-
-<p>‘Precisely. Mrs Fraser is, I should say, forty,
-possessed of a comfortable income, clever, and
-just the kind of woman to shield our brother
-from all the evils and temptations of this mortal
-life.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_782">{782}</span></p>
-
-<p>‘I only see two difficulties,’ responded Lavinia:
-‘Septimus may not like Mrs Fraser, and Mrs
-Fraser may not like Septimus.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ridiculous!’ said Penelope. ‘Who ever heard
-of a widow scarcely out of her thirties who
-would not jump at a man of fifty with nearly
-two thousand a year!’</p>
-
-<p>‘I admit the chief difficulty will lie with
-Septimus,’ placidly replied Lavinia. ‘He is very
-self-willed at times.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Leave that part of the affair to <i>me</i>,’ exclaimed
-Penelope with haughty confidence.</p>
-
-<p>Further discussion was summarily put an end
-to by the entrance of the individual in question.
-We must confess that although he wore
-‘the livery of woe,’ the countenance of Septimus
-was not expressive of any considerable
-grief for the loss of his ‘well-beloved cousin.’
-Constantly before his mental vision floated the
-Bank Stock, India Bonds, and Three per Cents
-of which he had so recently become the possessor.
-Frequently during the day he checked
-himself in the middle of a lively air of Offenbach
-or Sullivan, which he found himself humming
-with considerable gusto. He would pause suddenly,
-and mould his features into a becoming
-expression accordingly. Mr Redgrave looked
-considerably older than his years, his hair and
-whiskers being quite gray, and his features somewhat
-wrinkled. But he was always dressed with
-scrupulous care, and in the days of the Regency
-would have been dubbed a ‘buck’ of the first
-water.</p>
-
-<p>‘Have you seen the Frasers this morning,
-Septimus?’ inquired Penelope. ‘I mean, since
-breakfast.’</p>
-
-<p>‘They have gone as far as Luccombe Chine
-with young Lockwood. I preferred a quiet read
-of the <i>Times</i>.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Septimus, will you give us a few minutes of
-your valuable time?’</p>
-
-<p>Mr Redgrave, accustomed to defer to the wishes
-of his elder sister in most things, submissively
-seated himself in front of Penelope and prepared
-to listen accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>‘Lavinia and I have been discussing your
-improved fortune and prospects. Although your
-sisters have led a very retired and secluded life,
-they have some knowledge of human nature, and
-are quite prepared to learn that their only
-brother has been the target for every selfish and
-intriguing woman with whom he has been
-brought in contact. The only safeguard appears
-to us to be an engagement with some suitable
-person.’</p>
-
-<p>The aquiline features of Septimus flushed somewhat
-as he replied: ‘If you mean that I am to
-sacrifice my liberty when I am best prepared to
-enjoy it, you will excuse my saying that you are
-tilting at a windmill. If you think so highly of
-matrimony, why don’t you swallow the prescription
-yourself?’</p>
-
-<p>If it be objected that this retort can scarcely
-be considered such as should proceed from the
-lips of a gentleman, it must be borne in mind
-that Septimus was an irascible man, and that
-when he lost command of his temper he always
-lost at the same time command of his tongue.</p>
-
-<p>‘The relative positions of a woman and a man
-are vastly different, so far as matrimony is concerned,’
-replied Penelope. ‘The woman must
-sit at home till she receives an offer; the man
-can seek a wife in every circle of society.’</p>
-
-<p>This was a great admission on the part of
-Penelope, who would never have avowed to any
-man—except a brother—that her spinsterhood
-was aught but the result of her own free-will.
-It will be observed that both the sisters ignored
-all danger from such a quarter as the ambitious
-damsel of St James’s; at anyrate they would
-have considered it derogatory to their own self-respect
-to own (to Septimus) such a fear.</p>
-
-<p>‘You are no longer a young man, Septimus.
-We are both your seniors. Our last days would
-be inexpressibly soothed if we could feel that
-your lot in life was fixed, and that the fortune
-you have inherited would not become the prey
-of intriguing adventuresses. There is a lady in
-this house who entertains strong feelings of
-regard for you. She is young, handsome, and
-accomplished. You do not require money in a
-wife; but the lady we allude to is not by any
-means a beggar. Let us both advise you to lose
-no time in making up your mind, or a certain
-good-looking lawyer may be before you. No
-more at present. The lady, who will, I devoutly
-trust, eventually become our sister, is even now
-approaching the house.’</p>
-
-<p>Septimus turned his eyes in the direction of
-the garden. Two ladies and a gentleman were
-slowly walking along the path. Presently, the
-younger one suddenly left her companions and
-tripped into the drawing-room through the open
-French-window.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CHAPTER II.</h3>
-
-<p>Mrs Fraser was the widow of Major Fraser,
-and quite came under the description of being
-‘fat, fair, and forty.’ Her late husband had
-been the lifelong associate of Colonel Redgrave;
-so, when the widow announced her intention of
-quitting India for England, there to take up her
-permanent abode, her sole companion being her
-only child, a girl of some nineteen years, the
-colonel decided to accompany her. The gossips
-in the cantonments had quite decided that after
-a decent interval Mrs Fraser would become the
-wife of Colonel Redgrave; but all such speculations
-were put an end to by his sudden death.
-The Frasers were now staying at Oswald Villa,
-the elder Miss Redgrave, as the reader has just
-seen, having formed a plan of uniting her brother
-in marriage to the handsome widow. Blanche
-Fraser was a miniature copy of her mother. The
-same dazzlingly fair complexion, the same laughing
-blue eyes, the same luxuriant light hair; and,
-if the truth must be told, the same love of
-admiration and flirting, distinguished alike both
-mother and daughter. There was only one alloy
-to the happiness of the widow—the dreadful
-conviction that youth was slowly but surely
-deserting her. The fact might perhaps have
-been concealed somewhat, but for the visible
-presence of a marriageable daughter. So, with
-many a sigh, the widow yielded to the inevitable,
-and determined to choose a partner in life
-while a certain portion of youth and good looks
-still remained to her. At the present moment,
-her choice had fallen on the handsome companion
-of her walk to Luccombe Chine. Mr Frank
-Lockwood had been the lawyer of the Redgrave<span class="pagenum" id="Page_783">{783}</span>
-family ever since his father had vacated that
-position by death. He was now about three-and-thirty,
-was agreeable and good-looking. As it
-was now the vacation, the lawyer was staying
-at Oswald Villa, in response to the pressing
-invitation of Miss Redgrave. The widow had
-acted on the principle of making hay while the
-sun shines, and had exerted all her fascinations
-on the man of law; but in vain. Mr Lockwood
-was very gallant, but the heart of Mrs Fraser
-whispered that hitherto her efforts had been void
-of success. Still, perseverance, as we all know,
-achieves wonders, and so the widow resolved to
-adopt as her motto—<i>Perseverando vinces</i>, and
-hope for the best. Blanche, as we have said,
-tripped into the room, exclaiming as she did so,
-‘O Mr Redgrave, you have lost such a treat!
-I did so miss you; you were the one thing
-needful to complete our enjoyment during our
-delightful walk.’</p>
-
-<p>Septimus gazed keenly at the fair speaker; she
-was certainly very pretty, and decidedly clever,
-and palpably partial to his society. He might
-do worse than pass the remainder of his days
-with such a delightful companion. To be sure,
-there was a certain disparity in years; but every
-one knows that women age faster than men, and
-there were innumerable instances in public life
-of similar disproportions as to age. He would
-certainly treasure up the advice of his sister as
-to the choice of a wife. So it was with more than
-his customary urbanity that Septimus replied:
-‘An old man such as I am would have been
-but a poor acquisition, Miss Fraser.’</p>
-
-<p>Blanche peered with an expression of mock
-gravity into the gray eyes of Septimus. ‘An
-old man! Have you never heard of the old
-saying?—A man is as old as he feels, a woman
-as old as she looks. How old do you feel, Mr
-Redgrave?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I feel almost a boy, Miss Fraser, when in your
-society; I feel a centenarian when I am ill in
-my solitary rooms in London.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Then the deduction from that observation,’
-replied Blanche, ‘is, that to enjoy perpetual youth,
-you should be perpetually in my society.’</p>
-
-<p>‘A charming prescription, Miss Fraser; I wish
-it were a possible one.’</p>
-
-<p>Mrs Fraser and Mr Lockwood here entered the
-room. ‘Take care, Mr Redgrave,’ said the widow;
-‘you will find Blanche a sad flirt. I have
-only just been warning Mr Lockwood against
-her.’</p>
-
-<p>This was a double shot, intended equally for
-Blanche and Mr Lockwood, who had, in the
-widow’s opinion, been somewhat too attentive
-to Blanche recently.</p>
-
-<p>Penelope here intervened. ‘My brother is
-hankering after the fleshpots of Egypt, Mrs
-Fraser; in other words, is longing for “the sweet
-shady side of Pall Mall.” Can you not persuade
-him to remain?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Let me try <i>my</i> influence,’ interposed Blanche
-coquettishly. ‘You will remain, will you not,
-<i>dear</i> Mr Redgrave?’</p>
-
-<p>Septimus felt a thrill pass through his frame
-as Miss Fraser took hold of one of his hands
-and looked up in his face with a beseeching
-look, while Mr Lockwood threw himself with an
-air of vexation into an armchair and made an
-attempt to read yesterday’s <i>Times</i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘You <i>must</i> promise, Mr Redgrave,’ said
-Blanche.</p>
-
-<p>‘I promise to obey you in all things,’ said
-Septimus, as, with an air of old-world gallantry,
-he raised her fingers to his lips.</p>
-
-<p>From that hour, one thought and one only
-occupied the mind of Mr Redgrave: Should he
-adopt the advice of Penelope, and make Miss
-Fraser an offer of his hand and heart? It was
-a tremendous step for one who had passed the
-greater part of his life in studying how best he
-could minister to his own selfish comfort and
-happiness. But on the morning of the second
-day after the scene we have just described,
-Septimus determined to put his fortune to the
-test. He chanced to find the fair Blanche alone
-sitting under the jessamine-covered veranda,
-engaged in reading a novel. Attired in white,
-with a blue sash round her slender waist, her
-light brown hair falling in careless profusion on
-her well-turned shoulders, Miss Fraser presented
-a bewitching spectacle. As Septimus approached,
-Blanche shot a captivating glance from beneath
-her long dark lashes, and with a graceful movement,
-invited Septimus to seat himself beside
-her on the bench.</p>
-
-<p>‘I hope you are not in the crisis of your tale,
-Miss Fraser?’</p>
-
-<p>‘No; I am in the second volume only, which
-is always flat and uninteresting and skippable.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I am glad to hear it, for I am anxious to have
-a little serious chat with you.’</p>
-
-<p>Blanche placed her hands together in the form
-of supplication. ‘Oh, please, don’t, Mr Redgrave!
-I have just had a lecture of half an hour’s duration
-from mamma, and that was serious enough,
-in all conscience. Why will our parents and
-guardians expect us to have the wisdom of
-Solomon and the virtues of Dorcas before we
-are out of our teens!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Perhaps I used a wrong word; I wished to
-speak to you about love.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh! how delightful! Have you fallen in love
-<i>at last</i>, Mr Redgrave?’</p>
-
-<p>Septimus did not like the phrase ‘at last,’ but
-he continued: ‘Also I wished to speak about
-matrimony.’</p>
-
-<p>Blanche shook her head gravely. ‘That is a
-very serious subject.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And yet matrimony is the natural sequence
-of love.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Alas! yes,’ sighed Blanche.</p>
-
-<p>So far the discussion was not encouraging;
-but Septimus resolved to persevere. ‘I have
-fallen in love with a lady who is at present
-under this roof.’</p>
-
-<p>Blanche clasped her hands in wondering surprise,
-and gasped forth one word—‘Mamma!’</p>
-
-<p>‘No, Miss Fraser; my affections are settled on
-her lovely daughter.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Me!’ exclaimed Blanche. ‘Impossible! Oh,
-Mr Redgrave, you are joking!’</p>
-
-<p>‘I was never more serious in my life, Miss
-Fraser. Why should you think it impossible
-that I should have fallen in love with you?
-I am in the prime of life; I have sufficient
-means’——</p>
-
-<p>‘O pray, Mr Redgrave, forbear! What you
-ask is impossible; I am engaged, indeed I am,
-although mamma does not know it. You won’t<span class="pagenum" id="Page_784">{784}</span>
-tell her, will you, Mr Redgrave? Promise me
-you will not.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Certainly not; but I must inform my sisters,
-for it was owing to their encouragement that I
-have made this proposal. They led me to suppose
-that you were favourable to my suit.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What a singular delusion! no; I don’t mean
-that—misapprehension.’</p>
-
-<p>Septimus rose from the seat. ‘Then we resume
-our former relations, Miss Fraser?’</p>
-
-<p>Blanche rose, and as she made a low courtesy,
-said: ‘If you please, Mr Redgrave.’</p>
-
-<p>Septimus strode away in a towering rage with
-his sisters for having inflicted upon him such
-unnecessary humiliation, and entering the drawing-room,
-found Penelope and Lavinia calmly
-engaged in tambour-work. One glance was sufficient
-to inform the sisters that their brother was
-not in the best of tempers.</p>
-
-<p>‘Septimus, what has happened?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Everything that is disgusting and unpleasant.
-I have been fool enough to take your advice. I
-have proposed to the lady selected by you for
-my wife two days ago, and have been refused with
-ridicule and contempt.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Impossible, Septimus!’</p>
-
-<p>‘The lady is already engaged.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Impossible, Septimus!’</p>
-
-<p>‘But I have promised to keep her engagement
-a secret from her mother.’</p>
-
-<p>‘From her mother! Of whom are you speaking,
-Septimus?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, of Blanche Fraser, to be sure.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Blanche! It was her mother we alluded to
-as our future sister-in-law!’</p>
-
-<p>Tableau!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>By a singular coincidence, Mrs Fraser was
-closeted with Mr Lockwood in the library of
-Oswald Villa during the love-scene of Septimus
-with Blanche. The widow had gone to the
-library under the pretence of fetching a particular
-volume, well knowing that she would find the
-handsome solicitor in that apartment. Mr Lockwood
-was deeply immersed in Burton’s <i>Anatomy of
-Melancholy</i>, but rose from his seat as Mrs Fraser
-entered.</p>
-
-<p>‘I did not mean to disturb you, Mr Lockwood;
-I merely wanted a volume of Tennyson.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Pray, don’t apologise, Mrs Fraser. Your visit
-is very apropos, for I was very anxious to have
-a few minutes’ private conversation with you on
-a matter affecting all my future life.’</p>
-
-<p>The widow gracefully accepted the chair Mr
-Lockwood placed for her, her cheek flushing, and
-her pulse throbbing as a small voice whispered:
-‘The moment has at length arrived; and Frank
-is neither made of stone, nor so impervious to
-my fascinations as I supposed.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It is in your power, my dear Mrs Fraser, to
-make me the happiest of men.’</p>
-
-<p>A film passed over the eyes of the widow at
-this sudden statement of the lawyer.</p>
-
-<p>‘With your keen penetration and knowledge
-of the human heart, you must have long since
-perceived that I am hopelessly in love, and that
-the object of my affections is at this moment a
-resident of Oswald Villa.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I suspected as much; I will not deny it, dear
-Frank.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr Lockwood took the plump and trembling
-fingers of the widow in his own and gently
-pressed them. The widow cordially and instinctively
-returned the squeeze. ‘May I hope, dear
-Mrs Fraser?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Dear youth, you may!’ murmured the widow,
-as her head gently sank on his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>The countenance of Mr Lockwood expressed
-some considerable surprise at the phraseology
-adopted by Mrs Fraser, but he attributed it to
-the natural emotion of the situation.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then I may tell dear Blanche at once?’ said
-Frank.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes; she must know it sooner or later,’ said
-Mrs Fraser.</p>
-
-<p>‘Blanche already knows of my attachment,’
-said Mr Lockwood.</p>
-
-<p>‘Was she not very much surprised, dear
-Frank?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, I cannot say that she was, exactly.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I feared she might think there was too much
-disparity of age,’ said the widow.</p>
-
-<p>‘Only fourteen years,’ replied Lockwood.</p>
-
-<p>‘No, Frank, you are joking,’ said the widow,
-playfully tapping his cheek; ‘not more than
-seven.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Pardon me, Mrs Fraser. I am thirty-three,
-and Blanche is nineteen.’</p>
-
-<p>The room and its contents spun round before
-the horrified gaze of the unhappy widow. All
-was clear to her now. For a few brief happy
-moments she had been living in a fool’s paradise.
-The dream was over. But, like a judicious
-woman of the world, Mrs Fraser collected her
-agitated thoughts and rapidly executed a change
-of front.</p>
-
-<p>‘You will make some allowance, Mr Lockwood,
-for my natural agitation at the idea of losing a
-beloved daughter. Blanche is a dear good child,
-and you gained a treasure when you won her
-young affections. But you must have patience.
-I cannot afford to lose her yet, she is still so
-young.’</p>
-
-<p>‘My dear Mrs Fraser, I am the happiest of
-men,’ replied the enraptured Lockwood, overjoyed
-at the speedy success of his suit.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="MISTLETOE">MISTLETOE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0"><span class="smcap">A cold</span> dark night,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Some falling snow;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A gleam of light,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">A ruddy glow.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">A quaint old hall,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Some warriors grim,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Whose shadows fall</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Grotesque and dim.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">A maiden fair,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">A gleam of gold</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Upon her hair—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The story old.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">While the storm’s breath</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Sweeps o’er the snow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">One kiss beneath</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The mistletoe.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Ten Christmas Eves</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Have come and gone,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And each one leaves</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Me still alone.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">That fair sweet maid</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Of years ago</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Has long been laid</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Beneath the snow.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">While the wind drives</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Against the pane,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In fancy lives</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">My love again.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The firelight fades,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The embers glow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">One kiss beneath</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The mistletoe.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">Nora C. Usher.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center">Printed and Published by <span class="smcap">W. &amp; R. Chambers</span>, 47 Paternoster
-Row, <span class="smcap">London</span>, and 339 High Street, <span class="smcap">Edinburgh</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<p class="center"><i>All rights reserved.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<p class="ph3">FOOTNOTES:</p>
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> <i>List of Utensils for an Artisan Practice Class.</i>—Three
-tin saucepans, two quarts, 6s.; three do., three
-pints, 4s. 6d.; three do., one pint, 1s. 6d.; one fish-kettle,
-3s.; three small frying-pans, 1s. 9d.; one colander, 1s.;
-three strainers, 1s. 6d.; one set measures, 1s. 6d.; one
-scale and weights, quarter-ounce to one pound, 8s. 6d.;
-three dripping-tins, 2s. 6d.; two small wire-sieves, 3s.;
-three graters, 1s. 6d.; six wooden spoons, 1s.; six iron
-tablespoons, 1s.; six do. teaspoons, 3d.; six round tin
-moulds, 3s.; twelve knives, 7s. 6d.; six vegetable knives,
-2s.; three forks, 1s. 6d.; six chopping-boards, 9s.; three
-rolling-pins, 2s.; one spice-box, 6d.; one handbowl,
-1s. 3d.; one knifeboard, 9d.; two galvanised tubs, 4s.; one
-galvanised bucket, 1s. 3d.; one water-can, 3s.; three
-scrubbing-brushes, 2s.; three sink-brushes, 1s.; one set
-blacklead brushes, 2s.</p>
-
-<p><i>Crockery.</i>—Three large bowls, 3s. 6d.; three smaller
-do., 2s. 6d.; six small basins, 1s.; twelve handless cups,
-6d.; twelve plates, 1s. 6d.; three round baker’s, 9d.; three
-larger do., 1s. 3d.; three jugs, 1s. 6d.; three pie-dishes,
-9d.</p>
-
-<p><i>Linen.</i>—Six kitchen cloths, 3s.; one roller towel,
-1s. 3d.; one hand do., 4d.; three dishcloths, 6d.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sundries.</i>—Kitchen paper, house flannel, soap, soda,
-blacklead, bath-brick, oil, 5s.—Total, £5, 2s. 7d.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHAMBERS'S JOURNAL OF POPULAR LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART, FIFTH SERIES, NO. 49, VOL. I, DECEMBER 6, 1884 ***</div>
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